^fty or PRf/v^
^OtOG
ICAL SEV^'
BX 7233 .B4 1873X
The sermons of Henry Ward Beech
er in Plymouth
I.
The Hereafter.
INVOCATION.
Lift upon us, O God, the li^ht of thy countenance. Put us not far from
thee. Drive us not as by a storm to a covert, but bring us forth as by the
sun after a storm all that has life is brought forth with gladness. And may
we have refuge in thee, above care, above son'ow, above fear, above all things
which tempt and draw aside. May we have power to live toward thee m
Jesus Christ. And so may we find our home and our heaven begun. Bless
the service, this morning, of song, and of communion, and of instruction.
Bless us in our hours of meditation and of research this day. May everything
be done as in the quiet life of our Father's house. And so at last bring us
there with joy and rejoicing. We ask it through Christ our Redeemer.
Amen.
1.
THE SERMONS
OF
HENRY WARD BEECHER,
IN
Plymouth Churchy Brooklyn,
FROM VERBATIM REPORTS BY T. J. ELLINWOOD.
"PLYMOUTH PULPIT,"
EIGHTH SERIES;
MARCH— SEPTEMBER, 1872.
NEW YORK:
J. B. FORD & COMPANY.
1873.
.-^^
Entered according to Act of Congress, In the year 1872, by
J. B. rORD & CO.,
In the OfSce of the librarian of Congress, Washington, D. 0.
CONTENTS.
PAGB.
I. The Hereafter (1 Car. xiii. 13) .... 4
Lesson : l Cor. xiii. *Htmns : 132, 124G, 1272.
11. The Deceitfi-lxess of rticiiES (Matt. xiii. 22) . 19
Lesson : Dan. iv. Hymns : 573, COO.
HI. The Realm of Restful^s^ess (Ueb. xi. 27) . . 37
Lesson : Heb. xi. 17-40. Hymns : 218, 607, 1251.
IV. IIow TO Learn aijout God (Jcr. ix. 23, 24) . . 55
Preached in Steinway Hall, New York.
^ V. The Church of the Fl'ture (John iv. 20-29) . 75
lesson : Luke XV. Hymns: 128,877, 607.
VI. Our Father, the King: Brotherhood, the King-
dom (Mutt. vi. 9, 10) 95
Lesson : Matt. v. 1-17. Hymns : 212, 705, 505.
VII. God's Will is Good Will (Phil. iv. 4-7) . . 113
Les.'-:on : Psalm cxlv. Hymns : 199, 638, 617
VIII. The Conflicts of Life (Eph. vi. 10-18) . . 129
Lesson : Heb. xii. i-U. Hymns : GG8, CC5, 725.
IX. The Unity of Men (lleb. xii. 22-24) . . .149
Lesson : l Cor. i. 18-31 Hymns : 3G4, 531, ,
X. Apostolic Christianity (2 Put. i. 2-11) . . 1G9
Lesson : 1 Pet, i, 2-16. Hymns : 286, 055, 1251.
}t XL Signs of the Times (Mutt. xvi. 2, 3) . . . 189
Lesson : Acts xix. 23-41. Hy-MNS : 003, 705, 1022.
XIL The Battle of Benevolence (Matt. v. 11, 12, IC) 209
Lesson : John x'iil. 1-17. Hymns : 1344, GCO, 1181.
XIII. Bearing One Another's Burdens (Ivom. xv. 1;
Gal. vi. 2, 3) ■ . . . 231
Lesson : Rom. xiv. Hymns : 40, 658, 716.
XIV. The Indwelling of Christ (Col. i. 27) . .251
Lesson : Col. i. Hymns : 200,447,463.
XV. 'J^hougtits of Death (John ix, 4) . . . .209
Lesson : Psalm xci. Hymns : 1321, 021, 1257.
♦PLYMorxn Collection.
IV • COXTENTS.
Fagd
XVL TnE Religious Uses of Music (Epb. v. 19) . 287
Lesson : Psalm ciii. Hymns : 104, EOT, 632.
XVII. Peaceable Living (Rom. xii. 18) . . . . 307
Lesson: Bom. xii. *Hymns : 660, 784, 704.
XVIII. The Laav of Libeety (Giil. v. 1, 18) . . . 329
Lesson : Matt . xi. Htmns : 551, 600, 704.
XIX. What IS the Profit of Godliness ? (1 Tim. iv. 8) 349
Lesson : Psalm xlii. Hymns : OOp, 725.
XX. The PiELIGiox of Hope (Eom. viii. 24) . . . 365
Lesson: Rom. viii. 9-39. HYMNS: 78, e04.
XXI. SpiraTUAL Fruit-Culture (John iv. 15) . . 383
Lesson : Jolin iv. 3-27. Hymns: 180, 07J, 819.
XXII. The Aims axd Methods of Christian Life.
(Acts iii. 10, 20) 403
Lesson : Eph. iv. 1-16. hymns : 31, 818, 1257.
{pXXIIL The Spirit of God (John iii. 8) . . . .419
Lesson : Jolin iii. 1-12. Hymns : 218, 268. 474.
XXIV. Spiritual Hunger (Matt. v. G) . . . . 433
Lesson : Matt. v. Hymns : 162, 905, 907.
XXV. Trustworthiness (Psahiis xii. 1) . . . . 451
lesson : Psalm xii. HYMNS : 905, 847, 889.
0 XXVI. The Significance and Effect of Christ's Birth
(Luke ii. 11) 467
Lesson : Luke ii. Hymns : 215, 249, 247.
* Plymouth Collectioh.
PRinCETOIT
THE HEREAFTER.
THSOLOGIC:"L,;V
*• And no-w abideth faith, hope, love, these three ; but the greatest of
these is love."— I. Cob. XIII., 13.
It must be conceded, I think, that Paul stood second to none of
all the inspired teachers, in the range of knowledge which he pos-
sessed ; and there were more topics that came under his view than
was the case with the others. He has left more instruction, and in-
struction on more sides of thought and feeling, than either Peter or
John — certainly more than James and the others. Yet it is very re-
markable, especially when you consider the teachings of Paul — a
man as confident as he was, positive, dogmatic; a man of intense
firmness and self-consciousness ; a man with all the elements
which go to make a good professor of theology in any modern
chair — it is astonishing, when you consider his teachings, how
little he thought he knew. How positive he was of that which
he did say ! and yet, what a record he has left in respect to not
knowing ! It is the impression of many, that Christianity has de-
veloped such a range of truth that about every question which can
be asked, may, by somebody, be answered. Because Christ has
brought life and immortality to light, it is supposed that by all
people who have studied enough, or prayed enough, or thought
enough, there may be found some light to be thrown on almost
every question that the heart ever wants to ask in regard to a man's
condition here, and substantially in regard to his condition here-
after. But you will be surprised, if you go through the New Testa-
ment, to see how little specific teaching there is in regard to the
great hereafter. You will observe that, in the main, the instruction
of the New Testament in respect to the last things is generic. I
shall be better understood in that term generic, when I shall have
finished my exposition of this morning.
In this chapter the apostle was setting over against the conflicts,
the ambitions, the desires of men for the gift of tongues, miracles,
StTNBAY MonroNG. March 10, 1872. Lesson : I Cob. YTTT. Hymns, (Plymoutli Col-
lection) : Kos. ISa, 121C, UTi.
2 THE HERTIaFTEE.
prophecies, and what not, the fact that spiritual gifts — those which
are within the reach of every one's experience-^were more desirable
than these special and ministerial gifts. In the course of that dis-
cussion, which I have read in your hearing this morning, he magni-
fies and glorifies the value and authority of love. He says, in respect
to it,
" Love never faileth."
It is not meant that when one has once possessed love, he can never
lose it. That is not the question. It is a question of the general dura-
tion of great gifts and developments. It is as if the apostle had said,
" There are many things in this world which are good, but which
are only for a single age, or for one nation. They are local ; they
are transient ; they are related to a certain stage of development in
the human family. But love never fails. That is not local nor
transient. It is everlasting. It inheres in the eternal nature of
things. Prophecies — they answer their purposes ; but they are ripe
before the summer is over, and they drop. Tongues — they are not
to be continued. They shall cease. Knowledge — spiritual discern-
ment— that insight which was early given, at least to a part of the
Christian Church — that is also relative. It passes away." Then he
goes on to say,
*' For we know in part, and we prophesy [teach] in part."
There is not an atom of the genuine spirit of dogmatic theology
in this. Men who have rounded up the whole system of belief from
the very beginning of things clear on down to the present time,
dividing it into chapters and sections, and caused it, as they say,
by scientific processes, to cohere, and clamped the parts all together
— no one of these men rises up from his chair, and says, " We only
know a little here and there of the great moral realm. We know
things fragmentarily. We only know in part." So said Paul ; but
then, Paul would have had hard times in many modern churches !
♦' We know in part, and we prophesy in part. But when that which is
perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away."
His eye was looking forward. He looked beyond the scene, not
only of that age, but of all time. He seemed to be lifted above the
career of humanity on this globe, and to have an ideal conception
of a perfected manhood in the other life. It is as if he had said,
" When that which is filled up, swelled [for perfected means filled
up] — when that which has grown to its full size, and taken its color
and flavor under the sun — when that which is perfect, is come, then
all these transitory, local, limited, partial things, will drop away. As
fall the early leaves, that have brought the plant to a better state and
a higher form, so drop away these early experiences."
TEE HEBEAFTEB. 3
He then explains this by a figure and an illustration. The figure
■we will take first :
" Now we see througk a glass, darkly ; but then face to face."
In other words, We see through a window dimly ^ indistinctly.
Some have supposed that a mirror was meant. Commentators have
undertaken to show that it was a speculum, or a well-polished steel
mirror ; and that people only seemed to look through it. I prefer
to suppose that it was a window in which the glass, if glass was
used at all, was extremely imperfect. It may have been horn scraped
very thin, and giving a most smoky and indistinct view of all that
was outside of it. Such a use was made of horn for dwellings in
ancient times. And as one was sitting, and looking out through
this semi-transparent substance upon the landscape before him, he
could have but an indistinct idea of it. He lost its color and its
eharp specialities. And the apostle, as it were, says, " Now, in look-
ing at the whole of human life, at all the developments of moral
qualities, and the whole kingdom of God, as it swells out before us,
with these mortal eyes and experiences, we can no more discern ex-
actly what the fullness of it is, than one sitting at a windoAv can see
clearly everything that is beyond it."
We see through a glass dimly, indistinctly ; but in that great
future to which we are going, where humanity shall attain its full
proportion and excellence, how shall we know ? What will be the
condition then ? Why, only this : that the perfectness of knowledge
which God has when he thinks, is going to be ours. Then we shall
rise to such a condition that we shall know even as we are known.
As He that made us, and understands us thoroughly, knows, so
shall we know. Now it is all haze, with here and there a single
point jutting out before us; but by and by every part shall be per-
fect and distinct.
In order still more clearly to explain it, he brings in an illustta-
, kion which comes home to our own personal experience — namely,
the distinction between what we know as men, and what we knew
as children. We see that there were bits and beginnings of know!
edge in our childhood in respect to things which are transparent to
us now. AVe remember how, for certain reasons which we could not
understand, our father or mother was led to do or forbear certain
things in reference to satisfying our curiosity. We remember that
when we went to them with questions, they were often put back
upon us with some feeble explanation, or some faint analogy, or
Svith the answer, "When you are older you will understand it a
great deal better than I can explain it to you now."
I look back and see the faint beginnings of these things in my
4 TEE HEBEAFTEB,
early childhood. Comparing the fragments of knowledge which I
had then with what I have reached now by maturity of faculty and
added experience, I find that they were but the merest sketches,
scarcely initials, of the whole name. And the apostle says :
" When I WRfS a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought
as a child ; but when I became a man, I put away childish things."
He said, substantially, " I put away all these imperfect concep-
tions in favor of others. I rose to a clear view of things as they are,
instead of being limited to mere shadowy views of things.
The application is : In this complete state, when we attempt to
look forward to things after death, and in the ulterior development
of things, in the other life, our knowledge will be as transcendently
greater than the best of us have here now, as the knowledge of man-
hood is better than the conceptions which we remember to have had
when we were little children. In other words, now, at our best,
after gathering up all the light which there is in Scripture, and
after reasoning upon it as best we can, we can still say to ourselves
without any special modesty, " We only know about the after-life,
about the other state, as the child knows about life and manhood,
while it is yet a little child." We know something in general, but
very little in particular.
After this reasoning (recurring again to the words, " Love never
faileth," with which he began this run of thought), the Apostle
says, " Now, although we put away so much mystery and dim
knowledge ; although in respect to the whole after-career there is
so much that we cannot compass nor at all understand, and so
much that we misunderstand, and so much that we understand in
specks or in spots, yet, after all, there is something that we do know-
positively, and can understand ; that is, that in the progress and de-
velopment of ourselves hereafter, this is the line along which
humanity is going to develop.
•' Now abideth faith, hope, love, these three."
There is the luminous path along which humanity is to move
after death, and through the eternal cycles.
What, then, is faith ? That word is used unfortunately. It is
employed in a generic sense, as well as in many specific senses.
Faith, according to the definition in Hebrews, is " the substance
of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen." That
whole range of knowledge which a man can see, or hear, or handle — all
scientific material knowledge — lies below the sphere of faith. Above
that are what we call moral intuitions and affectional intuitions.
That is to say, we think of ten thousand relations and things which
have no external exponent in them. We think of things which aro
THE REBEAFTEB. 6
not seen. In other words, the higher faculties of man — ^his superior
reason, his moral sense, all those truths which are deduced from
his experiences, or from processes founded upon them — are things
unseen; that is, super-sensuous. We have a whole range of sen-
suous truth which we discern by the five senses of the body.
"We have the lower range, and the lower part of that range, which
we discern thus. But, also, we are quite familiar with what is meant
by friendship, and honor, and fidelity, and disinterestedness. These
are qualities; but they are qualities which are invisible. We see
what actions they lead to ; but the things themselves we do not see.
As the mind is developed, it becomes competent to form larger
and larger conceptions of things which exist only to the thought —
of moral afiections and intuitions. And this power, being generic,
is faith. It is that action of the mind which takes in things that
the senses do not take in — the truths that lie above them.
Now, as there is an infinite sphere of such things, so faith will
have a sphere of special adaptations. There was, as recorded in
Hebrews, a faith that worked by fear, which moved Noah to build
the ark ; there was a faith that worked by conscience, which led
Abraham to sacrifice his son ; and there is a faith which works by
love. There are special applications of faith. But the generic idea
of faith, is, that it is that power which dis~cems relations and con-
ceives of truths which have no physical exponents. It is that power
by which we take cognizance of things which are discernible only
by the higher nature.
So, then, reducing it somewhat to a philosophical form, or bring-
ing it within the circuit of modern habits of thought, we should say
that the nature of man is to be developed in the other life. y
" Now abideth faith." ^^^ '^
This is a thing which will last. The things which we see and
handle in this world will perish. Our bodies we shall not carry
with us into the other world. There is, you know, a belief that
these outward forms will rise in the resurrection ; but I should like
to know what sort of physical bodies those will be which are resur-
rected without flesh and blood — for Paul says, as plainly as words
can say,
" Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God."
There is to be a body raised ; but it is not to be a physical body.
It is to be a spiritual body. All that belongs to this mortal life ; all
tliat in this mortal life has depended upon physical organization ;
all that is relative to this mortal condition ; all that is identified
with this terraqueous globe; all those instincts which are neces-
sary only for the body's support — these stop with the grave. The
6 THE EEBEAFTEE.
body, with its aclies, with its passion g, with its appetites, with its
digestive functions, with its distributive apparatus, with those pro-
cesses which proceed from organic conditions, whether morbid or
wholesome — that is relative to time and matter, and ceases. And
all that which belongs to our mortal state ; that is, the groupings
together of men in families such as exist here, the groupings of
families into neighborhoods and States such as exist here, also,
under certain generic laws, and the grouping of neighborhoods and
States into nations — these are relative to this mortal condition.
They belong to the physical. They take their shape and direction,
of necessity, from the influences which spring up in the material
world. Men are largely physical, and are subject to the laws of
evolvement. And all this ceases at death.
There is no evidence of the existence of any such things as these
beyond this life. There are figures of cities, and mountains, and
gardens, and rivers, and what not ; but they are illustrations
borrowed from our experience here to throw some conception into
the other life. We can carry out with us no honors. We can carry
out no wealth. We can carry neither statues nor pictures. We
cannot carry anything that is physical. All things which belong to
this world are partial, local, temporary, and they stop short of the
other life. But there are some things which do not stop, which go
on; and among them is /az«^. That goes beyond the grave. The
higher part of man's nature, the superior part of his endowment,
that by which he recognizes higher truths — that goes on.
♦' Now abideth faith, hope."
Hope is not to be limited to our very partial use of that term.
We can conceive that one may have faith in the sense in which
I have defined it, and yet be as quiet as crystal as steel, or as glass.
One having faith may be a mere discerning spirit, living in the
higher range of perception and conception of truth. But there is
to be an animated nature. There is to be a heart of courage, of
enterprise, of cheeer. There is to Iw a heart that has action in it.
There is to be something beyond mere faith. There is to be a growing
spirit. There is to be such a thing a3 aspiration. There is to be a
tendency which shall make a man go upward. And that is hope —
glorious hope. All that which leads a man to go on and up, develop-
ing toward things better from thing'* worse I think is included in
this term hopo,
" Now abideth faith, hope."
Courageous, cheerful, animating 3»ope — that is to go on forever.
One thing more — love.
" Now abideth faith, hope, love."
THE HEBEAFTEB. 7
All that impulse by wliich the music of gladness is rung out
in created things, as if everything was a liarp, and lived only to
give forth from itself sweet sounds of music for others ; all that part
of human nature which is purest and best, which moves men toward
beneficences, and which leads them to give and give forever, using
themselves as a power beneficently — that abides.
Says the apostle, " There are three things in which our future
manhood is going to stand. It is not going to be what it is esti-
mated to be here in households and societies ; it is going to be de-
veloped along the line of faith and hope and love. In the direction
of these three great elements lies your manhood. In that direction,
lying luminous as a beam of light, is the path which your future
manhood is to take. Says the apostle,
" Now abideth faith, hope, love, these three ; but the greatest of these
[that toward which the others both tend] is love."
If now, you put all this together, you will see that the chiefest
of the apostles throws no discouragement upon our faith of the
future life. He does not take away from us the blessedness of the
vision of that " rest which remaineth for the people of God." But
he does teach us that all the minute parts of it, all its details, are
beyond the reach of our knowledge. "We are not forbidden to lift
our eye as a poet or painter does, and limn some vision of the here-
after ; we have that permission ; but so far as authoritative revela-
tion is concerned, we know that we shall not transfer the relative
state of things out of this life into the other ; and yet, that in the
other life we shall carry all our higher nature to an infinite degree
of brightness and afiiuence. We know, still further, that our growth
and development there will be accompanied with ecstatic joy.
To those, then, who ask what are to be the conditions in the
other life of the countless myriads of men who have been going out
of this world through countless ages, all the answer that can be
given, is : We know not. We know not whether from other sources
than this earth heaven is thronged and populated. We know not
where heaven is. We know not what it is. It has not been revealed
to us. There is not a word from the beginning of the Bible to the
end that can tell you definitely where heaven is, or what it is. It is
the place where the blessed are. Place f That term smacks of
physical matter; and so far.it is an imperfect term. Where the
blessed are, is heaven ; but whether it is near or far, whether it is
above or below, we know not. We are not in a state to know. What
might be called the geographical position of heaven is a thing which
you may think of as much as you please, but which no man. has a
right to put his demarcation on, with, " Thus saith the LortU*
8 TEE EEEEAFTEB.
You may say, " Thus fondly have I thought ; thus am I glad to be-
lieve ;" but nothing more have you permission to say. In regard tc
how the vast concourse in heaven subsist, the Word of God ia
silent.
" We know in part, and we prophesy in part; but when that which is per-
fect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away." " For now wa
see through a glass darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but
then shall I know even as also I am known."
We know not whether there are to be national divisions, com-
munal groups, or anything such as we have here. The mode
of future being transcends anything that we know. We are as
unable to understand it as a dog is to understand the nature of a
commonwealth. Go, try to explain to the next intelligent creature
below you all that you know of virtue, and disinterestedness, and
love, and beauty. Explain a joke to a dog, if you can. Here are
beings one or two ranks below you ; and it is absolutely impossible
to explain to a lower state of faculty the qualities of a higher state,
or of a higher class of faculties superinduced upon a lower one. We
stand in the line of the same analogy ; and it is impossible to explain
to us the evolvements which come from new faculties, or from old
faculties developed to such a degree that they are to all intents and
purposes new to us.
If you ask why God did not reveal more to us respecting the
hereafter, I reply by asking. Why do not you explain something of
^ the domesticities of life to a dog ? He could not understand it if
you did ; and we could not understand that which relates to the
future if God should explain it to us.
Then comes the question, What is to be the condition of fami-
lies ? Then comes the question so fond, so natural, find so unre-
bukable, but to which we receive no answer. Shall I know my
friends in the heavenly land ?
"Then shall I know even as also I am known." "Where I am, there ye
may be also."
We infer, from the general tenor of Christ's instructions by
which he comforted his disciples, and from the sayings of some of
^ the apostles, that we shall retain our identity in the other life ; but
there is no explicit knowledge or teaching on this subject. I be-
lieve we shall know each other in heaven ; but still, think of it a
little. How do we know each other now ? If I were to take a Bal-
timore oriole, and show him to you as he sits full of litheness sing-
ing on a bough ; and if you were to bring him down with a shot-
gun, and pluck off his crimson or scarlet feathers, so that there
was nothing left but the bare bird, and then set him up, would I
TUi: HEBEAFTEB. U
know him ? Would you know him ? He would present an appear-
ance Tiither strange and homely and unsavory.
I would not convey anything in the way of ridicule, nor under-
value anything ; but this I say : that when we come to live together
again, much that we call our personal i"dentity here will be left be-
hind. We have adapted ourselves to taking people as they are.
One has been so irritable that you have been in the habit of restrain-
ing yourself in his presence, and you cannot dissociate from him
the thought of his irritableness. Another is proud ; and you have
gone around the feeling of pride in him as a man would go around
the edge of a projecting rock, that he might not dash himself or his
horse against it. Another is cautious. Aiiother is headlong. There
are all temperaments and modes of development, and you have to
atop and think how to get along with them. You make an average,
and take them for what they are to you here. You do not appre-
ciate their superior excellences — those traits which will shine bright-
est there. You see them in their undeveloped state. Your thought
concerning them is, " How shall I move among them ? You take
your realization of their present imperfections, and transfer that to
their after-state. But if all that is sweet and beautiful in them
should be harmonized and rounded out into symmetry, and all the
passions and appetites and imperfections and clogs which belong to
them here' below should be dropped away, how would you know
them? What would be left of some men to know them by if
you were to take away all their faults ?
While we believe that in the other life we shall know each other,
we are in danger of attempting to transfer too much of the physical
in which they live to that other life, and of supposing that we shall
see our friends in the spirit-world as we see them here. If you
allow for the drifting of an undercurrent in making your calcula-
tion, there is great liberty in this direction ; but it is a liberty which
will be likely to bring you upon shoals.
I believe that I shall know my friends, and that they will know
me, in heaven ; but there will be a great deal of difference between
the knowing in this life and the knowing in that. I know that we
shall be as the angels of God ; I know that we shall be satisfied, be-
cause we shall be like Him'; I know that we shall be sons of God ;
but it doth not yet appear what that shall be. Nobody can now tell
what that means. I shall know you, but it will be in your corona-
tion robes. It will be when you have on your crowns, not of silver
or of gold, but of a glorious, heavenly, divine virtue. It will be
when you shall bear the palm, not of any perishing tree, but of im-
mortalities gathered in you. It will be when you are priests and
10 THE HEREAFTER.
kings in the other life. I shall look with glowing eyes on your
glittering beauty then. I shall know you, and you shall know me,
and you shall be mine, and I shall be yours. Oh, brethren, how it
will transcend anything that we know or can comprehend now !
Take some maiden. She has seen the stranger come as a toiler
and ask work of her father ; and yet, there was something in his
brow and in his eye that kindled respect. He worked from day to
day on wages ; little by little she discovered rare virtues and excel-
lences in him ; and at last he won her ingenuous heart and pledge.
Yet it was hid from her who he was, until, all arrangements having
been consummated, she was carried by her parents to a distant city.
It was understood that there was to be the coronation of a king ;
and she was filled with wonder as to what that could mean. And
when the trumpets blew, and the curtains were thrown aside, issu-
ing from the portals of a palace to the magnificent platform, came
forth he who was to be crowned ; and the firing of artillery and the
ringing of bells made music through all the heavens above ; and
behold, there stood before her dazzled eyes her lover, no more toiling
and sweating, but lifted up in his supreme beauty, and grandly
robed, and the object of universal admiration and cheering respect,
with a crown upon his head !
This is all literal and plain compared with what it will be when
I who have known you in the flesh, brother and sister, behold you
brought out in your Father's kingdom, and God shall put a crown
upon your head, and I shall say, " It is the same one that I loved
upon earth."
" It doth uot yet appear what we shall be."
But we ask, " Shall I find in heaven all those who have become
so necessary to my mortal happiness that I can scarcely do without
them ? Shall I find my children there ?" I shall surely find mine
there. Will they know me ? Do they know me now ? Do their
sweet little thoughts hover above me, and distil upon my head, as
dews come upon fiowers at night ? Are my children mine ? or, are
they like the drops of a brook, which flows between flowery banks
until it loses itself in a river, which pours out into the ocean ? Are
they only drops mingled with myriad other drops, to make ujd the
universal sea ? Are my children immei'sed and lost in the great
ocean of human existence ? Have I given them up for ever ? Is
all this discipline, all this lore of the nursery, all this sweet life upon
the knee, all this night and day in my bosom, as they lay sick while
they were babes — is all this gone forever ? Is this, too, one of the
illusions of life ? My boys — are they mine only as they are every-
body's ? Is there nothing of me in them ? Is there nothing that
my heart may claim in them ?
TEE EEBEAFTEB. 11
I believe that we shall know our children, as I believe that they
shall know us, not only as well as we know them, but far better.
"Will they not have grown ? Very likely. I do not know. I can-
not say. One thing I believe, and that is, that faith, hope, and love
are not relative. All that in my children which contained the seed
of promise ; all that through which I looked confidently toward the
future ; all that which made them my companions and my joy —
that shall abide, and shall be mine. They will not appear as they
did in their mortal bodies. Their bodies will then be rare and ex-
quisite compared with those which they wore on earth. But there
will be lines and lineaments by which I shall identify them, though
they will be without the clogs and hindrances which belong to this
mortal state. •
I doubt not that we shall.find our children there. I do not be-
lieve that the heart has been kindled to so much fear and suffering
that it may be quenched with everlasting forgetfulness.
This is my liberty. It is not God's revelation. It is my neces-
sity. And I am not rebuked when I indulge in such thoughts.
My heart cries out to those who have loved me and gone to the
heavenly land ; and when I cry to them, I hear a voice answering,
as the Spirit and the Bride are represented as saying " Come I" At
night, by day, at twilight^ in joy and in sorrow, I hear the voices of
loved ones saying, " Come !" Over all troubles, louder than the noise
of winds and storms, I hear the voices of those who have gone be-
fore me, saying, " Heaven is real; God is real; love is eternal;
come— from out of winter, from out of trouble, from out of storms,
from out of the sin-land, come !" There sound perpetually from the
walls and battlements of the celestial city voices that win and woo
every aching heart, saying, " Come, come, come!"
And yet, if you go into the minutiae, into the specialities, of
those things which a mother's heart, or a father's heart, or a lover's
heart, or a friend's heart craves to know, there is no answer. But
you are left to your own liberty. As a poet is left to imagine what
he pleases, and as an artist is left to draw what he pleases, so you
may imagine and draw what you please; only the results at which
you arrive will not be authoritative. This, however, is certain : that
our friends are not lost. This is certain : that they are not less
than they were on earth. This is certain : that they are more joy-
bearing and joy-producing than they were here. This is certain :
that I shall be satisfied.
So, Christian friends, not to draw out unduly this line of thought,
nor to weary you with it, in all our longings for the heavenly land,
let us bear in mind that, according to the teaching of the most rapt
12 THB EEBBAFTEB,
and inspired of all the teachers of the New Testament, the other life
differs from this, not by the wasting away of things with which we
are familiar here, and which we are wedded to here, except so far as
they are relative to a low and imperfect state.
"What eagle ever went sorrowing after its shell when once it was
born ? While it is an egg, the shell is its protection, and in the
walls of that little globe it has its safety ; but when once it has
broken the shell, and come out, and become an eagle of the heaven,
it never goes sorrowing back to the nest again, though when it was
but an eaglet, and unfledged, it hugged it so.
In all your thoughts of this life, where God has nested us, and
where we are fed and developed, remember that the things which are
now dear to you, while they are things good and desirable, are many
of them transient ; but that part of your nature which sorrow is
meant to develop, that part which love is ripening, that part out of
which comes the truest joy, that part which leads to all that is sub-
lime in character, and is transcendent and divine, and allies you to
God — remember that this grows apace, and waits in those that have
gone before. How beautiful it will be when we shall find, not what
we have lost, but that which has been saved and nurtured for us !
I go, in the autumn, and sow my seeds through my garden — for
many of them must be autumn-sown ; aivd when the spring comes,
and I visit my grounds again, I shall find not what I sowed.
I threw the brown black seeds into the dirt ; there stands the
glowing spike all a-blossom. I sowed to the flesh : I shall reap of
the spirit. I gave dust to dust. God wrapped in his arms my child.
He tended my dear ones. He loved into sweeter beauty my friends.
They are nobler than when I elected them. And in the heavenly
land they wait. What ? How looking ? In what occupations ? We
know not precisely ; but this we know, generally : that faith, hope,
love, and all that can be evolved out of them in human experience,
are forever unchanged, except to grow brighter and brighter.
TEE EEBEAFTEB. 13
PRAYEK BEFORE THE SERMON.
We adore thee, our Father. Though we behold but thine outward
glory— the trailing of thy robe, a3 it were; though we discern but little of
thy countenance; and though we are not yet Ufted up and purified so that
we can enter in, and know the heart of God; yet, where thou dwellest, there
is light. We look toward the beams and the glory thereof, and rejoice in
that which we do know, and from it interpret that which is yet to be re-
vealed. We rejoice that as we live and grow toward the spirit, we are pre-
paring ourselves for that higher sphere and that more blessed knowledge.
Not forever shall we be confined below ; not forever imprisoned in the flesh,
nor tried and proved and tested in our moral natures, and in all the exigen-
cies of human life. Tbou hast put us away from thee that thou mightest
bring us back increased and purified. Thou hast sent us thitherward to
school, and thou art waiting to bring us back to our Father's house, educated
into the knowledge of true spiritual living. Grant that we may have before-
hand some sense of that rest toward which we are hastening ; that we may
behold life not merely to ask for its pleasures, to participate in its joys, to
reap its honors, to mourn over its infelicities and shun its pains. May we be
quickened by it in our inward life, knowing whose sons we are, and who
is waiting for us in the heavenly land. May we accept all the experiences
of this mortal sphere, so that they may work together for our good, cleansing
us, strengthening us, inspiring whatever is good in us, and augmenting it,
both in quality and in volume, that by and by we may be not unworthy to
stand in thy presence, when we shall have been cleansed, purified, and pre-
sented by Jesus, our Elder Brother, before Ihe throne of the Father. Then,
if, O Lord our God, thou shalt say, " Worthy, enter!" what will have been
all the trouble of life? What will have been its disappointments, its sharp
conflicts, its crosses, the baptism of blood even, if by suffering we imitate the
Captain of our salvation, who through sufferings was made perfect? Vouch-
safe to every one in thy presence that foresight of faith, that enthusiasm and
gladness, that joy of confident belief, by which he may enter in and take
beforehand some fruit of the heavenly land.
If there be any in thy presence who are bowed down with trouble, to-
day, may the cloud lift. If there be any who feel that they have been
pressed beyond endurance, reveal to them that inward hidden strength
which comes from God, that they may stand, not in themselves, but by the
might of the power that is in thee.
We pray for all those who mourn the hidings of thy countenance, and
for all those who are surprised by sin, and who mourn and grieve over their
repeated insubordinations — their pride, their selfishness, their vanity, their
various worldly ways. Will the Lord grant that they may be strengthened
with all strength, and with knowledge, to know how to overcome besetting
sins, and how to build up into symmetry and perfection all these erring parts
of their nature.
We pray that thou wilt be gracious unto any that are in bereavements,
sorrowing for the loss of those who have been dear to them. Grant that
their grief may not weave about all the objects of their thoughts garments
of mourning. May they discern, as did those of old, angels clothed in white.
And grant that they may be lifted out of their sorrows by the cheer of the
Holy Spirit.
If there be those who are in the midst of afflictions, and are hindered
from coming to the house of God, we pray that thou wilt be with them, and
give them strength of body, and hope and joy in the Holy Ghost. If there
be any who are sick, we pray that they maybe gracioiisly restored to health.
14 TEE HERE AFTER.
or be prepared for the events of thy providence. And may It be alike to
them whether thou shalt with thy hand — the pierced hand of love — call them
to thee, or lengthen out their earthly service. May the Lord's dealings with
them seem to them the best of gifts.
Remember, we pray thee, all of those who are burdened with duty and
daily care. Especially remember those to whom have been committed
households, and who stand as ministers in those households, bearing the
burdens of the weak, supplying the wants of the needy, and attempting to
fulfill the law of Jesus Christ. We pray that thou wilt strengthen their go-
ing. Grant that they may not be discouraged. Even where they wait long
for the fruit of the seed which they have sown in tears, may they still have
faith to wait, and to believe in the Lord.
We pray that all the young in our congregation may grow up in truth,
honor, purity, and integrity of purpose, through life. We pray that
they may serve the church and the community in which they dwell with
more signal fidelity than those who have gone before them.
We beseech of thee that men may take a higher thought of disinterested
love and unselfish devotion, and that our land may be redeemed from all
sordid influences, and from all corruptions, and from all strivings of wicked
men. We pray that thou wilt purify this great nation, and make it God-
fearing.
We pray that thou wilt grant thy blessing to rest upon all that preach to-
day. Everywhere remember those who teach. May our Sabbath-schools and
Bible-classes come up in remembrance before thee. Bless those who labor
therein. May they labor in faith, rejoicing in sight when that is vouchsafed
to them; and may they still labor in faith when sight is denied them. May
they have faith though success may not seem to attend their efforts. May
their faith never fail. May they never be weary in well-doing.
Grant thy blessing to rest upon the nations of the earth everywhere.
May those who are in darkness receive the light of the Gospel in Christ
Jesus. May those who are in trouble be relieved from the conflicts of the
world. May violence cease, and peace reign instead. May knowledge drive
away superstition and ignorance.
We pray that the great race may come up in remembrance before thee.
May they grow too strong to be oppressed. May they stand, at last, clothed
in their rights, able to govern themselves, and be governed of God, so
that there shall be no more bitterness, no more wars by ambitious rulers, and
so that the whole earth may sit together, rejoicing in love and harmony.
Hear us in these our petitions, accept our thanksgiving, pardon all otir
sins, receive us graciously, and redeem us finally with everlasting salvation ;
and to the Father, the Son, and the Spirit, shall be praises immortal. Amen.
PRAYER AFTER THE SERMON.
Our heavenly Father, wilt thou grant thy blessing to rest upon the word
spoken. May it cheer and comfort us. May we seek out of this stormy land,
the land of the unsetting sun. May our tlioughts know how to fly through
the space which separates between life and death. Here, in the death-land
we begin to live where, living, we shall be as thou art, O loving Father!
Comfort those who mourn. Strengthen those who are weak, ued by
trouble. Draw near to those whose hearts, long hungering, are unfed. Be
a Father yet to thy children who are lingering here, and bring us all safely,
at last, to that eternal house not made with hands.
And to thy name shall be the praise, Father, Son, and Spirit. Amen.
II.
The Deceitfulness of Riches.
INVOCATION.
Bless us, our Father, uot according to our understanding of our needs, but
according to the greatness of thy mercy and thj^ compassion. Cleanse our
hearts from unbelief. Grant that the night may pass from our eyes, that we
may become the childreu of light, and rejoice in the nearness of our souls to
thee, and in the participation of those blessings which thou art wont to con-
fer upon those who love thee. May we be able to emancipate ourselves from
care. May we be able to retire from those vexing thoughts, from those
doubts, and from that unbelief which so often hold ua from thee and from
ourselves. May the services of the sanctuary be greatly to our edification,
building us up in the beUef of the truth, and giving us stronger desires for
holiness, and bringing us nearer to thee. We ask it for Christ's sake. Amen.
2.
THE DECEITFTJLNESS OF EICIES.
And the deceitfulness of riches.— Matt. XIII., 22.
This is a part of the parable of the sowing of the seed.
*' He also that received seed among the thorns is he that heareth the
word ; and the care of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches, choke
the word, and he becometh unfruitful."
In other parts of Scripture we have descriptions of the destruc-
tive influence of riches. But while they are elsewhere called canker,
and names involving corrosion and disease, it is the deceitfulness of
riches that is here meant — and that, too, in reference to the growth
in us of the truth — the quickening in us of moral sense. It chokes
the word, and it becomes unfruitful. That is, as seed left to weeds
(and especially, in Palestine, to thorns and briers), which eagerly
take possession of land that is not tilled, comes up, it may be, but
languishes, and never comes to head or ripens into grain ; so men
are kept from developing Christian graces or Christian manhood,
not so much by riches in their unavoidable nature, as by the deceit-
fulness which attends the obtaining, the keeping, and the using of
them.
We are not to interpret the New Testament as being averse to
riches. In the Old Testament wealth was distinctly recognized as a
divine blessing. It was the reward which God gave to a life of
integrity and virtue. Ample fields, vineyards, olive-orchards,
fruit-trees, bringing forth abundantly — these were promised to those
who obeyed God. This was the Oriental form of wealth. The
Kew Testament does not contradict it. It sometimes seems to do
so, but it is only on account of the emphasis which it places upon
the dangers which betide an indiscriminate and untaught love of
excessive riches. Not only are we told that it is a canker, but we
are told that it eats men as a cancer would eat them. The love of
money is pronounced to be a root of all evil ; but ncrwhere is money
or riches said to be evil. An inordinate concupiscence of wealth is
evil. Our version has it that it is the root of all evil, as if it took
Sunday Morntno. Feb. 25, 1872. Lesson : Dan. IV. Hymna, (Plymouth CoL-
lecUon) : Nos. 578. 500.
18 TEE DECEITFULNE8S OF BI0EE8.
precedence of eyerything else. A better rendering is, that it is a root
of all evil : there is no evil in the world which has not been set on
foot either by the desire of wealth, or by th* possession of it.
In the text there is no declaration against riches themselves, any
more than against care. Care means, at large, the ordinary duties
and burdens of life. There is a side on which riches, however good
they may be, are dangerous, and that side is their deceitfulness.
They deceive men.
God's providence has employed riches for the development of
human society, and for the education of men. It cannot be con-
troverted that the amassing of property has always been a way of
obtaining manhood, and that the ingenuity and perseverance and
commercial thrift required for the amassing of treasure, has at the
same time blessed the world, tending toward peace, development,
civilization, power, bearing seeds in one country which have ripener'
in other lands. Although attending commerce a;id the pursuit of
wealth are many incidental evils, yet, on the whole, commerce has
been an evangelizing element in the world. Although individual
men may thrive in wealth in communities that are poor, yet it is
susceptible, I think, of demonstration, that poor communities never
accomplish much ; that while riches are not necessary for each indi-
vidual, riches are necessary for large bodies of men, and for the
race. It is by their instrumentality that God develops men, and
carries refinement and civilization throughout the earth. In our
day, the production of values is education ; and more men are called
to earn riches than ever before. It can no longer be said that mer-
chants are a class. It can no longer be said that those men who are
seeking wealth are the few. Money-getting pervades the mass of
society from top to bottom. Everybody is more or less a producer,
in the wholesome parts of society. The desire for riches is proba-
bly more wide-spread in this laud than in any other. Not only so,
but there is a larger amount of property owned j^gr capita here than
in any other country. The stimulating nature of our free institu-
tions tends to wake men up. The doctrine of human equality is
coming, in this land, to be universally accepted. We have no titles.
We have no political or class distinctions. The distinctions which
exist among us are those which we ourselves make. They are
founded upon Jearning, and skill in art, and wealth with its attend-
ant excellences. These distinctions every man in the community
feels that he has a right to if he earns them.
We have also a stimulant which is derived from the climate ;
from the soil ; from the vast unbroken treasures of the mountains ;
from iiie ungathered treasures of the wilderness. The heavens
TEE DECEITFVLNESS OF BICHES, 19
above and the earth beneath, the water and the land, the rock and
the soil, are all holding out treasure to our glowing expectation.
And upon this land has been spread the most ambitious and active
of all peoples. It is not the old and sluggish that emigrate. The
young, the enterprising, the daring, come to ouf shores. And
although they bring with them some who are slow and weak by
reason of age, yet the character of the population of this continent
is that of eager industry.
Our faults, and largely our virtues, spring out of this wide ambi-
tion for wealth, and this wide industry which is manifested in get-
ting it. There is a universal movement in society toward the
acquiring of wealth. Indeed, there is danger that those professions
which pay slenderly will be abandoned, while all those ways which
have their insignia written in letters of gold, and which promise
speedy wealth, are absolutely choked with men who are determined
to be rich. I think I may say that far more than in any other
direction the ambition of the young in our time is turned toward
money-making — and that, not from disreputable motives ; not for
base and sordid reasons, though perhaps in excess and in dispropor-
tion. The generous, the daring, the educated, the refined, all seek
it, because all appreciate how mighty an instrument it is in the
hands of men.
Now, we are not to relinquish this pursuit of wealth. When we
consider what we mean by xcealth — that it is the production of an
active force in life ; that it is not simply a shadow but a reality ;
that it is an instrument of blessedness ; when we consider its power
for refinement, for civilization, for education, for material thrift ;
when we consider how much it may be made to serve morality, and
yirtue, and domesticity, and religion itself ; when we consider that
the church, in all its wide-spread enterprises throughout the globe,
is obliged to seek help from riches — we are not to stand and inveigh
against riches, and we are not to warn young men against becoming
or desiring to become, rich. It may be that there is an excessive
desire in that direction ; it may be that too many are pursuing
wealth to an extent which is injurious ; but we are not to condemn
the thing itself : we are faithfully to point out to them the evils which
accompany it. We are to put in the hands of every one of the ten
thousand eager aspirants for wealth the warnings of God against
the dangers which go with it, that they may watch ; that they
may be vigilant. And this morning I shall call your attention, not
to all, but to a few of the principal dangers on one side — namely,
the deceitfulness of riches.
1. Riches are deceitful in the insidious growth which they pro-
20 TEE BECEITFULNESS OF RICHES.
mote of the desire for wealth, quite independent of what it is worth
in its positive power. No man is hurt who fixes his eye upon
moral, social or domestic ends, and then seeks wealth purely as an
instrument by which to accomplish these ulterior purposes. The
motive which he has redeems him from peril. But the transition
from wishing money for the legitimate purposes of money to ^
desire for it in and of itself, quite independent of its uses, is very
insidious. There are many who pass entirely from the desire of
riches as a power, to the desire of riches simply as a possession. For
men scarcely study what the moral effect of the pursuit of wealth
is. They do not watch themselves. There is no sentinel set to
warn them against danger from excess. They do not perceive what
changes take place in them from period to period. They do not
look back to see what they are as compared with what they were.
And so the desire for wealth grows stronger and stronger. The
generous feeling with which they set out is disappearing more and
more. The idea of good to be done is less and less distinct. And
finally their ambition becomes solely a desire for the acquisition
of riches.
2. In the transition from a normal desire for wealth to the fervor
of avarice, there is great danger of deception among men. Avarice is
nothing but a higher form of the wish to obtain property — so high
that it cuts off one's sympathy from others, and lowers the im-
pression of the value of things which are more valuable than riches.
It becomes first a kind of intemperance ; and then it becomes, like
intemperance itself, a disease ; and finally it becomes insanity.
There are few misers ; but there are a great many men who have
the first touches of miserism in them. There is a closeness, a
tenacity with which men hold money. There is a growing indispo-
sition to use it for any other purpose than to increase it. There is
a spirit by which men see in riches only capital to be invested for
the sake of its interest, which is to them good to be invested again.
So they roll their possession, as winter-boys in New England used to
roll the snow. In rolling, it increases in magnitude, and is. at last
vaster than they can shove. And when they have amassed it, what
do they do ? They let it stand where it is, and the summer finds
it, and melts it all away. It sinks to water again ; and the water
is sucked up, and goes to make snow once more for other foolish
winter-boys to roll into heaps. Men go on amassing wealth, either
in the early stages, or the middle stages, or the latter stages of
avarice, desiring it, not for what it can do, not for what it is as a
quickener, as a helper, as a teacher, as a purveyor of God's bounty,
but purely and simply because it is wealth.
THE DECEITFULNESS OF BICHE8. 21
Tliis avarice does not run alone to money. Men who collect
books, as I can bear witness, often find and buy them, not so much
for wliat they can do with them, as that they may have more. They
come to desire valuable books, simply because they are valuable.
Especially they desire rare books. If there are but two or three
copies of a certain book in the world, they are all the more eager to
possess one of them. And then there is often a desire to have dif-
ferent editions of the same works. And so men enlarge, and
enlarge, and enlarge.
I know how misers feel. I do not know how they feel about gold
and silver ; but I know how they feel about books and engravings
and etchings. An old second-hand book dealer said to me, one day,
to my great benefit, as I went in to inquire about a book, " Oh,
you've got it, haven't you ?" " Got what," said I. " Why, the
book mania. You bought an edition of this book of me awhile ago,
and now you are after another edition. Yes, that's it. When I see
a man who wants another edition of the same work, I say to myself,
* He has the mania. He is bit.' " Sure enough, I was bit, although
I am now cured.
He that wants acre on acre, you do not ? Well, then yon
are not a farmer. Did you ever see a farmer who did not want all
the land that bounded his ? He would want it if it were ten thou-
sand acres more, and ten thousand on that.
Garments ? I do not care for more than one good suit, so that
I may exchange it often enough ; but are there not those who would
add dress to dress, dress to dress, far more than they could wear ?
Still, there is this desire of increasing the treasure of garments.
So it is with every kind of store. This predisposition to press
wealth beyond any legitimate use ; this tendency to transfer the
proper desire of wealth — that is the desire of wealth as a power and
benefaction — to the desire of wealth simply to hoard it — this is very
insidious and very deceitful in its approaches. Beware of it.
3. Wealth is deceitful in taking the place of legitimate enjoy-
ments in life. When men begin the adventure of wealth-seeking,
they are often generous ; they are often good ; they are often sus-
ceptible ; they are often broad in their tastes and relishes for plea-
sure. I love to see a young man go into business rejoicing in
virtues ; large-hearted ; quick to respond to all the touches of
friendship ; alive to every inspiration of heroism ; ambitious of dis-
tinction in more than his own routine or round of life ; full of a sense
of the admirableness of beauty ; awake to that beauty which God's
hand profusely scatters in the heaven and upon the earth. I am
always sorry to see a young man who, when once he is engaged in
22 TEE DECEITFULNES8 OF BICUE8.
business, begins to plume himself on having cut off these " super-
fluities," as he calls them ; who has grown careless of everything ;
who cares very little for politics, very little for society, very little for
anything, till money is spoken of, but who then is roused, sensitive,
full of conversation, eager. It is not a good sign. And yet, old cur-
mudgeons will tell you, " Let everything alone, my son, until you
have a good solid foundation under your feet, and then you can
attend to some of these fancy things." That is to say, " Do not
listen to your moral sense. While you are making money, make
money — do not listen to taste. While you are making money, make
money — do not listen to ideas of social enjoyment. While you are
making money do not learn music ; do not learn painting or draw-
ing ; do not practice manly athletic exercises ; do not do anything
except go to your office early and stay there late." And when you
are old, and have achieved wealth, what are you worth ? What is
your condition ? You are as dry as the leather pouch which holds
your ducats. All your juice is gone.
How deceitful is that process ! How few men retain the exhil-
arations of their youth, or what are called their wilder moods, when
they are gaining wealth ! And yet, how much better are these wilder
moods of untrained, generous youth, than those hard, senseless, soul-
less moods which men run into by addiction to money-making, and
the absolute exclusion of everything else !
The process is very gradual. It steals on men as death steals on
the sick. It is known afar off only by the gradual coldness of the
extremities, which creeps up, inch by inch, little by little, until at last
the vital organs are reached, and the man is dead.
4. The relative growth of the selfish over the generous ought to
furnish a separate head — and it shall ; for I apprehend that very few
persons ever watch the process as it comes upon themselves. I be-
lieve that constitutionally, as a general thing, youth is generous.
What is life ? The remains of youth are the best part of it. Al-
though it may be inexperienced, and may make mistakes, yet it car-
ries with it sympathy with men and interest in the well-being of
society. Men starting out with good blood, good-nature and good
prospects in life, are apt to be more nearly right than men forty or
fifty years of age, unless the latter have been by divine grace enabled
to cultivate their conscience and heart all the way through.
It is necessary that one should work. There is nothing more
wrong than to suppose that a man can get wealth without devoting
himself to the acquiring of it. There must be industry and fore-
thought. Addiction to business is indispensable if one is going to
succeed in amassing property. There ought to be every day vaca-
TEE DECEITFULNESS OF BICHES. 23
tions for the culture of the mind, and for recreation. NeYertheless,
the gaining of money is not an accident. It is a matter of design
from beginning to end, and legitimately. The product of the best
thought, and the best thought applied in the best way, is required
for the obtaining of "wealth. And the very process of making money
may itself be an education of men if they are not deceived by it, and
left to go without watch or without heed.
Frugality and economy are necessary ; but then, how easy it is
for a man to turn his industry into continuity without a pause ! How
easy it is for a man, out of frugality and economy, to come to ele-
gant stinginess — that is to say, stinginess at heart, with just enough
outgiving to keep him respectable in the circle where he moves I
What is called generosity is but the price which a man pays in con-
sideration of being thought hot stingy. Thank God, everybody
thinks stinginess is mean. Nobody likes to be called stingy. A
man who is worth twenty millions of dollars, and gives six cents a
year, does not like to be called stingy. Men give to some of the cus-
tomary things, and give obviously in various ways, in order to turn
oflF that imputation.
But this will not do. A man needs to stand well with himself,
A man Avants, in looking at himself, to say, " What am I, after all ?
What am I, in and in, through and through ?"
The deceitfulness of riches, I think will be detected, if one insti-
tutes a comparison between the exercise of his generous feelings in
earlier and later life. A man, when he was on a salary of a thousand
dollars a year, found mean§ of helping his associates. Here is a boy
who was brought up in the country on a farm, and who, having
come down to NewYork, has got into trouble ; the man goes to him,
and says, " Look here ; I will see you through this thing, if I go to
the poorhouse;" and he does see him through it. He helps a com-
panion on a thousand dollars a year. By and by his income is five
thousand dollars ; and a friend right along by the side of him, per-
haps from sickness, and perhaps from an unfortunate partnership,
has come to trouble. And now, I want to ask. Has this man grown
generous in proportion as his income has increased ? Does he say
to his companion, "I will give you forty thousand dollars, or fifty
thousand, anything, rather than see you go under. You shall not
go under. I will hold you up" ? Is there that tendency in his dis-
position to risk what he has in charitable sympathy and help which
there was when he was less prosperous ? When a man has an estate,
is he inclined to use what he has in the same broad, liberal way that
he was when he was possessed of only scanty means ? Does a man's
generosity grow in the ratio that his wealth does ? I do not ask
24 THE DECEITFULNESS OF BIGEES. '
whetlier men give away a good deal. That is not the question. If
you institute a comparison between the relative proportion of what
they gave when they were twenty years of age, and when they were
twenty-five ; or between what they gave away when they were twenty-
five and when they were thirty; or between what they gave away
when they were thirty and when they were thirty-five, and so on to
forty, and forty-five, and fifty, you will generally find that they grow
less generous as they advance in years ; and that by the time they
are fifty they generally begin to be very crustaceous and impene-
trable.
I apprehend that although it will be found that many men grow
up without having a suspicion that they are deteriorating, and with-
out the reputation of deteriorating, if you make inquisition into
their life, it will also be found that the ratio of the use of their
power for generous objects has been steadily decreasing from the be-
ginning down to the end.
I have a yearly income of a thousand dollars, and I give .away
one hundred dollars a year. I am prosperous, and by and by I have
an income of a million dollars a year — there are such men. Do I give
away one-tenth of that ? If, having an income of a million dollars
a year, I gave away one-tenth of it, would it not be considered an
extraordinary act of benevolence ? Does any man dare to say, in the
pursuit of wealth, " I will keep up the ratio between what I give
and what I receive all my life long "? There are some who do that,
and who increase the proportion. There are heroes among moneyed
men. Saints used to be taken out of caves, but nowadays we have
Protestant saints in the ordinary walks of life. There are men in
Wall Street — brokers and bankers — who stand near to the heart of
God, and who are pouring out their means in a way which gives evi-
dence of a Christianized manhood in them. There are noble men in
every direction — enough to encourage the young to believe that such
men are possible in business circles. But, generally speaking, is not
the deceitfulness of riches shown in this : that men are far more gen-
erous relatively to what they have, while they are young, than when
they are old ?
5. Then there is a deceitfulness to be noticed in the gradual de-
velopment of self-esteem and self-sufiiciency among those who are
in the possession of wealth. "When men begin, they all begin to-
gether ; and it is a fair race ; but they do not all come out alike-
One, and another, and another, drop out along the way. By and by
a few reach the goal. And he that is among the foremost begins to
feel his superiority — especially if he has gone through ten periods
of commercial panic, and come out all right. How he straightens
THE DECEITFULNESS OF MICEES. 25
himself lip I How he holds his head above those who have not
been so fortunate I " They may be very good men, and they may be
rich men, but then, they failed, and I never did." Yes you did.
When a man has become thoroughly conceited, he has gone into a
universal bankruptcy of manhood. When a man has, by seeking
wealth and gaining it, learned to compare himself with his fellow
men, he has failed. ,
" Oh, they are good men, nice fellows enough ; but then you
never meet them on 'Change." The kingdom of Heaven, to them,
means the bank. To them manhood means the power to get and to
hold money. And it is very insidiously, deceitfully, that this
measurement passes into men's minds. They come to judge
themselves by measurements of conceit. And at last they walk
in life feeling that money has made them second Nebuchad-
nezzars; and they strut, and say, "Is not this great Babylon
that I have built by the honor of my name and the might
of my right hand ?" Are not riches, have not riches been, to
them, deceitful, corrupting, destroying? When I see a man who
has by riches been insensibly led from sympathy with his fellow-
men to set himself up over them, and to look down upon those who
are poorer than he — the working classes — the men that are not, like
himself, pocketous ; when I see a man who is so puffed up by his
prosperity that he disdains those who are not prosperous around
about him, I say, " Oh, the deceitfulness of riches !" The man is a
fool to the top of his bent, and he does not know it. The poorest
man in the world is the man who touches his fellow men in the
fewest points. The richest man in the world is the man who has
the most warm and glowing sympathies Avhich connect him with all
classes and conditions in human life. Men are like great trees, which
never feed by one root, but which spread their roots abroad in all
manner of ramifications, drawing nourishment from the earth in
every direction. A tree which has but one root running straight
down into the ground, is like a man who, by the deceitfulness of
riches, has cut himself off from all sources of sympathetic supply,
and who ere long becomes branchless for want of nourishment, or is
overthrown by the storm.
6. The deceitfulness of riches is seen, also, in an entire perversion
which takes place in the minds of men who are prospered in respect
to what riches can do for them. Men feel that this world is good
enough when they are prospered, and are making a great deal of
money. When material forces are perpetually working for them
tike smelting furnaces in iron districts which are allowed to go out
neitiier day nor night, but burn on the year round, then they feel
23 THE BJ£CEITFUL2^E8S OF ETCHES.
that this "world is good enough for them, and they do not care for
the kingdom of God. But how are they cajoled I As if riches could
do anything except for the body !
Let a man be Tvorth — as I suppose some men are — a hundred
millions of dollars, and be shut up in his bedroom with the
gout, what is he really worth ? Or, suppose a man is worth fifty
millions of dollars, anjl suppose the only child that he has in the
world, the joy of his life, one of God's little children, that ran out
with him as he went away in the morning, and greeted him as he
came home at night, and kept bright in him the only green spot
that was there, is taken away, because God will not trust him with
it any longer, and he is left sitting by the empty cradle from which
has flown all that there was on earth of love to him, Avhat is he
worth ? What is a man worth though he have fifty millions of dol-
lars, sitting by the side of his empty cradle ? What is there in all
his money, or in all his ambition, that can comfort a man whose
heart is broken ? Money in your hand can do a great many things.
It can stop, and does stop, many tears ; but no money can stanch
the tears of one who has lost the only object of his afiection. Money
can build hospitals, and alleviate fevers ; but if you have a fever it
cannot cure you. Money can save many groans and sorrows ; but
when your friends are gone, and you have none to love, your money
cannot supply your lack, though you be as rich as Croeeus. There
are some things that riches can do for you, but if you can get noth-
ing but money you are not to be envied. Do not run the risk of
losing everything else for the sake of money. Money can buy a
great many things, but it cannot buy fidelity; it cannot buy love;
it cannot buy peace ; it cannot buy hope; it cannot buy consola-
tion. There are hours when the soul stands, as it were, between
two worlds, bankrupt for one, and a stranger to the- other. All the
money in the world cannot help you under such circumstances. It
is right tliat you should make money. I will not dissuade you from
that. There are many sequences of money-making which are noble.
But there are many things which money cannot do for you. So do
not let it deceive you. It may deceive you. It will Avhisper into
your cars many things that are lies. Consider some of these.
"While you are embarking in the search for wealth, you will,
every one of you, be told by Mammon, " You shall surely be rich ;"
and you will neglect many things that you would have done. You
will put your chances in life in tliat direction because jon have
faith tliat you shall realize the desire of your ambition. But not one
man out of fifty who starts in this race really gets rich.
If men simply wanted competence euougli to give them what
TEE DECEITFVLNESS OF MICHES. 27
they need to eat, and to drink, and to wear, and to bring their chil-
dren into the path where they, too, will be obliged to depend upon
their industry and frugality for their living, forty-nine men out of
fifty, in such a land as ours, ought, almost without a chance
of doubt, to have that amount of prosperity ; but that is not what
men think of. When they say that they are going to be rich, they
do not mean merely that they are going to have enough to live on,
and to bring up their children honorably, and to surround them-
selves with the necessities of life. What they call riches is some-
thing over and above what is necessary. It is something to be laid
up. And not more than one in fifty ever reach that. Of those who
are neglecting their youth and manhood, and are bent on becoming
wealthy, saying, "I am bound to die a rich man," forty-nine
are going to be deceived where one is going to succeed.
It is the deceitfulness of hope in regard to riches that you sliould
take heed to. One man is a carpenter, and he means to be a master-
builder, and to speculate in houses and lands, and to be as well off
as that other man. He goes to work, and, little by little, amasses
property, and puts money in the bank. Another man is a sailor •
and he means to rise to the command of a ship, and to make ven-
tures, and to own ware houses. He is going to be a rich man.
Another man is a merchant. He is a dry-goods broker. He is
going to be rich. Everywhere, whichever way you look, men are
confident, when they begin, that they are going to succeed. And I
should not object to this confident hope if it were not blinding and
deceiving. It is the beauty of hope that it does not estimate diffi-
culty, but runs with courage into things which, if it stopped to cal-
culate their difiiculties it would not be willing to assault. But that
is the point where the mischief comes in. You are neglecting the
culture of your understanding and your social afiections. You are
not building up a home, or the competency to have a home. You are
neglecting your manhood, and will be cheated of external wealth.
You will be a double bankrupt — a bankrupt inside and outside, in
heart and pocket.
And the promises of the happiness which you will experience in
your riches are probably not going to be fulfilled, even if you should
be one of the few who succeed in amassing wealth. Not once in a
hundred times are they the most happy men, as I have seen, who
have the greatest amount of riches. Now and then a man is happy
in his riches because he uses them well, and keeps alive the more
generous and manly qualities of his nature.
" It is more blessed to give than to receive."
A man who has true benevolence, and has the means of gratify-
28 THE DEGEITFULNESS OF MICHES.
ing it, is, or may be, one of the most happy men in the world. A
man who can go out a knight-errant, not any more with sword and
spear, but with that which is more potent than any sword or spear —
pecuniary power ; who can help the young to start in life ; who can
stand and bridge over the emergencies of men ; who can carry to
the sick and suffering the necessaries of life ; who can open the door
of the school, and put within the reach of the poor and the igno-
rant an education ; who is day by day carrying blessings to thou-
sands ; who loves to make men happy, and having wealth, devotes it
to making them happy — such a man is happy. His riches make
him happy — and they ought to. But when I look at rich men as a
class, I find that they are not the happiest of men, by any means.
They do not enjoy home more than other men, nor as much as other
men.
I tell you, there are two things which go to make fine playing
on a violin. The first is a master's hand. The second is a good
violin ; and the quality of the instrument is full as important as
the player's touch. If you take a violin and first break the highest
string, and by and by snap the next one, and finally break the next
one, leaving the base string, and that only, and that a great deal
the worse for wear, Paganini himself could not bring very much
out of that instrument except for surprise.
Men take their hearts, which are musical instruments, and snap
this cord, and that, and that, reducing themselves to one or two
points of sentient enjoyment, and then expect, because they are
rich, that they shall be happy. What you are in yourself is to de-
termine whether you are happy or not. You will not be made
happy by external things. It is inside that happiness lives. It is
that which is fresh and fruitful in you that is to make you happy.
I would rather be a man with a sanguine temperament, with ave-
rage good health, and in moderate business, with five hundred dol-
lars a year, who sees everything on the bright side, and has a quiet
hope of immortality through Jesus Christ — I would rather be such a
man than many a rich man. Inconspicuous as he is, and small as
his material resources are, he will shake more blossoms and more
fruit off from the boughs of the tree of happiness in one year than
you will, old curmudgeon, probably, in your whole life. And yet
you and he are living for the same general end — to be happy. He
is happy because he keeps strong and fresh those notes which vi-
brate joy ; and you are unhappy because you despoil yourself of all
power of enjoyment for the sake of that arch deceiver, riches, which
glozcs, and whispers, and promises, and betrays you.
7. There is another way in which wealth deceives men-by promises-
THE BECEITFULNESS OF RICHES. 29
Ho-w many men have I seen who promised that when they became
rich they would do such and such noble things ! " So soon as I
have secured a competence, an independence, I mean to turn round
and give all I can earn to charitable purposes." How many have
thought that ! How many of you who are in my hearing to-day
have thought just that ! When you began your business, it was
with some scruples. Some of you thought you ought to be minis-
ters. Some of you thought you ought to stay at home on the farm
and take care of your aged parents. But you broke through all
your scruples, and came down to the city. And you said, " I do not
mean to be a sordid man. I mean to have enough ; but as soon as I
get ahead myself, I am going to turn round and make others happy.
I am going to endow a school or a hospital. I am going to educate
all my younger brothers and sisters, and all my cousins." But the
trouble is, you never do get rich. You had not fifty cents in the
world when you made these promises ; and it is not many years be-
fore you are fairly worth fifty thousand dollars ; but you do not feel
yourself to be rich. You say, " If I hide this in three measures of
meal, perhaps I may become rich. So you invest %, and it in-
creases until it is two hundred thousand. Then you say, " Two
hundred thousand dollars is enough for a man to start on as capi-
tal." You set that to work, and in a short time it is five hundred
thousand. Your neighbors think that is wealth enough to do
something with ; but, no, you are going to get rich. So that five
hundred thousand dollars' is sent out to get five hundred thousand
more. Long are its fingers, and hard is its grasp ; and by and by,
when it comes back, it is increased to a million of dollars. You
say, "A million dollars ! — I used to think that when I had a million
dollars I should be rich, but I do not feel much richer than I did
when I had but a few thousands. I will be rich, though." So your
million dollars goes out, like a muck-rake, scratching and raking
everywhere, in order that you may be rich. You live to be forty-five
years of age, and you die worth ten million dollars. You have all
your life been saying, " 1 am not rich" ; and sure enough God comes
in and says, " Thou fool, thou art not rich. Whose now shall all
that money be which you must leave behind you ? Come to judg-
ment, naked, carrying not one beloved dollar through the grave !''
You had money enough to make the desert bud and blossom as the
rose, which you promised to use for benevolent purposes if God
would prosper you ; but you broke this promise all through life, and
now he takes it away from you.
You will be no more benevolent in your old age than you are in
your youth, and all the way through hfe. You are to judg^ of how
30 TEE BECEITFULNESS OF EICHE8.
you will feel at eighty by the way you feel now. If you feel goneroua
now, and you will take care of your generosity, it will go through
life with you. You must carry with you the feelings which you ex-
pect to exercise by and by. You are now forming the character
which is to remain with you to the end. If a man is going to do
good when he has made money, let him, to prove it, do good in a
smaller measure while he is making money.
In these and in many other ways which time would fail us to
discriminate and individualize, but which will suggest themselves to
your observation, and which you see in other men and they see in
you reciprocally, are riches deceitful in their dealings with us.
And yet, many of you are called to make money. Much of your
business is the amassing of riches. "Wealth is a power. God says
to you, " Gain that power, and uSe it for the welfare of your
fellow men, and for my honor and my glory." I cannot, therefore,
say to you, Turn back from it. But I must say this : You have
entered upon a career which perhaps above almost any other is full
of peril. It is the way of duty if God called you there, but it is a
way of duty hi which you must put on the whole armor of God.
It is not for you to wait until you become rich before you become
Christian men. You need the grace of Christ Jesus. You need to
have your head covered in that battlefield. You need the breast-
plate, and the greaves, and the shield, and the sword and the spear.
You need to be kept while discharging your duty as the provi-
dence of God has marked it out for you.
If you have been accustomed to feel that there is no great peril
connected with the amassing of riches, then the deceit has begun to
work in you. There is peril in it. He who has begun to accu-
mulate money ought, morning and evening, to humble himself be-
fore God, and say, " Search me, 0 God ; try me, and see if there be
any evil way in me." You need to lean upon the promise of God,
" Lo, I will be with you to the end." If you walk in a consecrated
way ; if you have consecrated your heart to God ; if you have lifted
your right hand and consecrated your wealth to God ; if you feel
in your very soul, " I am the steward of God ; this is not mine ; it
is lent to me to be improved upon for the good of my fellow men
and for the glory of my Lord " ; if God has given you this spirit,
then All hail ! You are doing a noble work, and are walking in a
noble way, and not far before you is the crown and the city of ref-
uge. But if you have no consecration, no moral purpose, no daily
prayer, no fear, no outlooking, no watching ; if you are going along
that way in which so many hundreds of thousands have perished
without conscience and without guard, Woe be to you 1
THE BECEITFULNESS OF RICHES. 31
May God, in liis unspeakable mercy, grant to so many of you
as /re in the strength of life, and full of vigor ; to so many ol
you as do not believe in your frangibility, and do not believe that
there is any danger ahead ; to so many of you as have a hope that
Is competent to look the whole future in the face — may God grant
to you the shield of his providence. May his protection be over
you. And may that love which led Christ to suffer and die for you,
speak to you, from day to day, something of that inward manhood in
which your life resides. May it speak to you of those duties which
God discharg'es toward the universe, and expects you to discharge
toward your fellow men. And may you be spoken to by the Holy
Ghost of that other life, that glorious city, where, not by your
riches, but by that virtue which has been wrought out in your heart
by the divine Spirit, you shall stand high or low among the re-
deemed of the Lord.
PRATER BEFORE THE SERMON.
Unite our hearts together, our Father, m the sense of our common need.
Unite us in our feeling of dependence upon thee, and of gratitude therein.
We do not draw near to thee as to one stem and vindictive. We come to
the bosom of our Father. We come to the fountain of pity and to the source
of all love. We draw near to thee as a God of love that hath taught us to
love. Thou that hast awakened the feeling of love in us toward our
children ; thou that hast surrounded all our youth with the tender affection
of parents ; thou that hast taught us in our own experience to interpret
something of thy nature— how much greater art thou than a man ! How
much greater is thy love, how much sweeter is it, how much more full of
blessing, than any that we can conceive of! It is to thee that we draw near
—not to our conception alone, but to all that in which thou art abundantly
more than we can ask or think ; to the greatness of that love which the ages
cannot weary ; to that love which brings faith and patience, which waits
upon words through their infinite evolutions, and which is never tired ; to
that love which watches over all things, even the smallest and most insig-
nificant. We rejoice in that love which is serving all things, and administer-
ing them, and leading them forward toward eras of greater and gi-eater
glory and purity. We rejoice in thee, O thou that art infinite, whom by
searching we cannot find out in any way— surely not in all the magnitude of
thine excellence of being. And we come to thee beseeching that thou
wilt have compassion upon us. As the heavens, at night, drop down their
dew upon the flowers and every one is refreshed, so wilt thou drop down
upon us, this day, thy mercies, so that multitudes, including those that are
the most sinful and the most unclean, may still feel that God's bounty bath
found them.
32 TEE BECHITFULNES8 OF BICRES.
Refresh, we pray thee, our faith. Let us not be carried away from be-
lieying in thee by our own feeble light of reason. May we see how mighty
are the powers which environ us, and what are those etreatns which are
bearing down the generations of men. May we feel our weakness and our
ignorance, and trust in that supreme central power which is above all others,
and better than all others. Out of our own littleness may we have ministered
to us a sense of thy greatness ; and in thy providence may we behold it; and
in thy grace may we have in timations of it.
We pray that we may learn more and more to make out the invisible
world, and the invisible God, and the invisible administration of sure mercy
and glorious love. "We pray that we may live as seeing Him who is in-
visible.
We beseech of thee, this morning, that thou wilt give to every one of us
a sense of thy power and perfection in the work which we have begun,
where we are bearing our own burdens, and where we are discouraged
in the fight against our easily besetting sins. We mourn over our vio-
lations of obligations. We mourn over our broken vows. We mourn all
along the way through which we have so feebly contested for heart-holiuess.
And we look to thee who didst begin the work in us to inspire in us mor-
ardor, and minister to us more patience and fidelity, and finally to vouch-
safe to us a victory over all sin and evil.
We pray that thou wilt grant unto all who are before thee this morn-
ing, the nearness of thy presence, and those secret communications of
grace which shall make every heart know that God hath thought of it. May
those who are troubled for themselves be able to lean upon thee, and cast
their burden on the Lord. May those who are troubled for others find all
the sense of thy sympathy encouraging them and sustaining them. If there
be any who are ready to perish, whose hearts seem bruised and broken and
cast down utterly ; if there be those who look to see which way the gate of
death shall open to give them escape, draw near to them. We pray ti at
thou wilt open the prison-doors, and bring forth the captives, and shake off
their chains, and crown them with victory. We beseech of thee that thou
wilt draw near to all who are in any extremity, and who need thee for their
very soul's salvation.
We pray for those who are not with us ; for those who are languishing
in sickness; for those who wait for death as the watcher waits for the
morning. We pray for all who are environed by troubles at home. We
pray for all who are tried in any way. Will the Lord be near to them all,
and comfort them this day, and kindle in their hearts such faith and love
and hope for the future, that all their distemperatures may seem as a pass-
ing dream. We pray for those who are wandering abroad; for those who
are sent on errands hither and thither upon the land and upon the sea.
Will the Lord have them in his holy care and keeping, and protect them
from harm, and restore them to their loved ones.
Grant that all that ministering providence which thou are enacting in
our behalf from day to day and night by night may not pass unrequit<-d by
our gratiude. May we rejoice in God's goodness, and make mention of it
daily with thanksgiving and with praise.
We pray for all for whom we should pray— the prayerless, the outcast,
those that are in crimes, those that are dissolving in vices. Lord, wilt thou
not raise up a gospel of hope for them ? Wilt thou not strengthen those
who go out to seek and to save them ? Wilt thou not bring in many whom
men forget, but who are not forgotten of God, to be monuments of thy
grace, whose testimony ahall carry hope, repentance, aad recovery to
others 7
THE DECEITFULNESS OF BICEES. 33
We pray for all those who seek for the amelioration of manners ; for the
puriflcation of the laws; for the establishment of beneficent institutions
throughout our land ; for the spread of intelligence; for virtue and reforma-
tion ; for justice and integrity.
"We pray that thou wilt be pleased to bless all those who rule over us—
the President of these United States, and those who are in authority with
him, and the Houses of Cougiess assembled. We beseech of thee that thou
wilt be in the midst of our coimselors, and minister to them the spirit of
forbearance and of peace.
And we pray that the hearts of this great people may conspire together
for things most honorable and most noble. We pray that the hearts of
all nations and of all that rule in all nations of the world may tend toward
unity and brotherly love. May there be no dashing together of warlike
nations. May there be no spilling of blood. May there be no scenes of hor-
rible cruelty. Wilt thou bring in the latter-day glory. Let the times of
peace and helpfulness come. May there be no desire among nations to pull
down and destroy each other : on the contrary, may they strive to build up
and perfect one another. May that joyful day of promise come, for which
we have so long waited, when it shall be proclaimed by the angels, sound-
ing through all the heavens, that the kingdoms of this world have become
the kingdoms of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
And to thy name shall be the praise, Father, Son, and Spirit. Amen.
PEAYEE AFTEE THE SEEMON".
Our Father, we pray that thou wilt bless us in the contemplation of thy
truth in all its instructions. Grant that we may not be puffed up by worldly
prosperity, nor think ourselves strong when our strength is but of the out-
side. May we search to see if the root of faith and of love and of truth is in
us. May we, in the midst of outward prosperity, know the dangers that
attend the inward life. May we not trust our own power. May we lean on
thee. Protect us. Lord Jesus. Protect those who are called by thy name,
and who still walk in the way of danger. Grant that their hearts may be
increased in the power of godliness. Grant that they may more and more
dwell with the spirit of the Master and with the inspiration of heaven rest-
ing upon their hearts from day to day. And let the power which is being
accumulated in the earth go to the promotion of truth, and of purity, and of
affection. Let it not be used for the upholding of corruption in the world,
but for the building up of thy kingdom. We ask it in the name of Christ
J esus our Lord. Ame/n.
III.
The Realm of Restfulness.
INVOCATION.
Inspire our hearts, thou that hast brought the light of morning upon the
earth, and driven its darkness away. Drive from us all darkness, and bring
to us the light of thy countenance and the joy of thy salvation. May we
lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us. May we
come to thee as children come to a parent. May we make confession of our
sin. May we behold that grace which stands ever open to those who will
take it. May we have peace in the Lord Jesus Christ. May we have the
blessed Uf e which comes by the hovering of thy Spirit. May we have the joy
which comes to those who, as children, look up to their father. And so may
we have the presence of the Father, of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, in all
the services of the morning and of the day. Wilt thou look upon us, we pray
thee, with thine help, by which we shall commune aright; by which we shall
rejoice in common songs, and in the fellowship thereof, and with new pur-
pose go on upon the way of life. Hear us in these our petitions, and answer
us, for Christ Jesus' sake. Amen.
3.
THE REALM OF RESTETJLNESS.
"For he endured as seeing Mm who is invisible."— Heb. XI., 27.
The Avriter is speaking of Moses.
There is something in looking back at these primitive saints
that must needs attract eyery imagination. Abraham and Isaac and
Jacob — those names beloved to the Jews — are venerable to us. Al-
though they were in an utterly different state of civilization, and
surrounded by circumstances entirely different from ours, we can
perceive that no mean measure was laid upon them in creation.
They were great natures. Yet they were not so very fruitful. Moses
left effects behind, more than all the others. They were in some
sense pictures ; but he was a veritable historic cause. Standing at
the beginning, he was one of those few grand natures from whom
the history of civilization has flowed.
The facts of his history are of great and dramatic interest. Born of
Hebrew parents, adopted by the royal family in Egypt, bred for a
king's son or child, and reared, all unknown, by his teachers, that he
might destroy the power of the Egyptians, he grew to man's estate.
And all t^e luxury of that court, and its pride and circumstance,
could not destroy in him the love for his own people. We hardly
know whence the culture came. It was there. The earliest oppor-
tunities he improved, though prematurely, in attempting to work in
their behalf, and for their deliverance ; failing, he fled and dwelt in
the wilderness. He was forty years old when he made his first essay.
He then Avent into the pastoral life, and wandered up and down in
the land for forty or more years. When other men were ready to
die, he was just ready to begin to live. At eighty, he assumed the
burden of that great flock, and convoyed them, under great, wonder-
ful, miraculous interpositions of Providence, from their bondage,
across the sea, into the school of the desert; and for forty more
years he was their leader, and legislator, and supreme executor. He
organized his people anew. He framed their constitution for them.
Sunday Mornino, Mar 24, 1871 . Lesson : Heb. XI., 17-40, Hymns, (Plymouth Col-
lection) : Nos. 218, COT, l:i51.
38 TEE BEALM OF EESTFULNESS.
Sloughing mucli, lie incorporated many old customs in tlie frame-
work of the civil and religious government which he made for them.
And we are ourselves beneficiaries of this great man. Many of the
most beneficent and prominent features of our civic commonwealth
we have derived from the original commonwealth of the desert.
When he was a hundred and twenty years old, he died ; and as
if romance, that began with him, was to go with him to the very
end, he was not permitted to lead his people across the Jordan
and into the promised land, but from the tops of the mountains of
Moab, where he went up, he discerned that land afar ofi" — its hills,
its valleys, its green and fruitful glades. There he died, and was
buried ; and no man ever knew the place of his burial.
Such a life as this, under such tremendous tasks and responsi-
bilities, so nobly carried out, must be memorable. Though the
fragments are few, and the range is not wide, yet no person can look
into the life and times of Moses without being profoundly impressed
with his great wisdom and executive power. He was a genius in
every direction — judicial, legislative, and executive. His name
stands, and is worthy to stand, far back in history, as one of the
most noble of the names which are preserved to us.
It is declared here that he accomplished all his great work, sus-
tained by his sense of the Invisible.
r " He endured as seeing him who is invisible."
This is a kind of insight given to us, of that which impelled him.
Men like to know how great artists work. Men would like to
know what it was that inspired Michael Angelo. Men would like
to go into the studios of great jaainters, and hear them talk, and see
what they think about, how they work, and what secrets they
have, if any. We love to hear of the interior life and history of
great generals, of great statesmen, of great men of every kind. And
here is a sort of an inside view given of this great statesman. We
see how it was that he kept himself up under his tremendous re-
sjponsibilities. We see what it was that he took for his rest. Under
his cares, and vexations, and annoyances, and discouragements —
enough of them to have worn out a score of ordinary men — he
maintained himself to the very last ; and this is the way in which
he did it :
" He endured as seeing him who is invisible."
This was his vacation. This was his play-ground. This was his
refreshment method. He endured his mighty task by divine reverie
— by a lioly exercise of the imagination. He kept hold of things
on the earth, consequently, by letting go of them, and flying into
THE REALM OF BESTFULNES8. 39
tlic great realm above. It was by commerce and familiarity witli
that great realm where imagination, which, when it is religious, is
called, faith, has its flying ground. And so we see what it was that
helped Moses.
There is this tendency in man, and there has been from the
earliest times. They Avho derive men from the race below, have, it
seems to me, their hardest task to show what is the derivation from
anything below us of the principles of moral sense, of conscience,
and of imagination. It is most difficult to show how there ever
should have been bred in men this tendency to live above material
things, and live in the invisible realm. When you go back to the
earliest periods, you see it efficiently working there. It was always
known, more or less strong, among these sensuous creatures, with all
the force and power of their animal propensities acting upon them.
And it is now. But it is not, and has not been, the result of culti-
vation ; for cultivation tends rather to destroy imagination than to
increase it. It is as nearly native or natural- as anything can well be
conceived to be.
Children learn by the imagination. What is the imagination,
but that constructive faculty by which we take invisible things, and
make them as if they were visible to us ? Ignorant people learn
by the imagination. The religions of primitive people are filled
with fables and creations of the imagination which, regarded from
the scientific stand-point, are lies, but which, regarded from the
imaginative stand-point are wonderful helps. They are myths ; they
are quasi truths ; they are primitive verities.
The world has worked itself up to its present standing ; and in
the beginning, far back, not only in our childhood, but in the life
of primitive nations — there was this bright faculty which is unlike
anything that you could breed from surrounding circumstances — a
faculty by which people have learned civilization. For I think it
will be found that while morals, so called, have followed refinement,
refinement has always been the product of the imagination — an
imagination that lifted the ideals of things ; an imagination that all
the time painted in the invisible something better and yet so nearly
allied to the visible that men went on to the higher state, aspired,
had ambition. And to-day, if you look at large, you will find that
men are in the active employment, in one and another way, of this
same dominant tendency to sustain themselves in the grinding con-
flicts of the world by taking refuge in the unreal — that is to say,
that which is real only by the constructive efibrt of their own
imagination.
Not alone the maiden who spins by the wheel, and sings, and is
40 THE BEALM OF BESTFULNESS.
silent, and sings again, comforts herself with reverie. Those who
are weary of the tasks of life retreat from them by reverie. Thou-
sands who find no place to rest otherwise, often rest in reverie. It is
a sort of waking dream, and is distinguished from constructive
imagination rather by this : that it is left to run its own Avay, one
thing being tacked on to another without ordinary cause and effect,
by juxtaposition and accidental associations.
Though the habit of reverie may be carried to excess, and though
men may be made too unpractical by it, the thing itself is a bless-
ing. It is a bandage that no man should tear off from wounds
over which oftentimes it is bound. It is the wings by which men
lift themselves up above that which they cannot master nor meet.
It is a beneficent dispensation by which we can retreat from things
that we cannot endure, and live above them.
There are those who live in memory. Memory, though, as we
live in it, has the constructive element, and is largely an effort of the
imagination. It is very seldom that any person remembers things
in their order. We trace tliem again and again. We reconstruct
them. We recall, to be sure, the scenes of childhood ; we live over
voyages and travels in distant lands ; we experience again things
joyful and grievous ; but it is always with something added, the
imagination hovering over this exercise of memory. Multitudes of
persons find this exercise a retreat into which they may run, and
shut out, in the scenes which they recall from their childhood,
the dismal storms of the present. How blessed and peaceful and
virtuous and sweet childhood is ! How blessed it is in parents
to give this education to their children, and store them full of such
sweet suggestions! For there is in their memory of experience so
much that is bright and beautiful, that it becomes to them a
portfolio of engravings, a gallery of pictures, a palace of many
chambers ; and it is a refuge into which, in later life, they may run
and hide themselves from care and trouble.
Make your children as happy as you can ; make their happiness
as many-sided as possible ; for remember that in them you are lay-
ing up treasures, opening up realms and regions where afterward
this faculty will minister to their consolation.
Then there is a constructive tendency which is more overt, more
obvious. We see among men a building, a weaving faculty. How
many young men are there who have not built castles in the air ?
How many maidens are there who have not ? How many young
tnen are there who have not, at some time in their life, been orators,
and imagined the audiences and the occasions ? Some imagine the
speeches — but that is generally the hardest part of it. How many
THE BEALM OF BESTFULNESS. 41
men have imagined themselves on the quarter-deck, conraiodures, or
admirals, and gone through terrible fights ! How meaiy men have
commanded armies ! We are great generals, all of us, in peace
times, and in imaginary scenes. How many men have, in imagina-
tion, gone into business, and made all fly and sparkle around about
them ! What wonderful enterprises have shot out of men's brains
that never put anything into their pockets ! How rich men have
become in imagination ! How many have, in their imagination,
opened mines, and struck railways through mountains, and brought
stores to the markets of the world ! What ships men have built,
what engines invented, what books written, what poems left, what
scenes beheld, by the imagination ! How many have traveled, and
explored, and wandered amid fairy scenes such as Easselas never
found ! What caves, and stalactites, and mines, and metals, and
jewels and gems, have there been disclosed by the imagination !
Have you never flown in the air ? I have, a thousand times.
Have you never had wings ? Then you do not know how good it
feels. I have been upon tree-tops, and ridden upon clouds, softer
than any cushion that man can imagine. I have flown above the
storm, and looked down upon it. I have gone from mountain-top
to mountain-top, and seen men below climbing with slow and meas-
ured mountaineer's step. I have been to the top of Mont Blanc
and down again as quick as thought !
It is a blessed thing to have wings. You have them if you only
knew it — not wings that can take up this poor trudging body, but
wings which can take up the best part of it ; which can take a man
to the polar sea, where the year round the water chants its own an-
them, and sings its own song ; and which can take him southward
to the tropics, where there is perpetual warmth and fragrance and
beauty.
I have descended to the bottom of the sea, and walked among
rocks, and seen the jewels in the skulls of dead men. There abound all
around the world, and in nature — in this treasure-house, the globe —
objects of wondrous interest and pleasure, if a man only has eyes to
see and wings to fly withal.
Do you say that this is unprofitable ? Then I should like to know
how profitable your way of looking at things is ! I have seen men
eighty years of age who have gone through life digging, pulling, haul -
ing, striving, contending, sAveating, decaying, dying, and wlio were
good for nothing at the end. And they were all the time talking about
" these unprofitable imaginative men." What has practical life done
for you who have been bearing burdens and toiling all your days ?
Are you any better ofi" than your long-ep^;.'ed brethren ? How many
42 TEE BE ALU OF BESTFULNESS.
I see "working in life — practical men, gradgrinds — who despise the
poetic tribe, the whole set of those who live in the realm of the im-
agination ! But which is the better, he that goes through life doing
no harm, doing the least possible mischief, and reaping as much en-
joyment day by day as is consonant with good morals, or he that all
his life long is attempting things which- he never accomplishes, and
is discontented all the way through, and dies in discontent ?
Still, I do not advise you to take up imagination as a trade or
profession. It is not meant to be meat and drink. It is medicine.
It is cordial. It is solace. It is something to help you in the asper-
ities and attritions of rude material life. It is the angel of God's
presence that is constantly illuminating things, and making you see
something higher and better. Wisely employed, it becomes a bless-
ed retreat. Out of curmudgeon care, out of envious and splenetic
moods, one may escape by a wise economy of the imagination.
Oh, how tired one becomes of winter ! Are you not tired to-day
of this everlasting March ? Well, go with me, now, to the fairest of
all hillsides — mine of course — and sit and smell with me the new-
blown roses of next June. I can see them. I can see my trees full
of blue birds and robins. And the sunshine — oh how bounteous
and beautiful it is ! How deep the blue ether is ! And from the
north I see those royal thrones and those white islands come float-
ing through the heavens. I hear the rustle of the leaves in the
trees, and I can almost by the sounds tell the different kinds of
trees. Can you tell the difference between an organ and a piano by
their sounds ? and cannot I tell the difference between a pine and
an elm, or between an elm and a maple, by the sounds of their
leaves ? No two have the same sounds. Listen with me to these
things. "Walk with me on the hill-side and watch the ten thousand
gauzy creatures that go flying and buzzing and filling up the short
space of their lives with the utmost activity.
There is no March to me. I have a cure for rude winter days in
the imagined days of spring. I have a cure for rough and disagree-
able spring days in the bright days of June which I see through my
imagination. When all things are hard upon me, all the earth dis-
ports above and around me ; and if only I can set myself free from
the coarse materialism of the body, and take the wings of the imag-
ination, I can fly away to scenes that are fairer and better than any
that are real.
These are facts ; and I suspect that those who deride the imag-
ination are continually resorting to it. Where you use it along the
line of reality ; where you use it in the range of your nobler faculties —
hope and love; where yo\i use it so as to insphere the other life;
TEE BEALM OF HESTFULNESS. 43
where you bring into it the reality of the All-Father ; where by it
you raise up again the lost, that never were lost ; where by it you
enter the fair abode which purified natures in heaven occupy, then
it is faith. Faith is nothing but spiritualized imagination. That is
to say, it is the picturing of invisible reality by the power of imagina-
tion. That which distinguishes it from ratiocination or a scientific
process, is the imaginative element — the glowing, creating, artistic
power — which God has given to every human soul. Not they are
painters alone who paint on canvas. They who paint on the horizon
above are artist painters. Not they alone are sculptors Avho can cut
the solid marble, or shape the gold and ivory, but they who by the
imagination can make noble creatures stand out populous in the
heavenly land, touch them with the fire of life, and be with them in
sympathy and aSection.
Are all these powers given to man to be smothered in him, or
only to creep sinuously along the line and level of the earth ? Great
roads there are between here and the other life for great thoughts
and great souls. The spaces between this world and heaven you
can dart through as quick as the light comes from the sun, by the
power of the imagination.
This is the power by which it is said that Moses was sustained.
Practical man, factual man, he was ; but so wise a man was he that
he knew how to dodge facts, and could take things as they were
here, and could take things as he imagined them to be there. He
lived as seeing things which were invisible. With society of a re-
bellious people, and all manner of trials and disappointments and
heavy, wearing burdens, it was by the power of the imagination that
he ministered to himself patience, and renewed his strength, and was
enabled to endure to the end. A man who lives to be a hundred
and twenty years of age, and is governor of such a people as the
Israelites were, needs something more than this world can afford
him.
The last visit I made in Washington was during the life of Edwin
M. Stanton — the noblest of all the men who stood in the great
struggle through which we came ; the foremost man ; the cleanest
man through and through ; the wisest man ; the man who, when he
had thunder of will, had divinity within him — one of the few cre-
ative natures. And with all these manly qualities he had a woman's
heart, a child's tenderness, and an angelic fancy. The last time I
was at his house, we spoke of public afliiirs. It was at that difficult
time when we were striving with all our might to save a recreant
President from going over to the wrong si^e, bearing all things,
enduring all things, hoping all things, and believing pretty much
44 THE BE ALU OF EE8TFULNE88.
all things. The conversation soon ended on that subject. Then he
went to his book-case and took down a book of poems and a book
of literature (Arthur Helps was one of the authors), and sat down
and began to talk with me on poetic themes, reading this, that, and
the other passage. There was that great work of a million men going
on ; this man had in his hands those springs which touched every
part of our vast land ; oftentimes he was oppressed night and day
beyond the measure of human endurance ; and he retreated into his
room and library, and went to the poets and sweet singers and noble
men in literary life, and held commerce with them ; and he was as
one who comes from a bath. His soul was washed and refreshed by
these musings and imaginings.
Was it not beautiful ? Was it not natural ? Had he not learned
the art of living in the invisible ?
I think he rose to higher musings than these. I believe, I know,
from his own statements, that he lived as in the conscious presence
of God, and that he derived his courage from the sense of the Divine
power and presence. All the way up to the highest and sublimest
heights of imaginative life he found refreshment. And so may you.
So may all men.
The most glorious chamber, it seems to me, in the Lord's
mansion, the human head, is oftentimes ignominiously locked up.
Here are mirrors by which things are reflected ; here are windows
through which you can look out ; here are hints by which you can
build, and suggestions by which you can paint; and that part of the
human soul which is sweetest and most restful — how often is it
sacrificed because men think they must attend to duty, and that
reality must take the precedence of imagination, and that factual
truth is a great deal more important than any form of merely im-
aginative or conceptional truth !
As Moses endured as seeing Him who is invisible — as God, in
other words, constituted the center and ideal of his vision and
reverie — so it should be in Christian life. So in Christian life I
think it is. Our conception of God is an imaginary one. No man
who has only a God of the letter has a God. To read what is said
of Jehovah and Jesus in the Bible, and to be content simply with
that literal statement, is not to believe and not to perceive. No
person can be said to have a distinct conception of God who has
not framed it out of some elements which are vital, living in him.
Nobody has a God until he can say, " 0 God, thou art my God ; I
have made thee." Man create God ? Yes ! The imaginary concep-
tion which must always be that which is God to us, we do frame.
We take the materials out of the letter. It says that God is long-
THE REALM OF BESTFVLNESS. 45
suffering. "We take our knowledge of long-suffering jis one element,
and begin to mold. It says that he is gracious, patient, abundant
in goodness. We take these qualities in our imagination, and frame
them into some picture iu our mind. It says that he is loving, giv-
ing himself in love, and that he is just. We take what we know of
these qualities and form them into a personality. And that is to us
God. And every man who has a vivid, living conception of God has
framed it himself out of what he knows of moral and social wants. He
has prepared it by the power of the imagination. Whatever thought
overhangs you, and fires your soul's enthusiasm of God ; whatever
vision brings tears to the eye, or tremulous experience to the heart,
is something that has been fashioned by the ministration of your
thoughts working upon invisible qualities, and shaping and holding
up aloft a conception of God that is peculiar to you. We call it our
father's God and our mother's God. We caress it with ten thousand
phrases of excellence. But after all, the part which takes hold of
you is that part which came from you. The materials are given us
in the Word of God. Our experience of the qualities which are
there represented is that which vitalizes them. We take these quali-
ties, these excellencies of the divine nature, and frame them into a
dignity, a majesty and a grandeur which to us make God. The
vision which Ave have of him springs out from our own mind. So
that, though we have in the Bible a revelation of the qualities which
go to make the divine Being, there is a second revelation in us of
the spirit of God thx'ough the imagination. And it is this second
revelation which makes him vital and powerful to us. The filling
up is our own. The materials are furnished ; the outline is given ;
but the realization and the idealization are our own.
In the exercise of this power of the imagination one may so
frame to himself an ideal of the divine kingdom that it shall be-
come as real to him, substantially, as if it were visible, and far more
influential. There is no limitation, there is almost no circumscrip-
tion, of the power of the imagination in this direction. And the
blessedness of it is far beyond the blessedness of the ordinary use
of reason. Not that I would undervalue that, nor that I would un-
dervalue practical wisdom and experience in human life. The two
are joined together ; but the higher is the imagination, through
which we perceive unseen beings, and the unseen world. The rea-
son is overhung by the imagination and is energized by it, and so is
made more valuable than it can be in its barren, material, practical
self.
Now, what is the effect, on the whole., of living in the continual
use of the imaginative power, applying it to things above us and
beyond us, in another life and in anotlier sphere ?
46 THE BEALM OF EESTFULNESS.
First, it enlarges the range of our own being. It brings us into
sympathy with the universe. It has the power to conceive of things
which are outside of ourselves and beyond ourselves, enlarging the
circle, widening it, and leading to all manner of strange relations.
It is this power which gives largeness to men's thoughts and con-
ceptions.
The peasant thinks that his farm is the universe. By and by,
perhaps, by a little travel, or by reading, he learns of the next mar-
ket town. Then his idea of the size of the universe is greatly en-
larged. Gradually his knowledge increases, and he takes in his own
county. Now his idea of the magnitude of the universe is im-
mensely expanded. By and by, perhaps, he becomes the servant of
a man who goes to the war. Or, he travels in foreign countries.
And he smiles in himself to think that he should have thought that
his farm or his county comprised the whole world. Every year he
widens the range of his familiarity with things. And when he
comes back he is as much more than when he went out as his sym-
pathy and imaginative power are more than mere practical, matter-
of-fact knowledge. And at last he may become all-knowing so far
as mundane affairs are concerned. Now if we only carry this same
tendency higher and higher, not only do we couple ourselves with
all men and with all ages of the world, but we have new possibili-
ties. We rise and expand. We reach to the north and to the
south, to the east and to the west, and to the zenith, by this power
of the imagination. We bring our souls into commerce, into per-
sonal relationship, with all sentient beings in heaven and upon the
earth.
This use of a sanctified imagination — spiritualized imagination,
rather (this word sanctified has been trod on so much, its meaning
has been so perverted, that it does little good to use it)— this spirit-
ualized imagination helps, in practical afiiiirs, to bring up the
higher parts of our mind, by putting them into relations with the
whole divine scheme. The trouble with men is, that they see them-
selves only in connection with their daily drudgeries ; that they do
not see themselves in the relations which they sustain.
It must be a very barren life that is occupied with sticking pins on
a paper. Or, as it takes some twenty men to make a pin, what a philos-
opher he must be who has nothing to do but to put heads on pins I
If a man puts heads on pins for forty years, how largely his mind
must be educated by his work ! And those who hold the points of pins
to sharpen them, for forty years— what a school of manhood they go
through ! And men whose business it is to clean the sewers of New
York— I do not wonder that they neglect it ; but suppose they were
THE REALM OF B1E8TFULNES8. 47
faithful and attended to it, what sort of a life would they lead ?
Night scavengers — what sort of a life is theirs ? And day scaven-
gers— boys that go around after swill — what is their thought of men
and of families, who see nothing but the fragments that come out
in pails ; who take that which is left from the most piggish side of
men, to carry home to pigs ? Men who sweep the streets ; men who
do the menial services oi life, and have nothing else to do, and noth-
ing else to think about — do you wonder that they are gross and
coarse ? And if they go to a drinking-house ; or if they go home
to rouse up the animal that is in them ; if they go home to quarrel
with their companions ; if they go home to "fill their maw and tum-
ble into the corner on a heap of dirty straw, only to get up again to
perform these lowest and most disagreeable ofiices of human life, I do
not wonder at it.
Think of servants in dissecting rooms, who have to bring in dead
bodies, and carry them out again in morsels and fragments all their
life. Think how full society is of just such workingmen ! If you go
through New York, you walk over the heads of a thousand men. If
you walk up Broadway, down in damp cellars, under your feet, and
in dusty and cobwebbed attics over your head, are human beings
who stay there month in and month out working for their
pitiful remunerations. AVlien I think what, in these crowded
cities, the actual life is, I say to myself, " If those poor creatures
have no skylights, I pity them. If they can think of nothing
but what they have to do ; if while tReir hands are busy their mind
is busy with the same things, what a bondage theirs must be !"
But, thank God, there is not one of them that cannot, while he
is working, by his imagination carry his works out in its relations
to benevolence and love and kindness in society. There is not one
of them who cannot take hold of his own being while doing his
routine work. The man who shoes horses' hoofs may himself be
walking the golden pavement. I have seen those who soared in
angelic realms while their hands were stained in the colo]:s of the
vat. No matter how low a man'^ work is, no matter how poorly he
is remunerated, though he has never seen the sun, though he was
born, and has always lived, in the mine, or though it be his lot to
delve and work in the sea, it is in his power to be a son of God. For
him, too, there is a crown. For him, too, there are songs. He has
brothers, and he has sisters, and he has a God of glory.
What man is so poor that he does not have an undivided interest
in the sun ? You walk along the street. You do not own that
house, or that, or that. You do not own any house, most of you.
You have no money in that bank. You cannot draw a check and
48 TEE EEALM¥)F BESTFULNES8.
liave it honored in any bank, most of you. And stocks you do not
own. You have no part nor lot in any of these things which men
are praised for having.
But who owns the flocks of birds that are coming up north now,
and that are singing already in the fields ? Anybody who has ears
to hear and eyes to see, owns them. Those spring days that are
coming, and bringing balm and sweet mpisture from the south —
who owns them ? You own them, and I own them. When the
raggedest beggar that walks the street with head uncovered and hair
unkempt, lifts himself into the air, it is his air. And the sun is his.
And the summer is his. The morning and the evening are for him.
God makes the curtains around about his bed; for he is God's child.
He is not so rich in that which men call riches as that old curmud-
geon and miser ; but oh, how rich he is overhead !
There is a great class of toilers who have no tapestry, no pictures,
very little physical comfort in life. There are men who labor with
their hands for their daily bread, and feel that part of the Lord's
Prayer which you jump over with so little thought — " Give us this
day our daily bread." To you who have twenty barrels of flour in
your house, that does not mean anything. ■ But there are many men
who have eaten their last morsel of bread, and who have to engineer
for the next mouthful. There are men who in the morning pray in
earnest, " Give us this day — this day — our daily bread !"
But these men are not cabined and confined to base materiali-
ties. They spring up above them to this upper arch, this all-glow-
ing, all-beneficent constitution of things. They have wings, and
they fly up into the realm of things invisible, and there live, or may
do so. They endure as seeing Him who is invisible. How easy it is
for us to retreat out of our cares, out of the sick-room, out of the
house of death, into this great upper realm.
Greenwood has a most elastic and bounding surface, to me. I
never have a thought that strikes there which does not bound as
high as heaven. Do you suppose that when I look upon the graves
I see tiie graves alone ? I see a pearly gate that opens through and
through. I see something that is beyond. I see the invisible. Do
you suppose that when I see that most impressive of all regiments
that ever were marshaled to the music of death — the regiment of
little children that lie in rows there — that I simply see those little
mounds ? I see fathers and mothers and nurses who were so poor
that they had nothing to erect over their darling children, and who
brought out little lambs and all manner of playthings and laid
them upon their graves. But thcL^c memorials of what love has
done are by no means all that I see. I see the households to which
THE REALM OF BESTFULNES8. 49
the children belonged. Up from these graves spring visions of care-
ful hands that laid these little ones to rest. I look above and see
them clothed in robes — in white raiment. I see them, brighter than
birds, flying through the upper land. I rise above the things that
are visible by the power of imagination, into the realm of the invisi-
ble, and dwell in the higher ether with them.
Why do you not rise above your cares ? Why do you stay where
you are wrought upon by the attritions of life ? Wliy do you not
go and walk in the gardens alone ? Why do you not accept the
offer of Him who said, " Cast your care upon me, for I care for
you "? Why do you not go where yoii will live in his presence, and
behold his brow, and feel his touch ? Why do you not go where you
shall rest in his bosom, and realize his compassion, aqd be sustained
by his strength ? Why do you not go and fill again and again the
urn of your waning power from the power of the eternal God, from
which we all sprang ? Why do you not renew your better self at
the fountain of divine love ? Why do you not, when weighed down
by the trials and disappointments which invest you here below, take
refuge in the invisible realm, until you are able to come back again
to your labor and your drudgery, clad in the garments of consola-
tion, soothed by the cordial of the soul, and bringing with you
thoughts supernal, angelic, divine, which shall be more to you than
silver, or gold, or counsel, or sympathy, or friend, or lover ?
Our riches are not made up of material things.
" A man's lif e consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he
possesseth."
Our riches lie above. The eye hath not seen, the ear hath not
heard, neither hath it entered into the heart of man to conceive, the
things which God hath laid up for those who love. But, God be
thanked, Ave come to the border of them. By this divine power,
this yearning aspiration, this quickened imagination, this devout
faith, we enter into heaven, we walk its streets, and with the blessed
throng its temples, and come back stronger, more patient, more
gentle, more loving, purer-hearted, less discouraged, to our work, to
our suffering, to everything that God's will has prescribed for us 5
waiting for the day to daAvn when we shall no longer see God
tlirv)ngh the imagination, through a glass, darkly, but face to face?
— and shall know even as also we are known.
50 THE BEALM OF BESTFULNES§.
PEAYEE BEFOEE THE SEEMON*
We thank thee, our Father, that in the greatness of the way we need not
be lost, wandering without sight of things invisible. Groping at mid-day, we
need not miss the path; for thou art our Guide. Thou knowest how to
speak to the consciousness and to the understanding ; and those who are
afar off are brought near by thy sweet influence. We thank thee that
though thou dost not disclose thyself to us ; though we cannot take thee in
by the eye, nor by the measure of our thought, yet we are gi'owing toward
thee, and are coming to the day of disclosure when we shall see thee as thou
art — when we shall be like thee that we may see thee and understand thee.
We rejoice that we have some symbols given us by the way. We rejoice
that thou hast been pleased to call thyself our Father, and that we have
some secret knowledge and interpretation of thy relations to us. We rejoice
that in the household we are brought into such relations to our little
children that there grows up in us some* thought of God that is higher and
hotter than that which comes to us from nature without — ^love, and patience
therein; the sacrifice of love; wisdom given from those who have it to
those who have it not; the transfer of experience. We thank thee that
we are able to fold our children, as it were, in our own lives, and clothe
them there, and bring them up to the threshold of their own independent
life, by the virtue which is in us. So, dimly, we discern something of the
glory and the mystery of thine own nature— of thy care-taking. And we re-
joice that we may believe that this is but a spark, and that the great orb and
glory of the fact is in thee undisceruible until we rise into thy presence.
Then how wonderful will be the disclosure I How little do we understand
here the nature of divine love and beneficence, or what it can work in a
higher sphere !
We pray, O Lord our God, that we may learn more and more of thee
by becoming more and more like unto thee. Fill all our households with
thy presence. Refine our affections toward each other. Make us Christ-like
and heavenly-minded, that through our own experience we may discern
something more of the divine life and of the blessedness of the other state.
Be pleased to bless the parents who have brought their children this
morning into the midst of their brethren, and sanctified their desire to con-
secrate them to Chiist. May they rear them in the spirit of love. May they
be able to create around about them such a life and such households that
these Ghildren shall early discern the spirit of the heavenly land. May the
lives and health of these little ones be precious in thy sight. And remember,
we pray thee, all those who have been consecrated in baptism, and all those
who have been consecrated in the closet by the prayers of faithful parents.
May the young that are growing up be more manly than we have been be-
fore them. May they have more zeal and courage, and discern more clearly,
both by our mistakes and our successes, the better way. We pray for the
young, that they may be shielded from temptation, that they may be valiant
and noble in good, and that they may live for their country, for their fellow-
men, for their households, and for themselves as the children of God. Grant
that the life which is to come may evermore shine down upon the life which
now is ; and lead them with higher and sweeter aspirations from strength to
strength until they shall stand in Zion and before God.
We pray that thou wilt command thy blessing to rest upon all the fam-
ilies of this flock. If thou hast darkened any, and brought sorrow and grief
unto any, come thou, thyself, and interpret thine own work to them. Come
♦ Immediately following the baptism of children.
THE BEALM OF BESTFULWESS. 51
thou, O Spirit of consolation, that where darkness is, there thy light may
shine.
Be with all who are in perplexity, or who are carrying burdens or cares
that they cannot throw away nor endure. Thou canst give them power to
endure, Wben the thorn shall not be removed, thy grace can be made suffi-
cient to bear it.
We pray for the tempted, that they may rise up against temptation, and
watch against insidious and easily besetting sins. We pray for all who are
in any trouble, that they may seek relief in thee.
We beseech of thee that thou wilt hear our prayer, not only for the fam-
ilies of this household who are with us, but for all who are upon the sea or
in distant lands. We pray for all the members of this church and congre-
gation who are wayfarers anywhere. Gather them, as we do, yet more
abundantly and gloriously, in thy thoughts to-day.
Grant thy blessing to rest upon all who shall worship in this our taber-
nacle— strangers among us; those who have been wanderers; those who
have come back again after long absences ; those who come with hearts of
thanksgiving and rejoicing. Will the Lord meet them with a portion this
morning.
Bless all the churches of this city, and of the great city near us, and
throughout our land. Revive thy work in their midst. We thank thee
that thou art showing the marvels of thy power, and that multitudes of men
are being gathered from the service of sin and the flesh to the service of
God. May their number be increased.
Wilt thou cleanse this great land by the power of the Spirit. Wilt thou
give us wise rulers, upright magistrates, and administrations that are less
and less corrupt, until they become a moral power.
We pray that thy kingdom may come among all the nations of the earth.
See the scattered poor. Look among the waste places. Behold the darkness,
thou that dwellest in light. And let the word of power go forth, and all the
earth see thy salvation.
We ask these things, not because we are worthy, but in the adorable name
of Jesus, to whom, with the Father, and the Spirit, shall be praises evermore.
Amen.
PEAYEE AFTEE THE SEEMON.
Our Father, how far off thou art ! Our words go sounding out, and seem
to die in vacuity. We reach up our hands, and nothing touches them. It
is very dark, often, and no light dawns. We call, and are as little children
lost in the wilderness. Yet thou art ; and thou art found of those who dili-
gently seek thee. Thou hast thine hours of appearing. There are dawnings
of hght. There is the grace of the Spirit ai'ound about us to help us. There
are those uplif tings of our own soul by which we are able to discern the In-
visible, and take hold of the Spirit-land, and participate somewhat in its
strength and joy. We pray that thou wilt grant to every one of us such
a constant indwelling of thy Spirit that the window which opens toward
heaven may never be shut. May we, from day to day, look out upon its fair
fields, its sweet scenes, and all that is laid up there for those who love God,
and be more content with our lot," more faithful in the discharge of our
52 TEE BEALM OF EESTFULNESS.
duties, more earnest one with anotlier, more patient with each others' faults,
and more forgetful of each other's sins. We pray that thou wilt grant that
this other and better and higher sight, this faith, may be so strong iu us
that we shall be able to say that we do live by faith, and not by sight. And
bring us at length where faith shall minister to sight, and sight shall be aa
faith, in thine own immediate presence. And to the Father, the Son, and
the Spirit, shall be praises evermore. Amen.
IV.
How TO Learn about God.
■%
HOW TO LEARN ABOUT GOD,
"Thus saith the Lord, let not the wise man glory in his wisdom, neither
let the mighty man glory in his might, let not the rich man glory in his ,
riches: but let him that glorieth glory in this, that he understandeth and
knoweth me, that I am the Lord which exercise loving-kindness, judgment,
and righteousness, in the earth: for in these things I delight, saith the
Lord."— Jer. ix. 23, 24.
It is not to be understood that one is to have no satisfaction in
the consciousness of learning, of skill, of power in its various kinds,
or of riches, but that these are not to be regarded as the highest
enjoyments, nor as the consummation of our ideas of good fortune-
We are to have our distinctive pride and gladness far higher than in
such matters as these.
A correct and personal knowledge of God is a source of more
happiness, of more power, of more beauty, and is therefore a subject
more fit to glory in, than any other — a proposition which you do
not believe, but which is thoroughly true. Some may know it ; but
the most of those who call themselves Christians do not.
"We shall come back to a consideration of this practical aspect
after some foregoing consideration of the human knowledge of
God.
In every age of the world of which we have any record, the best
ideas of that age have been grouped together and called God. It is
said that God has revealed himself to men, and that there has
been, from the earliest periods, a divine representation which
transcended the measure of human faculty. In some sense this is
true ; for the passage which I read to you in the opening service
this morning, and which dates far back — almost to the beginning of
literature — contains a representation of God in his goodness, in his
domestic relations, if I may so say, as well as in his justice, and in
tlie administration of pain and joy as instruments of government.
There is nothing to be added and nothing to be subtracted from
this picture of the divine nature which hangs back in the vista of
time at the very opening of things.
Preached In Stelnway Hall, New York, (temporarily occupied by the church of the Ser.
Ceo. D. Hepworth) Sunday Morning, Mar. 17, 1872.
56 EOW TO LEAEN ABO UT GOD.
Nevertheless, in regard to the world at large, and all its races, it
is true that in every age the best things which men conceived of
were wrought together, and constituted the popular or theological
idea of God.
When men lived in their basilar nature, when power meant con-
trol over the brute beasts and over men, and when the warrior was
the type of the highest manhood, then God was the god Thor, or
his equivalent. The God of that time was some thundering Jupiter.
The presentation of Jehovah which was then most common, was one
which represented the force-side of divinity. But as, with the prog-
ress of life, society became more dependent upon law and moral in-
fluence than upon absolute force, and men began to be knit together
in communities, a new conception arose ; and you shall find that
then all these ideas were transferred to the popular conception of
divinity, and that God was represented no longer as a mere absolute
sovereign, doing what he would, but as one who governed by law
and motive.
As, looking at men comprehensively, civilization and religion
still wrought upon the human mind, and the sweet amenities of the
household began to increase, and home began to blossom like the
orchard, and to bear on every bough fruit good to the eye and to the
taste, so there began to creep into the notion of God the domestic
elements. Tenderness and pity and compassion began to be repre-
sented in it. But as in the household there breaks out in every
mother's life vicarious suffering ; as every parent in some sense uses
his life, gives it, for the benefit of the helpless and the ignorant ; as
in exigencies the great drama of life is enacted in every house ; as
all that are good in the family wait patiently upon the wandering
and the lost, yielding up their several good, as it were, in order to
reclaim them ; so, at last, in the later days of divine disclosure, there
came to be the conception of a sufiering God : not one who in his
original nature was constructed to suffer, but one who was so full
of love and pity that he was the type and original of that sacrifice
which we see manifested in detail, and imperfectly, in the household
for the reclamation of children.
The nearer a man is to the fruit — to maturity — in his spiritual
condition, the more he inherits that nature by which he suffers to
make others happy. The nearer a man is to the ideal of manhood,
the more willing he is to suffer himself to save others from suffering.
The law of suffering runs through the universe ; but it changes just
at the point which diyides between true manhood and that animal-
hood on which manhood is grafted in this mortal state. On one
side, the law of suffering is a law by which men make themselves
no W TO LEABN ABOUT G OB. 5 7
oppressors, treading down their fellowmen, as the vintner treads the
grapes in the wine-vat; it is a law of selfishness by which men
grab and gather in, acting centripetally, and cause all things to
rush to themselves. But at that point where man begins to ap-
proach the other side, or the divine nature, the reverse takes place,
and the law of suffering becomes a law by which men give them-
selves for the sake of others. The mother is willing to watch Avith
the child night after night; she is willing to work with the child;
she is willing to toil for the child ; she is willing to suffer that the
child may be made happy. There are thousands and thousands who
are gladly spending their lives, and taking only the remunerations
of love from day to day, in the hope that they may put tpJieir chil-
dren where they will not be narrowly shut up, restrained, burdened
with toil. And as this conception of manhood develops, it begins
to appear in the notions of God which men entertain.
I shall now, perhaps, be better understood than if I had stated
it at first, when I say that the knowledge of God is not a thing
which can be fixed in the beginning, except in words ; that in its
very nature, the knowledge of God among men must, to a large ex-
tent, be progressive ; and that it must follow the development of
the race itself. As our knowledge of God consists in the inclosure
by that name of the noblest qualities of which we have any con-
ception, or which fall out in human experience ; as we gather these
qualities, and group them, and then lay on them the scale of the in-
finite, and exalt them to the sphere of government, and call them
God ; so the knowledge of God goes on increasing with the develop-
ment of the race of mankind. Especially it augments. as men grow
wiser, purer, more self-denying, more heroic. Then they transfer
these interpreting elements to the divine character; which to their eyes
begins to glow in a wider sphere, with beams more full of light, and
less filled with heat that smites or destroys. The character of God,
in our apprehension of it, ameliorates, and grows more beautiful,
more attractive, and richer in every element, just in proportion
as the race from which we get our notion of moral excellence in-
creases in moral excellencies. There has been, and there is recog-
nized in the Word of God from beginning to end, a steady progress
in the disclosure of the divine nature; and we see that in the
thoughts respecting God among men there has been a gradual aug-
mentation of the conception of the divine character, arising from
the process which I have already delineated.
If it should seem to any of you that this view would set aside
your accustomed notions of the disclosure of God — those which
you have derived from the Bible ; if you should say, as many of
68 EOW TO LEABN ABOUT GOD.
you will, that this is relying on human reason ; that God in ancient
times, by the mouth of his holy prophets, and in later times by the
mouth of his son Jesus Christ, and still later by the mouth of the
apostles, described the divine character ; that it was set up as a
thing to which nothing was to be added, and from which nothing
was to be subtracted ; if you say that this view of progressive de-
velopment contradicts the conception which the Bible contains,
then I say, It does, and it does not. It may, but it is not necessary
that it should.
The alphabet being given, the whole English literature is con-
tained in it ; but although a man knows the alphabet, he does not
necessarily know the whole English literature. If you take the
alphabet of God, which is found in the Bible, it does not follow
that everybody can read all that that alphabet can spell.
I go into a gallery where there are illustrious persons hung in
portraiture. I see one that I am attracted to, and I look upon it,
and I know this much — that it is a man. I know that it is a man
of beauty, or, lacking beauty, indicating great intellectual develop-
ment and power of brain. A number of such external things I
know of him, but nothing more. By and by, some one says to me,
" His name is Goethe." Ah ! instantly a vision springs up in my
mind. I have read of Goethe. I know his poems. I know his
dramas. I know much of the whole German literature which he
has created. And the moment I hear his name, and associate it
with that portrait, it assumes new life. It is a hundred times more
to me than it was before. I say to myself, " Then that is Goethe,
is it ? Well — well — Avell" ; and all these wells merely mean that I
am thinking, and gathering together all my scattered knowledge,
and concentrating it on that effigy. I do not know him person-
ally, though I know him as well as a book could interpret him to
me. But suppose I had been in Germany ; suppose I had been in-
vited to his house ; had seen him in the morning, at noon and at
night ; at the table, familiarly ; with his manuscripts, in his study ;
suppose I had seen him when topics came before him for discussion,
or in his intercourse with men ; suppose I had seen him surrounded
by little children, and seen how they afiFected him ; suppose I had
seen how noble personages affected him ; suppose I had seen him in
moments of calmness and silence and reverie; or at funerals; or
at great public rejoicings; in all those moods and circumstances
which go to show exactly what a man is ; suppose I had lived with
him, and seen the coruscation, the whole play, of his soul, would
I not then have a knowledge of him which no portrait could give
me ? Having gained this larger knowledge of him, I say, " I never
ROW TO LEABN ABOUT GOD. 59
knew Goethe before"; but one exclaims, "You never knew Goethe
before? Yes, you did. I pointed him out to you in such a gallery,
at such a time ; and now you say you never knew him before !" But
would it not be true ?
You know many things about your wife's relations ; but you have
never seen them. The summer vacation comes round, and you go
to visit them. You go wondering what sort of folks they are. You
have heard a great deal about them, but you do not feel that you
know them. The father, the mother, that brother, that sister, and
the other persons — you go full of curiosity concerning them. There
is^much about them that you have yet to find out. And when you
go into the household and see them, there is that in the pulsations
of life itself which no portrait can represent. No painter paints on
canvas as the presence of living people paints on your consciousness.
You knew a multitude of facts in regard to these relatives, but the
knowledge which you had was as nothing compared to the knowl-
edge which you have now, after having been with them in the
household, and communed with them.
It is true that in the Bible there is much sublime portraiture
representing the character of God ; but, after all, no man knows God
until he has jjersonally found him out in such a way as that he feels
that God has touched him. It is the communion, it is the soul-
feeling, it is the influence which comes from the conscious presence
of God, that brings him into acquaintanceship.
Therefore, every man must have a God of his own. You have
the Bible-God ; but he belongs to everybody. Every man's personal
identity, every man's character, differs from that of every other man ;
and every man's own self is the medium through which he inter-
prets the divine character, and takes different parts of it, and in dif-
ferent proportions, and with different emphasis — as I will show in a
moment. No man can say, " I know God as a liviyig God," except
so far as he has interpreted him out of his own living consciousness.
The conception of God, primarily, then, depends upon the attri-
butes and the qualities of the divine Beingwhich have been catalogued
for us; but our real, vital thought of God depends far more upon
proportion and emphasis. You may take a list of attributes and
make out of them a thousand men, and the list shall be the same.
Thus, you may say of a man, " He is truthful, tender, faithful, gen-
erous, industrious, thoughtful." All those qualities are true of a
thousand men. They do not discriminate one man from another.
Here is a man who is truthful, industrious, faithful, thoughtful,
active; but he is a painter, and his life comes through the sense
of beauty in form and color. Another man, with precisely the
60 HOW TO LEABN ABOUT GOB.
same general qualities, is a merchant. Another is a statesman.
Another is a mechanic. Another is a voyager. One is full of delicacy.
He has a woman's nature. Another man, with just these same
qualities, is robust and sturdy. He is trained in the more vigorous
exercises of life. You see you cannot discriminate between one
man and another merely by the recapitulation of these qualities.
Now, suppose you say of God, " He is just, true, righteous, pure,
benevolent, lovely." Those qualities being enumerated, there will
probably be in this audience a thousand different conceptions of the
personality which they go to make up.
What are the circumstances which will make this difference yi
your conceptions of the divine nature ? I will explain. Some there
are here who are far more sensible to physical qualities than
others. The sublimity of power is to their thought one of the chief
divine attributes. God is omnipotent. That idea touches them.
He is omjiiscient. Their eyes sparkle when they think of that. He
is omnipresent. They have a sense of that. He is majestic. He
has wondrous power. He fills the heavens. He thunders in sum-
mer. He breaks down the forests by his tornadoes. He sinks ships
by his storms. According to their conception he is God of all the
earth. None can resist his might. He doth what he will. He is
supreme" in the councils of heaven and among the people of the
earth. There are a great many of you who feel, " That is the kind of
God that I want — a God who has substance and power in him." That
is your sense of God. If you only have such a God, you are sat-
isfied.
Another person wants a scientific God. He says, " I perceive
that there is a law of light, a law of heat, a law of electricity ; I see
that everything is fashioned by law; and my idea of God is that he
must be supreme in science ; that there are to be found in him all
those qualities which science is interpreting to me." His God will
be just, generous, faithful, but lie will be just, generous, faithful,
after the fashion of some Agassi z, or some Cuvier, or some Faraday.
His God will be some form of being lifted up to great supremacy in
the direction of science.
Another man conceives of God from the domestic side. It is
the mother-nature that he thinks of — the nature that is full of gen-
tleness; full of kindness; full of sympathy; full of sweetness; full
of elevated tastes and relishes ; full of songs ; full of all manner of
joy-producing qualities. His conception of God will fill liis mind
full of little glinting lights scarcely worthy to be described in lan-
guage, but going to make up his ideal.
Another, who is an artist, will feel after the God of the rainbow
— a God of beauty.
no W TO LEABN ABO UT GOD. € L
So every person will be dep'endent upon the most sensitive parts
of his own soul for his interpretation of God. What is it that makes
one flower blue and another scarlet ? No flower reflects all the lijrht.
If a flower is purple it absorbs a part and reflects the rest. If it is
blue it absorbs some of the parts and reflects others. The same is
true if it is red. And as it is with the colors of flowers, so it is with
our conception of God. What you are susceptible of, and what you
are sensitive to, in the divine nature, largely determines what your
conception of God is. There are many elements which are common
to the conceptions which all persons form of God ; but each indi-
vidual puts emphasis on that part of the character of God which
his own mind is best fitted to grasp.
For instance, God is said to be a God of justice, of truth and of
benevolence. Now, Avhich of those elements is first? Which gov-
erns the others? It makes a difference Avhich qualities are subor-
dinate, and which are predominant. It makes a difference which
governs and which is governed. There are several parts to every
piece of music, and it makes a diflference which of these parts is the
light and which is the shade of harmony. And so it is in the con-
ception of character.
We see this among men. We know a man to be good and kind ;
but he is stubborn. He is like those geodes — stones which are rough
on the outside, but which, if you break them, are full of crystals. We
know men who are outwardly hard and rough, and force their
way through life. At home, in the domestic sphere, they are full
of sweetness and beauty ; but the sternness dominates, and the beauty
is subordinate, and only fills the chinks of life. Another man is
stern ; but the element of benevolence dominates and rules in him.
Everything else is subordinate to that. The same qualities may ex-
ist in different persons, and yet their characters may differ, from the
fact that the emphasis is put upon one quality in one, and upon
another quality in another.
One theology holds that God is a supreme Judge and Lawgiver.
It holds that he is just and true first ; and that whatever is in him
of goodness and kindness and gentleness is to be considered after
he has had full swing of those attributes. The theology which
forms that conception of God I call the High Calvinistic.
Another theology holds that though God is just, he is promi-
nently a God of goodness and love — love outshining ; love filling
the heavens ; love pouring itself out as the sun pours itself over all
the earth ; love that, like the light, searches everywhere, leaving
nothing unglorified ; love that calls into life and beauty the very
mosses which have only the rock for a mother ; love that makes tho
62 ROW TO LUABN ABOUT GOD.
stick radicant ; love that makes the very barren sand beautiful ; love
that speaks through the dew-drop and the rain-drop ; love that
makes everything radiant and beautiful in all the earth. Let that
be the first thought. Then in carrying out, in exercising, this
love, there is a necessity of pain. Love does not scrujale to give pain
any more than a mother does. If to save bitterness, bitterness needs
to be taken into the stomach of the child, bitterness must be ad-
ministered ; and it will be administered in love. If to restore
the child's health it needs to be starved, it is starved ; and love
starves it. If the child, for the sake of its disposition needs to have
some physical help to overcome its temper, help it shall have ; and
it is love that gives it.
It makes a great deal of difference which end first you put attri-
butes in the divine character. If God is first sternly just, and then
suffers and is kind, that is one sort of God. If he is first loving,
and then in the service of love is stern, and severe even, that is
another kind of God. I hold that the emphasis which you put
upon the divine attributes determines the character of God in your
mind ; and when you say, " I hold that God is omniscient, omnip-
otent, omnipresent, just, good, true, faithful, benevolent," you
have said what this man says, what that man says, and what I say.
We are all agreed, then, are we ? Oh, no ! If I could take a
Daguerrean picture of the conception which each man forms of
God, it would be found that one puts more emphasis on justice than
love, and that another puts more emphasis on love than on justice.
It would be found that one emphasizes one attribute, and another
its opposite ; and that the conception which each one forms of the
divine character depends upon the quality which he emphasizes
most.
There are persons who say, " It needs nothing but clear teach-
ing to have everybody agree upon the character of God." You
might as well say that one man could drain the whole Atlantic
Ocean, or breathe the total atmosphere above his head. God
is infinite ; and there is so much of him that it takes the sum of
hundreds of men's thoughts put together to begin to touch the hem
of his garment. God, the everlasting Father — do you suppose that
you can comprehend him, any one of you ? You can take in a
little of the knowledge of him, and it is true as far as it goes ; but
it goes only a little way. It is enough to be of service to you, it is
enough to guide you, it is enough to comfort you ; but it is only a
paragraph of the great volume to which it belongs.
Is there anything more sad than to see two persons living to-
gether, one having a great and rich nature which the other is not
HOW TO LEAEN ABOUT GOD. 63
able to understand ? I have seen husbands and wives who were ill-
matched in this way. I have in my mind such a couple. They
have both gone to heaven. I hope that it is different with them
there ; but on earth she was radiant and royal in all those qualities
of womanhood which make one thank God ; and he was a small
pattern of a man who ran after her with a kind of admiration for
what she knew, and with a vague impression that there was some-
thing about her that he did not know — which was very true.
I see people running after G-od very much so. All of us have a
conception of some parts of his nature; we have a dim understand-
ing of some of his attributes ; we see him through a glass darkly ;
but by and by, when we go home to heaven, and only then, we shall
see him face to face.
It is not possible, my brethren, that there should be absolute
unity. One man will have his picture of God, and another man
will have his, and another will have his, and they will all be true,
but they will all be partial. They will be true in the same sense \
that what is true of one leaf of an apple tree is true of the whole
orchard. They will be true in the same sense in which a little bit
of landscape which you pick out from nature and put on your can-
vas is true of the whole of nature. It does not represent nature.
Nature is bigger than that. It has more sides to it than that. One
landscape is of rocks ; another is of sand on the sea-shore ; another
is of the tranquil sea ; another is of the glacier ; another is of fields
and forests. Nature is complex, and cannot all be represented by a
single picture. And so the whole of God transcends the concep-
tion of any one human being. We know in part ; but when that
which is perfect is come, then we shall know as we are known. We
shall see Him as he is. Such is the interpretation of the Word of
God.
The next question which you would naturally propound to me,
is, " Since these are the ways in which God is conceived of by men,
how shall each fashion in himself the living God ?" I call the Bible '
a picture gallery. It is an historical record which is open to all ; but
it behooves us each to have some conception Avliich we call our God,
our Father's God, the living God. I know of no other way than
that which has been practiced by the race from the beginning. I
know of no other way than for you, in filling out the catalogue
Avhich the Word of God gives you of the elements of the divine na-
ture, to employ i\\Q actual perceptions and experiences of this life,
in order to kindle before your mind those qualities which other-
wise would be abstract to you.
For instance, w^ are to know " the love of Christ which passeth
64 now TO LIJAEN ABOUT GOD.
knowledge." This has seemed almost contradictory to many per-
sons. They have so low an experience of love in the world that
they have no color on their pallette with which to draw the portrait
of that part of God. A person who has seen love in hnman life ;
who has seen the wealth of it ; its lights and shades ; its heights and
depths ; its beauty ; its permanence — snch a person has a rich foun-
tain of inspiration.
Blessed be those men to whom God gave a mother that stands in
their imagination and memory as the Virgin Mary stands to the
worshiping Catholic, the sum of all goodness ! Woe be to him who
has never had a sister, a wife or a mother, who was to him a per-
petual suggestion of the nobleness, the sweetness, and the delicacy
of love. When I think of God, I think of the goodness that I have
known in such a one, and in such a one, and in such a one. When
I have brought to me some rare tale of devoted love, the light of it
does not stop with the person about whom it is spoken : it flashes
out toward God ; and so I get an interior view of the divine nature.
The glowing mass I cannot understand ; but I transfer this little
spark out of the household to the divine nature, and give it infinite
proportions ; and then I say to myself, " Oh, that is the nature
of God!"
.1 know of parents who live on the cross perpetually. I know
of parents who have one, two, three children ; and I speak the truth,
I lie not, when I say that the greatest joy which could be borne to
them would be the message, " Your child is dead." What a life is
theirs ! And yet, I know there is no kindness too great for them to
show toward those children. I know that there is a patience which
never wears out. I know that those who are good do not receive a
tithe of the yearning and sympathy which those who are bad receive.
I see what the heart of great natures is when in pursuit of those
•who are out of the way and are in danger of perishing. I see what
the baptism of love is. I see what its tenacity is. I see
what its fertility is. I see how it will suffer and watch and
work, and never fail till the sea dries up, till the clouds are
gone, till the universe burns. " Love never faileth." Whenever
I get a hint of this, I lift it up and transfer it to the character
of God, and say, "Is that then a conception of the divine love and
mercy of Jesus Christ? Is that redeeming love? Is that the
thought of the grandeur of which we get a hint, a suggestion from
our experience among men, lifted up into the infinite sphere, and
made majestic as God himself?"
The tommu7iion of the Jloly Ghost; the indxcelling of God;
havinff loved his own, he loved them unto the^nd / cohere I am^
EO W TO LEAEN ABOUT G OD. 6 5
there ye may be also — those soul-caressing words of the Lord Jesus
Christ are in the literature of love without a parallel, and must
always be. I cherish all those moments in which I am conscious
of the most heroic and worshipful love to those who are as near and
dear to me as life. I sew them with golden thoughts to me. I
weave my life into theirs. I am strong because of them. I should
be weak without them.
What the inspiration of music is in the household, that is love
in the economy of the soul. I know what the bright days and the
golden hours of love are. "When, therefore, Christ says that he
loves, I take the most exquisite, the sweetest, the most refined and
delicate sentiment of love that I have seen or felt or dreamed of, and
I say, " All this is but the beginning of that love which goes on
in the divine nature, pulsing through the universe, lasting
forever and forever, and which will round out the future, redeeming
the race. So I get a conception of the royalty of God in Christ
Jesus which puts me in sympathy with the apostle when he speaks
of the length and breadth and height and depth of the love of
Christ which passes knowledge — intellectual knowledge.
Suppose, then, that you have built up in your mind, by some
such process as this, a personal God — a God of your own — who fills
the heaven with the best things you can conceive of, to which you
are perpetually adding from the stores of your daily experience — for
it seems to me that God is a name which becomes more and more by
reason of the things which you add to it. Every element, every
combination of elements, every development which carries with it a
sweeter inspiration than it has been your wont to experience, you
put inside of that name ; and you call it God. You are forever
gathering up the choicest and most beautiful phases of human life;
and with these you build your God. And then you have a living
God adapted to your consciousness and personality,
Xow, let me ask you — for I come back to my text (a sermon
should always have a text at one end or the other, and this sermon
has one at the last end) — let me ask you whether it is not a good
text to stand on :
" Thus saith the Lord, let not the wise man glory in his wisdom."
A man who has D.D. or LL.D to his name; a man who bears
the title, F.R.S. or Ph.D., is apt to glory in his Avisdom. Why, he
is a savant/ He is a philosopher! He is world-renowned! If
he take a ship to go abroad the papers proclaim it, and tidings
of his approach reach the foreign shore before he does ; and when
he lands, the people in the street look at him — for there is a world
of impertinent curiosity ; and they point him out, and say, " Do
6Q HOW TO LEABN ABOUT GOD.
yon know "who that is?" He is bathed in people's observation.
Does not a man rejoice in that ? A great many do.
"Neither let the mighty man glory in his might."
" Who can touch me ? I do not owe anybody. The law cannot
touch me. I have committed no offense. I have a vast estate.
There are no bounds to my resources. I have the presidency of that
great corporation. I am one of its chief managers. I can just touch
one of these springs, and control the whole State, and all the party."
A man takes the paper in the morning, and reads, and strokes his
beard, and says to himself, " Grand things stand where I stand. I
wield a mighty power. I rejoice to think that I am such a strong
man." A great many men do rejoice in their might.
"Let not the rich man glory in his riches."
If that were obeyed, it would upset New York in one twenty-four
hours. A rich man not glory in his riches ! A rich man not hang
all the insignia of vanity on the outside of his house so as to make
everybody stop before it and exclaim, " Who lives there ?" A rich
man not fill the inside of his house full of everything that is costly
and beautiful, so that when a person comes in, at every step some-
thing shall say to him, " You must stop and look at me " ! A rich
man not' surround himself with all those things which gratify his
vanity ! A rich man not rejoice in his riches ! A man be so rich
that he is able to throw out money by the handful and never miss
it ; a man have riches that come in as tides do along the whole line
of the sea, and not rejoice in it ! A man be rich, and not feel con-
tempt for poor folks ! A man walk with the consciousness that there
are only three men in the nation who can begin to compare with
him in wealth, and not rejoice in his riches !
It is right for a man in a subordinate way to rejoice, if he be
wise — although there are some very hard things said of men who
are wise in their own conceit. It may not be wrong for a man in a
subordinate way to rejoice in his might. If a man is six feet high,
he cannot, for the sake of humanity, think that he is only three feet.
If a man has the power of creating and combining and managing,
he cannot help knowing it. You might as well expect that a white
man would not think that he was white. A mighty man may re-
cognize his might; but there is something higher than might.
There is something higher than wisdom. A rich man has a right to
recognize the blessings of wealth — for wealth brings great blessings
with it to those who know how to temper prosperity Avith manliness.
A man has a right to rejoice, especially, when his wealth represents,
not craft and cunning, but patient industry long continued, and
the wise adaptation of means to an end. Some men who are rich
EO W TO LEABN ABOUT G OD. 6 7
have a right to say, " When I came to New York I did not own a
dollar ; but now I own a hundred thousand dollars ; and there is
not a dollar of it that ever caused a man to shed a tear. There is not
a dollar of it that can rise up in the judgment day and say to me,
* You stained me with dishonesty.' " Such a man has a right to feel
some pride in his riches — especially if he administers them so as
that they will develop in him something higher.
Now and then we are brought to the edge of the great invisible
realm, and then we are made to feel that we need something besides
wisdom, something besides might, and something besides riches.
When a man lies sick in his house, feeling that all the world is going
away from him, what can riches do for him ? It can be of but little
service to him then.
When a man is fifty years of age, and he has large estates, and
a high reputation as a citizen, if he is going to leave the world,
what can his wealth do for him ? If he knows that he is going
fast toward the great invisible sphere, does he not need something
to hold him up when the visible shall have broken down in this
life ? In lonely, friendless hours ; in hours of sadness ; in hours
when we have a consciousness of our fallibility and of our failings ;
in hours of fear and remorse ; in hours when some beloved one
goes from us whose going is to us like the going of an angel ; in
hours when the cradle stands empty, and when the house, that used
to be vexed with too much noise, is too still — a world too still ; in
hours when those on whom we had put our pride, and the horo-
scope of whose prosperity we proudly had drawn, are cast down,
and, as in a moment, the stay and hope of our life is gone — in such
hours what is there in riches that can afford relief ?
The great emergencies of your life make it needful that you
should have something more than wisdom and riches and skill and
strength. You need a God. You need to believe that there is a
providence that takes care of things, and that you are included in
it. You need to believe that over against fate and crime and ne-
cessity there is a God who has a loving heart. You need to have
such personal communion with him that you can say, " Whom shall
I have but thee ? Whom shall I desire beside thee ? Thou art the
chiefest among ten thousand, and the one altogether lovely." You
need something stronger than wealth, wiser than philosophy,
sweeter than human love, mightier than time and nature : you need
God. For when flesh and heart fail, then he is the strengtli of our
soul, and our salvation forever.
Brethren, I ask not whether your thought of God is of this or
68 HOW TO LEABN ABOUT GOB.
that school of theology. What I ask is this : Does it lift you up
in trouble ? Does it purify your soul ? Does it comfort you in be-
reavement? Does it carry you through temptations, blameless ?
Does it make death itself seem to you as the very pearly gate of
heaven ? Is your thought of God yours ? and can you say to him,
" Thou art my God" ? If so, then you have what the world cannot
take away from you; and you are more blessed than any outward
fortune can make you ; but if you are without God and without
hope in the world, what will you do in trouble ? What will you do
in sickness ? "What will you do in death ? How will you go into
the unknown future unacquainted with its language, without knowl-
edge of its Governor, a stranger ?
I bring to you the disclosure of God in his "Word. But it is to
be brought into your experience. Glory not in your outward life or
home-life. Glory not in any other life than this : that you know
God, and that you know him to be a God of loving kindness and
tender mercy.
EO W TO LEABN ABO UT GOD. 69
PEAYER BEFORE THE SERMOIS-.
What can we bring to thee, O Most High, in whom we live, and move
and have our being? What thought is there that is not overmastered by
the grandeur of thy conception ? What feeling have we which is not lost in
the flood of thy nature ? Where can our imagination kindle any brightness
that is not as darkness compared with the light of thy face ? Only in loving
thee can we praise thee. Only in those ecstasies which love begets is there
pleasure in the ascriptions which we bring. We cannot praise thee by de-
scribing thee; for we do not understand thee. We can take no measure of
thy being. Though thou art like unto us in many things, yet in many more
thou art so large, so transcendent beyond anything to which we have yet
attained, that we have unsaid the chiefest things, and thy brightest glory ia
yet unexpressed.
But thou art a Father. Now we know the way. Now we have some
conception and measure. What is it that makes our little children dear,
that are so far below us? Their love is the sweetest gift which they can
bring. Nothing that their hands can take, nothing that their minds can
fashion, is so precious as that. But when they draw near to us with the im-
pulse of love, and yield themselves to us with joy and gladness, though we
think more than they can think, though we are wiser and stronger than
they are, though in every way we are above them, we recognize them, and
draw them near to us. And so thou art pleased to take the little ones.
Thou art One whose heart, alive to all that is good in our least estate, is
sending thy thoughts forth as the dews go forth by night, and as the rains
and sunlight go forth by day, and art nourishmg in all, all that is good. It
is by the power and strength of goodness in thee that evil is repelled. It is
by the goodness in us which thou dost rear up and strengthen, that we are
able to overcome easily besetting sins, and to maintain ourselves as the sons
of God. Nor art thou cruel when we transgress thy law, and thou dost
chastise us ; for, whom the Lord lo veth he chasteneth , and scourgeth every son
whom he recieveth. We accept all the penalty, and all the pain, and all the
disappointment, and all the suffering of life, not as a measure of divine
anger, not as the stem decree of relentless fate; we accept them as the dis-
cipline of a God of love, who, by the wisdom and power of love, will yet
nourish unto perfection all his household. We submit om-selves to thine
hand, and accept the chastisement which thou dost lay upon us, praying
only that as our day is, our strength may be also ; praying that we may have
light to discern, faith to believe, and strength to walk in the right way.
We pray, O Lord our God, that thou will grant more and more perfect
communion between thyself and us. May we understand thee better by
living better ourselves; and out of the experiences of our advanced life
may we be able to see more perfectly the glory and the beauty which are in
thee. So draw us near thyself through better living from day to day, teach-
ing us how to fend off temptations ; teaching us how to eradicate evils, to
repent of sins, and to forsake them ; teaching us how to be built up in holi-
ness and true godliness unto the end.
Look graciously, O thou Spirit of all mercy and goodness, Jesus, beloved,
upon all that are in thy presence; and accept at their hands, this morning,
the offerings which they bring. Look not upon the poorness, nor the
slenderness of their gifts, but only upon their need and upon thine own
riches. Art thou not one who is touched with the feeling of our infirmities?
Is not our poverty, and all our wants, whether of body or of spirit, affecting
to thee ? Be gracious, then, to every one, and teach him to cast his care
upon the Lord, who cares for him.
If any have come up hither clouded with evil thoughts, or trouble of
70 ROW TO LEAEN ABOUT GOD.
mind, thou that dost by the wind drive storms out of the hep.Ten, shirw? again
royally in us. Canst thou not by the breath of thy Spirit drive all evii
thoughts and all suggestions of sadness away from us ? If there are any who
are disquieted with fear and apprehensions of the future, canst thou not say,
" I am the God of the past, and of the present, and of the future " ? Yester-
day, to-day, and forever, thou art the same. Thou art the same in justice,
in purity, in truth, and in love. In thee may we trust.
Are there those who are in great affliction ; whose memories are full of
poignant suffering? May the Lord be very near to them! Thou that didst
comfort the sisters; thou that didst console the mourners; thou that didst
call all the weary and heavy-laden to come unto thee, hast thou forgotten
the divine art and skill of healing wounded hearts ? We commend to thee
tliiue own elect sufferers, marked of thee as thine own by that which they
suffer ; and we pray that as from the crushing of the grape comes wine, so
out of their distresses there may flow forth that treasure of soul and of spirit
which shall be unspeakable and inestimable.
We beseech of thee to work in every one inward riches, and inward
strength. May our riches consist, not of that which the hands have builded,
but of that which God's thoughts and influences have reared up within us.
We pray for all those who are contesting in hfe, discharging their duties,
carrying the burden, bearing the heat of the day, that they may be strong
and valiant for that which is right, and evermore seek to promote the Gos-
pel of Christ by raising up that which is truer and truer, and higher and
higher in the practice of men. Increase in all a sense of thy providence — of
its personality; of its mightiness ; of its particularity to their thought and
feeling and necessity, so that every one may walk bathed in an atmosphere
of divine love.
Draw near to all who are mourning over sin and temptation ; all who
have wandered; all who have fallen; and all who are discouraged when
they look at goodness, to see how high it is, and how far beyond their
reach. Look upon those who would be good, but are periled by tempta'tion
and overborne by a strength mightier than their own. We pray that thou
wilt rescue them, and bring them back with joy and salvation.
We beseech of thee that thou wilt draw near to all those whose thoughts
wander away after their beloved. Comfort parents whose children are not
doing well. Accept the gratitude of those whose children are an honor and
a joy to them. Hear those who come this moi-ning, after sickness or absence,
to render thanks to God in the midst of his people. May their hearts know
how, as flowers, to send out fragrance and exhale gratitude before thee.
Be near, we beseech of thee to all those who are separated from those
best beloved. May they have some sense that their absent ones are under
the care of their Father. May they also have some sense of that rest which
remaineth for the people of God. What matters it what trial we have laid
upon us, or what separations we are called to endure, if we are going to a
land where there shall be no more toil and no more separations?
We beseech of thee that thou wilt draw near to any who hunger and
thirst after righteousness; to any who yearn and are not satisfied; to any
who from day to day desire to enjoy more intimate communion with thee,
and to be more mighty in things which are good. We pray that thou wilt
fulfill thy promises to all such.
We pray for those who never pray for themselves. We pray for those
whose parents are with thee, and who are far removed from the purity and
the ti-uth of their youth. We pray for the outcast; for those whom men
forget ; for those who are trodden down and abused ; for those whom seK-
ishness and pride rob; for those who are weighed down by sorrow and
Bhame and degradation.
MOW TO LEARW ABOUT GOD. 71
O Lord our God, help us to cling to our faith in thy fatherhood. Thou
art good, and not evil. And yet, what means the suffering of men ? The
whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain yet. Look upon the nations.
See their darkness and their distress. O come, if thou art the Redeemer of
the world, to rescue the race, to lift up the poor and the degraded, to
banish ignoranc^e, and to bring in that light which shall expurgate all the
woiks of dai'kness throughout the globe. Lift the light of thy countenance
upon the struggling peoples of the earth. And may the day speedily come
when wars shall be known no more, when oppression shall be forgotten,
and when all the earth shall rejoice in common praise, and in the love and
unity of the Spirit of God.
We commend to thee thy servant who ministers in holy things in this
place, and all those who are gi'ouped together ^vith him in the sacj'ed woik
which they have in hand. We thank thee for the prosperity which thou
hast vouchsafed to thy servant. May he be made mighty in the Scripture
and niighter in the experience of his own heart. May he have the hearts of
this people; and may he be able to sow with good husbandry seed that
shall spring up and bear fruit in holy living. We pray that thou wilt bless
him in his household, and in this place. Prosper him in his labors among
this people where they shall seek to establish themselves a home. There
abide with him. And from his ministrations may multitudes arise, in the
last day, to call him blessed.
We ]iray that thou wilt look upon -all sister churches of every name,,
Unite thy people. May they have more patience, more gentleness, more
charity, toward each other. And grant that at last all the earth may see
thy salvation.
And to the Father, the Son, and the Spirit, shall be praises evermore.
Amen.
PRAYER AFTER THE SERMON.
O Lord, we thank thee that thou art in the heaven transcendently more
glorious than any human imagination can understand. By searching we
cannot find thee out, nor understand the Almighty unto perfection. And
yet, we know that our mistakes will be in not making thee glorious enough.
The depth of thy love, the power of thy sympathy, the sweetness of thy
patience, the greatness of thy forgiving mercy, none can understand. Not
until we are transferred, not until we ourselves are made better and larger,
can we have, in any adequate measure, the conception of our God.
Grant, then, that we may grow in grace, and so in the knowledge of our
Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ, until by and by it shall dawn, and we,
emancipated from the flesh, become the children of God in very deed, to
know as we are known.
Vouchsafe thy blessing to rest upon this flock. Again we hold up before
thee, for thy supremest care and blessing, thy servant, their pastor, praying
that thou wilt guide his feet safely, and that by and by, when his work on
earth shall be accomplished, he may be greeted at heaven's gate by hun-
dreds that have been sent thither by his preaching, and saved.
May we all find the city, and find the gate wide open. May we all find a
multitude waiting for us. May we find that out names are known there,
and that we are saved. And, desired and drawn by the everlasting tide of
love, may we run into the harbor, out of which none shall go again, and
where no storms shall fall.
We ask it in the name of Jesus Christ our Lord and Saviour. Amen.
T.
The Church of the Future.
invocation/
Our Father, up through all our cares, in spite of our burdens, through
the darkuess and the night, through the storm, through doubts, through
fears, through sorrows, we press our way toward thee. For thou art our
refuge. Thou art our fathers' God, and our God, and our only hope. Vouch-
safe to us, this morning, then, some sense of thy x^resence, that in our weak-
ness we make take hold of everlasting strength, and help ourselves by God's
power. We pray that thou wilt grant unto us, this morning, that we may
worship together in fellowship, in blessing, m peace, in gladness, in honor
Grant that the kingdom of God may be within us to-day. Vouch-
safe, we pray thee, thy help, that every service of the sanctuary may be
blessed and guided from above. Help us to speak, and thy people to hear.
May we all rejoice in the service of song. May we easily find our way to thy
throne in prayer. May every exercise please thee. We ask it through Jesus
Christ our Lord. Amen.
5.
/
THE CHURCH OF THE FUTURE.
" Our fathers worshiped in this mountain ; and ye say, that in Jerusa-
lem is the place where men ought to worship. Jesus saith unto her, Wo-
man, believe me, the hour cometh when ye shall neither in this mountain
nor yet at Jerusalem, worship the Father. Ye worship ye know not what :
we know what we worship; for salvation is of the Jews. But the hovir
cometh, and now is, when the true worshipers shall worship the Father in
spirit and in truth; for the Father seeketh such to worship him. God is
a Spirit; and they that worship him must worship him in epirit and in
truth."— John iv., 20-29.
This, I think, is the earliest attempt to point out that which
has excited in our day a great deal of discussion, and a great deal
more of curiosity — namely, what is called the Church of the Future.
Our Saviour, Jesus, is here holding high discourse with a Samari-
tan woman ; and the theme, although ranging over wider ground,
here touches the particular topic, What is to be the future of re-
ligious worship ?
The Jewish idea of the church of the future we are not ignorant
of. It was supposed by the Jews to be a church having a definite
external organization, and therefore was called a historic church. It
was believed by them that this church would extend itself by means
of its external organization until it included within its bounds the
populations of the whole globe. They did not understand that all
the nations foreign to them were to remain in their own nationality,
and adopt simply the moral principles which were inculcated by the
Jewish teaching. On the contrary, they believed that they sliould
literally bow themselves down and become disciples of the Jews,
and be received by adoption into the Jewish church, so that in the
end all the people on the globe should be members of the Jewish
economy, and all the people on the globe in that economy should be
adopted Jews.
It seems to us very amusing— the idea that that handful of Jews
at the further end of the Mediterranean, with their cramped sys-
SuNDAY Morning, April 7, 1872. Lesson : Luke XV. Hymns, (Plymouth Collec-
tion) : Nos. LJ8, 877. 597.
76 THE CEUBCH OF THE FUTVEE.
tern, their specialties, their ordinances, their modes of worship,
their temple-service, should be so ignorant of its undaptedness
to the qualities of men, to their necessities, to their individual pe-
culiarities, to their race-elements, as to suppose that before the end
should come everybody would hav^ to be compressed into the Jewish
church. This seems very singular to us — or it would, if we were not
ourselves under just the same delusion. Our sect — the sect to which
each one of us belongs — is doing again what the Jews of old did.
Everybody believes in the universal extension of the church.
Everybody believes that his denomination is to receive into itself all
sorts of people, and that they are to be ground over, and remolded,
into little Baptists, or little Methodists, or little Congregationalists,
or little Episcopalians, or little Presbyterians, or little Eoman
Catholics. We think that every man on earth is to be named after
our sect, just as the Jews thought that every man on earth was to
become an adopted Jew before he died. What they exhibited was
nothing but a wide extension of that conceit which by nature belongs
to us all.
. The Jews believed that the temple in Jerusalem would be to all
races of men in the world the same that it was to them. They
believed that pilgrimages would always be made to Jerusalem, and
that the temple- worship would remain to the end of time. The
greatest shock which the Jews ever experienced was that which was
caused by the overthrow of Jerusalem, the temple, the altar-
worship.
Christ taught that the time was coming, and that it had set in,
when worship should be universal. And he taught that it should
be untied from any compulsory externality ; from forms, ordinances,
conscience-compelling beliefs. Not that Jesus declares that it shall
be untied from forms and ordinances and beliefs, but his disciples
understood it so. Paul taught that in Christ circumcision availed
nothing, and that days, and fasts, and ceremonies, and ordinances
and uncircumcision, were matters of relative indifference. He
did not teach that there was no need of external instrumentation,
but he taught that it was subordinate to the spirit. He taught that
men were left to their own option in regard to these things, and
that none of them were masters of others' consciences. He taught
that every man was free before God, and had a right to take
good wherever he could find it, under any circumstances — in the
temple or out of it ; in the cathedral or out of it ; in the church or
out of it. He taught that men were at liberty to accept religious
truth, whatever form it came in ; that man was imperially free
by the edict of his Creator, and had a right to find his way to
THE GEUBCn OF TEE FUTURE. 77
God, witli or without help, as it seemed best to him. He taught
that henceforth there should be universal liberty among men —
not to do what they pleased, but to find their way from their
lower nature up to their higher, and to take that way which proved
to be the easiest and best for them. They were bound by no
hierarchy. There was no particular place where they must go.
There was no round of services which they must . observe whether
it did them good or not. There were no articles of philosophy to which
they must subscribe whether they understood them or not. There
was no externality which had authority to say to men, " You must
conform to tliis, or you cannot be saved." The teaching of the Lord
Jesus Christ was this : that God is a Spirit, and that whoever wor-
. ships him must do it in spirit. It does not make any difference,
when you are worshiping, if a dozen acolytes or priests swing the
censer, — that does not alter the fact of your worshiping or not wor-
shiping. If you find that by having a ladder of form, by having
things written in a book, you can ascend better, there is no objection
to your having such a ladder ; but if your neighbor can fly, and
can ascend better without a ladder than with one, he has a right
so to fly. The man who worships God must worship him in spirit
and in truth. There must not be merely a recurring ritual, a set
of observances, something to do at just such a time, the making
of genuflexions in just such a way, the performing of some
perfunctory duties, and calling that religion. God must be worshiped
in truth. There must be a genuine glow of feeling. The heart must
be overflowing with love. We must worship as the spirit worships.
How do I worship when my heart, in the fullness of love, goes out
to my mother, or to my father, or to my companions ? God calls
upon the human heart to lift itself up to him in tRe loyalty, the en-
thusiasm, the zeal of love. Just such love as we give to each other,
purified and lifted upi immeasurably, is that love which God wants
from us, and demands. But there is no command, and there is no
obligation, as to the way in which it shall be attained. If you can
come into this state of mind in one way better than another, you are
at liberty to do so ; and if another man can attain it in another
way, he has a right to his way. No man can say, " You must get it
as I do."
Very soon the Christian church adopted the idea of the Jews —
namely, that the church of God on earth was not only to be an
organic structure, but that there was a definite, prescribed,
exclusive, and authoritative external form. That there is a
definite organic structure, and that there always will be, I
believe, just as I believe that there wiU always be a de/inite
78 THE CHUBCH OF TEE FUTURE.
scliool for teaching young people how to read. It is not in-
dispensable. A child may learn to read without the aid of his father
or mother, and without the aid of schools. Many a poor slave has
done it. Many men learn many things without a teacher
or professor. Yet experience teaches us that intelligence is acquired
more easily and surely by means of educational institutions ; and we
say that schools and academies and colleges will last to the end of
the world. But they are not obligatory or authoritative. Yet we
advise men to employ them as the best instruments for gaining an
education.
The probability is that men will always journey, and that they
will journey by highways and turnpikes and railroads ; but if a man
chooses to go across-lots, he has a right to do it. No man is bound
to go by the railway. He may travel on foot, or on horseback, or in a
wagon, if he prefers to. But probably there will always be cars as
the most expeditious and best means of traveling.
It is said, " When you say that churches are not necessary, you
disown the conditions of human nature." I do not disown them at
all. I suppose that to the end of the world there will be definite
external organizations — churches, with their methods and symbols
and ordinances; but God did not make them, nor ordain them,
in any other sense than that in which he formed families — civil
institutions, — science, literature, or anything else that is founded in
human nature ; in any other sense than that in whicli he
made and ordained Homer's poems, and Milton's Paradise Lost.
He made Homer and Milton, and caused the inspiration by which
they brought out their poems ; but those poems were only indirectly
ordained by him. There is a church, as I believe there always will
be — a historic body, composed of groups of men associated together
for purposes of worship ; but it is purely and merely an instrument—
and from the human side, too. There is not a church on the foce
of the earth that has any exclusive divine stamp on it. God
has not written his name on any one Christian church on
the globe more than another. The church as it is, is con-
structed by men. All things which belong to it are so Occidental,
modern, scholastic, that if you undertook to put them into the cradle
where they came from they would not fit.
Then there are those who feel that perhaps there may be a little
too much made of the external forms of the church, and who are
disposed to let out the harness one or two holes on that subject, but
who say, " The great doctrines are not going to be changed." They
hold that there was a definite deposit of absolute truth, that it was
committed to the churches, that it is contained in their printed sym-
THE CEUECH OF THE FUTURE. 79
bols, and that it is going to prevail, without much alteration,
throughout the world, and clear doAvn to the end of time.
The Arian and his school think that Arianism contains the
precious doctrine ; the Arminian and his sect think that Arminian-
ism holds the precious doctrine ; the Calvinist and those who agree
with him think that Calvinism formulates the precious doctrine ;
and among the. Calvinists, the Supralapsarians, the Snhlapsarians,
the High Calvinists, the Low Calvinists, and Calvinists of every shade
and degree, think, every one of them, that they have struck the
right view. They do not say that there will not be a little moditi-
cation, some slight change, a difference in the emphasis here and
there ; but they claim that their distinctive views are to go all over
the Avorld.
Thus Christians perceive the stumbling-block of the Jews. They
perceive that the Jews did not believe what was the real truth —
namely, that the ultimate church which Christ had in his mind was
not a mere organization, but the Eace — Mankind. They see that
although out of that race a few who were assembled together weje
called churches, that is, assemblies, they were but the first-
fruits of that which Christ was seeking. He said, "The
field is the world." The world, the race, the whole body
of mankind, and nothing less than that, was to be Christ's
church. We divide men up into denominations, sects, schools,
and so on ; but, after all, the divine ideal is, that the church is yet to
include all men, everywhere, and under all circumstances. It is
not meant to hold up as specially divine this church or that church,
this sect or that sect, this denomination or that denomination, any
of the various religious bodies, or all of them, but to represent them
as so many forces seeking to bring the whole human family up into
spirituality, and into a knowledge of God. The human family, the
race, the whole race — that is the divine conception of the final, fu-
ture church ; and the future church Avill not be built until that idea
is accepted, and until large strides are made toward the accomplish-
ment of it.
The church of the future we may now inquire into with some
light, I think, from these views — not so much into its definite and
exact affirmations, as into some of its more general aspects and
conditions.
1. The church of the future is to be looked for, not m the preva-
lence of any single form of worship, or any philosophic creed, —
though both of these will go along subordinately as working forces,
— but in the condition of the human race. It is not to be an or-
ganized thing, with ecclesiastical lines thrown around about it ; or.
80 TE£! CEUBCH OF THE FUTUEE.
if ecclesiastical lines are thrown around about it, they will be merely
auxiliary.
When the careful cook compounds her material, and gathers on
her table the flour, she puts it in a pan. And the eggs — they are
beaten up, and worked into the flour, in the pan. And the leaven is
put into the flour, in the pan. And the sugar is worked in, in the
pan. And the suet is worked up, in the pan. The whole mass is
beginning, now, to be most tempting to the eye of the child, who is
waiting to see the raisins go in. And they go in. All these choice
ingredients are in the pan, being worked up; and the cook says,
'' Now, my child, do you see what a precious pan that is ? I have
heard people run out against 23ans / but I tell you, there is nothing
like jDans in cooking."
Well, is it the pan or the pudding that is precious ? The pan is
the thing to mix it up in, to be sure ; but is that or the contents the
most important thing ? I do not suppose that to the end of the
world cooks will be able to do their work best without a table, with-
out pans, without dishes, without spits and skewers, without ovens,
and a hundred other things ; but it is what is prepared by means ot
these things, it is the food, that is of supreme importance.
I do not suppose there will ever be a time before the end of the
world in which it will not be necessary to compass education by defin-
ite institutions of various kinds. In the great work of education
there must be schools of every sort for molding men ; but, after all,
these are only instruments. They have no overt divine sanction.
They need none. They will spring from men's natures and neces-
sities. They are safe, useful and normal.
So, in the course of religion, this sect is but a kitchen, and that
sect is but a kitchen, where the loaf is prepared ; and the loaf is
mankind. God looks upon the Eace. Men look upon narrow sects.
The ineffable Anglo-Saxon race, which thinks it is to be the frosting
of the loaf, or the plum at the bottom, will be in, too, at the final
baking. But I take it that the Celtic race, the Eomanic tribes,
and the Orientals, will go in as well.
Why, we are just as conceited and arrogant in our day as the
Jews were in their day. They despised the Gentiles, and we pity
but despise the Gentiles. We feel toward people outside of our
church about as the Jews did toward people outside of Jewry.
Men out of Christendom are deemed outcasts. If they are in a
church which we do not regard as the true church, we do not
think them quite so bad. We have not the feeling that the heart
of God is open to all mankind, in present pity, in real tender-
ness, in a true Providence, and that the cliurch is to be, not a
THE CEURCE OF THE FUTURE. 81
Beet but Humanity, from horizon to horizon, and from pole to
pole ; that Indians, Africans, Ethiopians, all men, barbarous or
civilized, bond or free, high or low, good or bad, belong to God's
great future church which Avill not be rounded out and completed
until they are spiritualized. And all the methods by which you take
this great heterogeneous race, and lift it up from its degradation, and
mold it from aninftilisra into spirituality, and give it commerce
with God, and sympathy and communion with the holy powers
above, are useful instruments, but only instruments. They are
means, not ends. They are not the things for which Christ died or
God's providence is reigning. The condition of the human family
is the real thing.
Local churches, national churches, are but rills or streams flow-
ing into the Ocean, until that day shall come when the " earth shall
be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the Avaters cover the sea."
The smallest rill is of use. The navigable river is invaluable. But
none of them, not the Amazon, is the Ocean !
Now, I believe that if the Church of the Future becomes so far
founded and built up that men shall be able to point to it as an
entity, it will be when the whole human family is developed, civil-
ized, Christ-like. The Avhole race must advance. You cannot carry
up any nation to its maximum height until you learn how to carry
up too all the nations that are below it. You know it was said that
the prophets and the patriarchs died before they saw the things
which were promised them, "that they without us, should not be
made perfect." The world is an organic whole. As long as any
limb or member suffers, the whole body will suffer. No civilized
nation can carry itself up above a certain line without carrying up
all below it. And God will not permit a church, any more than a
nation, to go high up in the scale toward perfection and leave every-
thing else behind it. There must be a common preparation and organ-
ization and economy by which the whole race of mankind shall be
removed from basilar to spiritual conditions. When the whole human
family, of every grade and color and name, of every conceivable con-
dition,are gathered into one substantial brotherhood, and are severally,
in their own ways, beginning to live as sons of God, then you will have
the divine influence encircling the whole, and that will be the
Church of the Future. That church will be no little ark carry,
ing forty persons across the flood, and leaving all the rest of the
world to drown. The church of the future is to be the people of the
globe, all their tears and sorrows gone, with strong bodies in health,
in harmony with tlie laws of their earthly condition, in living
sympathy with invisible realities, in communion with God and
82 TBI] CRUECH OF TEE FUTURE.
angels; the wliole race lifted up, and all flesli seeing tlic salvation
of the Lord — that is the chiirch of the future. " The field is the
world," said Jesus. Even so ; amen. The field is the vs^orld.
2. In the great church of the future men will employ educating
institutions and doctrinal forms; but such things will fall out of their
present idolatrous position. Rome, Canterbuiy, Geneva, New
England, will all alike be useful, and will all alike be relative and
subordinate. The ideal of the church is higher than that of the
means by which it is to be compassed. That will be the true way
of belief and of worship and of conduct which brings the individual
and the mass of mankind fastest and highest toward their true
manhood.
Will the Church of the Future have a creed ? Of course it will.
"What is a man who has no beliefs ? What would be the moral
worth of bodies of men without any moral convictions, without
definite ideas of right and wrong, of virtue and evil, of human na-
ture, of its relations to duty, of God, Providence, moral government,
Death and Immortality ?
But it is doubtful if any of the creeds which expressed men's
best thoughts of God and duty, at any age foregoing, will survive
the changes which growth in knowledge and the evolutions of the
human race will produce. The changes will be more in form, pro-
portion, and emphasis, probably, than in the root-facts, around
which Christian Creeds have clustered.
Belief in the existence and universal authority of a Personal God
will never die out of the world. The growth of man, and the
evolution of society, will fill the divine attributes to our conception
with qualities transcendently nobler than our impoverished experi-
ence hitherto has set forth.
The moral government of God will come forth into a clearer
light by all the researches which disclose the nature of men, and
the laws of nature, and the methods of improving and governing
mankind.
The sinfulness of man, its nature, extent and consequences, has
given rise to endless debate and dissension. Time will only confirm
and illustrate the fact, however much philosophy may change the
theories about it. Much that has been indiscriminately called Sin,
will under clearer light be regarded as ignorance, infirmity, heredi-
tary disease, race-peculiarity, unskillfulness in the use of moral facul-
ties, crudeness, inexperience, sympathetic bias ; but after every discrim.
ination and subtraction, it will be left clear that mankind are also
sinful in a sense implying choice, and carrying with it blameworthi-
ness and desert of penalty. The race is a sinful race as well as an
TEE CHVEOH OF THE FUTVEE. 83
undeveloped one, and needs the divine interposition for its rescue
and regeneration, and the future church will believe that fact.
Nay, more, men are in such a sense basilar, and so naturally at-
tracted to the earth, that I believe it will be a part of universal truth,
that all men need the influence of tlie Spirit of God for inspiration,
growth, and spiritual perfection. As no flower can lift itself up,
but is drawn by the light of the sun ; so no soul will ever lift itself
up except by the inspiration of the divine Spirit. By that inspira-
tion men will be lifted into the higher life — will be born again —
will be brought into the spiritual kingdom, and under abiding
spiritual influences.
That by education under divine influences men will rise to a
higher potency in all their nature, is, I believe, a fact that will be a
doctrine of the church of the future.
' The great doctrine of moral sequences will, I think, be a part
of the belief of universal Christendom in the future. I suppose that
the necessity of sufiering for transgression is eternal. When millions
and millions of ages shall have rolled away, and you are in this
sphere or that sphere, standing by the throne of the Eternal or on
the farthest orb that sweeps through space, unaccomplished in its
destiny, there will be found one universal law — namely, that obe-
dience to divine law expressed in man's nature will produce happi-
ness, and that disobedience will produce misery. Not that every
disobedience will be eternal in its consequences to each individual ;
but the system or constitution which makes obedience pleasurable
and disobedience painful, the system of moral sequences, which
teaches that the soul that sins shall die and that the soul that obeys
shall live — that system will go on for ever. It is not secular, local
or transient It belongs to the eternal order of the universe. If all
that happens under this great law were painted in its length and
breadth; if all its consequences could be brought out and known
in this world, if all the efiects of secret diseases, and hidden crimes,
and harbored animosities, and moral transgressions, in men, could
be registered and disclosed, — there is no monkish legend of penalty,
no representation of suflering, that could compare with them.
While we need no further illustration of the sinfulness of man
and his need of spiritual enlightenment and susceptibility to it, the
world does need a larger revelation of the restorative power of the
divine nature acting upon the human soul. In this direction it may
well be believed that in the Church of the Future, the vicarious
suflering of Jesus, illustrated from all the experiences of love among
men, will grow to a proportion and grandeur never yet imagined ;
that the medicating power of Celestial Love upon the human soul
84 THE CEUBCE OF TEE FVTUEE,
will have been disclosed in such radiance as shall fill the Tvorld witli
the light of redemption as from a new sun.
These great truths are only parts, inflections, of the truths of
manhood itself. They are revealed to us in the Bible ; but I be-
lieve they would have been found out in the process of time, even
without this revelation.
3. In the church of the future, ordinances will be hints, helps,
but never authorities. In the light of the sublime imity of
the human race in the future ; in the light of the relations of men
to God and to each other ; in the light of these great central doc-
trines of spirituality in the soul — ordinances of every description
will be reduced to their proper level. They are like a child's clothes.
Every child needs clothes ; but the clothes are not the child. Nor
is the child's character determined by the clothes which he wears.
They are like school books ; useful helps, but not yokes. *
There are in different neighborhoods different machines for
cutting grass and wheat ; but in estimating the value of a man's
crops the question is not whether he uses the Buckeye or the Clip-
per, the Hussey or the McCormick, or any other machine : the
question is, " How many tons of grass and hoAv many bushels of
wheat does he raise to the acre ?" When you Avish to know what a
man's success has been in raising fruit, you do not ask what style
of culture he adopted, or what tools he used, but how much his trees
yielded. It is the result, and not the kind of spade or hoe or
pruning-knife he used, that determines what his success has been.
" By their fruits ye shall know them."
That is a good ordinance which helps men to be better, and that
is a poor ordinance which does not help anybody to be better.
Men make idols of ordinances. They make middle walls of par-
tition of them. They say, " I am bound, ecclesiastically, to con-
sider you not a Christian. I recognize your meekness and humility >
I recognize that you are just and sympathetic; I believe that you
are really a child of God ; but still you are not in the regular order,
because you have not been immersed." " Yes, I have." " Ah,
well, you may have been immersed; but the man had not who im-
mersed you." " Yes," says another, " but you do not hold the
true doctrine of bishops, and the whole doctrine of the church."
"Yes, I do." "Ah, but you hold it after the Anglican sort, and
not after the Eoman." So men go on raising objections.
I do not seek to turn men from sympathy with cliurches, nor
from the use of ordinances, nor from any form of administermg
truth that experience has shown to be wise and useful. But is
it not time that men should learn that in Christianity the in-
TEE CHURCH OF THE FUTURE. 85
terior life and spirit were the subject of divine command, and that
the externals of religious associations were left to be determined by
the experience of Christian men ? The necessity of social intercom-
munion in religious things is the root of the church, and is as old
as the creation of man. During his whole life Christ was an obedi-
ent member of the Jewish Church. We have no record of any plan
of anotlier church. We have the clearest evidence that his apostles
did not regard themselves as the founders of a new church. They
remained in the Jewish Church. They anxiously cleared themselves
from the imputation of having departed from it. The directions
which they gave to early Christians were either to communities
where no Jewish organization had any visible existence, or where
the disciples, yet in the Jewish church, had instituted social
religious meetings of their own, just as Wesley's followers, during
all his life-time, were members of the Church of England, though
having a religious economy of their own existing within it.
But there is abundant evidence that the apostles, while distinctly
recognizing external organizations, helps, customs, &c., put them all
into the place of servants. The Spirit of Christ set men free. The
liberty of man in Christ Jesus was a theme of constant jubilation.
" Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us
free." "In Jesus Christ neither circumcision availeth anything
nor uncircumcision, hut faith, that works by loveP
The inward soul ruled all outward conditions! « The Kingdom
of God is not meat and drink (sacrificial oflFerings — parts of temple
service) but righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost."
Manhood is the sovereign thing. All customs and usages that help
it derive their authority from their lielpfulness. If manhood exists,
no ordinance can rise up and command obedience, as if there was
some mystic benefit in an ordinance besides the service Avhich it
could render to the soul !
It is moral quality ; it is exalted manhood ; it is spiritualized
human nature that religion seeks to produce. And that is what we
are all working for. We are working for it by schools and by
churches. Among churches, we are working for it by those that
are High, and by those that are Low. We are working for it by
the simple voice of the Book. We are working for it by the ordained
priest and by the man who never had a hand on his head except
his mother's. We are working for it as we please. And it is the
fruit which we produce that determines our fitness for the work.
If you make men better, you are ordained ; but if you do not make
men better, you are not ordained. The great end rules the instru-
ments, and is superior to them all.
86 TEE CEUBCH OF TEE FUTUBE.
4. In the Church of the Future not only may we expect that
great light will have been thrown upon the truths of Sacred Scrip-
ture, but that there will be such a reconciliation between revealed
truth and the truth of science that they will coperate and harmo-
nize as parts of a common revelation. It is not possible that the
Bible and the revelations of science should be in antagonism, and
yet both proceed from the same God. If there continues to be a
conflict between them one or the other must yield, and the experi-
ence of ages leaves us in no doubt which will accept modification and
come into harmony by new interpretations. But, in the far future
day it is our hope that the grand spiritual truths of Holy Scripture
will receive interpretation and confirmation from the revelations
of science — no longer "falsely so called." Then the distinction
between secular and religious, sacred and profane, revealed and
natural will be much narrowed even if not entirely done away.
There will be a change in men's notions of the comparative sacred-
ness of truths. All truth proceeding from God will be divine and
sacred. The decrees of God wherever promulgated will be alike
sacred. Truths will take their rank not by their method of dis-
covery, nor by the channel through which they come to men, but
by their relations to the higher or lower nature of man, by the
greater or less power of exalting man to his sonship in God.
Truths once disclosed, proved, and accredited, will thenceforth
stand simply gn their own bases. A truth discovered by a philoso-
pher will be as true as if spoken by an infallible prophet. The
decrees of God set forth by Natural Laws will be as sacred as if they
had been promulgated from Sinai. Nature and religion will stand
upon a common level, not by lowering religion to the plane of men's
former misconceptions of nature, but by lifting our conceptions of
nature up to the plane of spiritual and divine things. For a long
time religious men have regarded nature as a grand antagonism to
religious systems. Human nature has been contemned, as if the
misuse of normal faculties was man's true nature. They have treated
divine thoughts recorded in the material world as if they were not
only outside of all revelation, but as if they impose on men no moral
obligations, whether of faith or of obedience. By a natural reaction,
men are now rushing to the other extreme, and doubt all truth
that claims to be a revelation from God through inspired human
faculties. This cannot last. The final science and the final religion
will own brotherhood. Again the heavens will declare the glory
of God, again the earth will show his handiwork. When men are
better, and better understood then God will shine out in clearer
lines, and science will be heard saying, " The earth is the Lord's,
and the fullness thereof."
TUE CEUECH OF TEE FUTURE. 87
In that clay teachers Avill widen their sphere. Ministers will
QO longer gather their materials from a narrow and technical
theology. They will accept God's Word as travelers do geography
and as sailors do their charts, not as containing the things of which
they speak, as if a book were a world, but as pointing them out,
describing them, and sending men outside of the book or chart, to
the thing signified.
In that day revelation will be larger, wider, and far more nearly
universal than men have thought. Nature will no longer be
thought to vulgarize religion, but religion will have taught us to
behold a sacredness and moral meaning in nature to which we are
now mostly blinded.
5. To many of the views now advanced stout objections will
spring up.
It will be asked, are not men already little enough mindful of re-
ligious institutions ? Is there any need of divesting them of the
little authority which remains ?
Men have cherished a kind of idolatry of forms, ordinances, and
religious usages. They are now dispossessed of such superstition.
It will be vain to revamp the old notions. They are fainting and
failing. There is but one course to save men's regard for religious
institutions, and that is to put them upon grounds of reason, and
good use. If religious institutions are doing good there can be no
better reason than that for maintaining them. Men will preserve,
on rational and practical grounds, customs and usages which they
will reject on grounds of authority.
There can be no more pestilent illusion than that which leads
men to believe that nothing is stable or safe which has not a direct
authorization from God. How fairly grounded is the family, and
yet no pattern is given for it ! Civil government thrives and
renews itself after every revolution, not upon a divine rescript, but
upon that organic necessity divinely created in man for society
and for social order. - Schools are just as successful in their sphere
as churches are in theirs, and yet there is no Scripture charter for
common schools. The schoolmaster does not think it needful either
for his authority or for the perpetuity of his order, to trace back his
pedigree to some pedagogical apostle. God is nearer to us than the
apostles are! Why should men go drifting back for eighteen hun-
dred years to find the apostles when God is right overhead ? There
can be no better ground for any ordinance or institution than its
usefulness. If it be needed no authority can suppress it. If it bo
useless no authority can long maintain it, if reason rule and super-
stition is banished.
88 THE CHUBCR OF THE FVTUBE.
But will not such a doctrine of liberty in all religious things
tend to such individualism as will break up all cohering activity,
and send men off with centrifugal force into fragmentary sects, until
all economy of force is lost, and men lie as so much unorganized
sand on the shores of time ? Has liberty then proved destructive to
unity and wise organization in civil affairs? in the realm of intel-
lectual life, or in the industrial affairs of men ?
What has tended to create sects ? It is the notion that men have
had committed to them — a definite, divine plan of churcli order or or-
dinance, or a creed of absolute truth, which they and no one else
possessed, and which it was their solemn duty to propagate at all
hazards. If persecution be applied to them, like fire on clay, it
will harden them into solid forms.
The moment that men accept the truth, that it is the spirit that
giveth life, while the letter killeth, that the one important thing is
manhood in Christ Jesus, and that any variety of means and instru-
ments may be tested and employed, they will no longer feel that
"they are the people, and wisdom shall die Avith them." Sects
spring from the false notion that Christ determined any form of
church, any system of church order, or any systematic creed, and
from the religious conceit that each sect has the exclusive possession
of the divine council, and is bound to propagate it !
A true liberty in religion will lead to order, concentration with
elasticity, and harmony in infinite diversity. Many men yearn for
this larger liberty and this true catholicity, but they fear that it will
kad to a decadence of religious fervor, of real faith in invisible and
divine things, that it will send men adrift into all vague and wild
speculations, and that the world will be left without churches, or
religious teaching, and be overspread with a clear but cold and cheer-
less material philosophy.
But religion is not an artificial want, hanging on men like a
parasitic plant, beautiful, but with only mechanical adhesion to the
bough from which it swings and blossoms. The moral sentiments,
from which all religion springs, are an integral part of man's nature.
They may be undeveloped, or wrongly developed, but extinguished
they cannot be. Man craves a moral stimulus as really as he does in-
tellectual or social. He is a worshiping creature ; he bears deep within
him the sentiments of faith, of conscience, of benevolence, of aspira-
tion. They are as much parts of his organic life as intellect or do-
mestic love, or self-esteem.
This is the same kind of fear that shuddered and prophesied evil
when the doctrines of liberty were proclaimed against arbitrary
governments. Destroy the monarch and men will lose the spirit of
THE CEUECH OF TEH FUTURE. 89
allegiance ! Take away the throne and men will lose the love of
country ! Paralyze the strong hand and men will rush into storms
of anarchy, and civil institutions will founder in the universal
whirl !
But it has been demonstrated that liberty gives stability to civil
government, that laws flourish best among a free people, and that
the organization of society is far better attended to when intelli-
gence and democratic liberty prevail, than under any other circum-
stances.
In like manner the need of the soul, the hunger for the religious
element will always secure sufficient means and ministrations, if
men are left free. Liberty will multiply, not diminish churches ;
it will intensify, not deaden, the spirit of fellowship. Out of liberty
will spring infinite variety and versatility, so that the Church of
the Future, like a garden of the Lord, will have not one, but myriad
flowers, each by contrast or harmony helping the others. One tree
of life, but " twelve manners of fruits."
But did not the inspired writers speak of churches, and were
they not under the apostles' authority and subject to their direction ?
These churches were simply " assemblies" of believers. They were
groups of men banded together for mutual help. To each was
given such counsel as it needed. But, except the great canons of
morality, and the simple facts of Christ's life, there was no organiza-
tion or usage common to all alike Avhich was not subject to the
changes required by national customs, to the exigencies of different
places, and in short to the laws of convenience and expediency.
Church organization was extremely simple and adapted itself to
circumstances with plastic facility, and was as unlike the rigorous
forms of later days as the old and hardened bark of the hickory
tree is to the soft and semi-fluid alburnum within, which is always
taking the form of the tree while it is at the same time changing
and augmenting it !
The great question which concerns us all is that of immortality.
Am I near the verge and end of myself ? Am I made to tick and
keep the hours of this mortal sphere only ? When I am done here,
shall I be run down forever, never to move again or record the hours
of time ? Or do I belong to the horology of the universe ? Passing
through life, do I enlarge my sphere? Do I fit myself to live more
nobly, more fruitfully, with augmented sweep of being? Is that
true? That is the truth Avhich is pre-eminent, standing above
every other. The problem is, how to live here so as to live surely
and well there. And all the truths whicli come to us in this lower
sphere, civilizing society and Christianizing nations, are important
90 TEE CHURCH OF THE FUTURE.
as lifting men up out of vulgarism, animalism, bestiality, selfish-
ness and pride, into the serener latitudes of faith and love in the
Holy Ghost. What truths are good for is to create manhood ; and
they are good in proportion as they have the power to exalt the ideui
of manhood and inspire its realization ! Food is good, and good
only in proportion as it nourishes the body. And God's truth is
food. It is the manna of God rained down into this world. This
will be recognized in the church of the future.
When men would discuss with you the Church of the Future, tell
them that with definite organization it will have infinite diversity.
It will not be so much a temple, as a city with endless variety of
structure, with uses and ornaments expressed in a hundred ways ;
but that in spirit it will be one ; in creed one ; and that creed and
spirit will be, Love to God and Love to Man I
PRAYER BEFORE THE SERMON.
Thou, O God, art unsearchable. Such is the greatness of thy nature, and
so far doth it transcend all the circuits of our thoughts, and all the lines ol
our experience, that no man by searching can find thee out or understand
the Almighty unto perfection. Lo 1 these are but parts of thy ways which
■we discern in this sphere. Not the little round of human life can so mag-
nify itself as to represent the grandeur and the glory of that life which is
the life of life. Nor can we understand the ways of God among men — not
even with the light of thy truth shining upon us. Thou hast manifested
something; and yet the whole doth not yet appear. Thou hast made known
to us what we cannot understand; but we accept it, feeling that it goes out
beyond our reach, and is constantly eluding our thought and our feeling;
and we wait for the revelation of that bright day when we shall be dis-
abused of life, unclothed as to the flesh, emancipated from earthly constric-
tions, and when we shall be as the angels of God, and shall know as we are
known. We know, O Lord our God, but little. We know the way. Thou
art the Way, Jesus. Thou art the Truth. Thou art the Life. What if we
cannot understand all the teachings of holy men, we behold the beauty of
thy life. We know what was thy spirit. We know what was the character
of thy ministry. We behold thee going everywhere, familiar with the lowest,
not disdaining the Mghest, teaching on every side, sweet and blessed to little
children, comforting mothers, full of companionship for fathers. We be-
hold tliee rebuking things that are evil, that thou mayst cure them. We be-
hold thee standhig between the worst oppressions and the oppressed— the
oppressions of unjust thoughts — the oppressions of the rigorous and tyran-
nical selfishness of men over their weaker brethren. We behold thee every-
where breathing sympathy and love upon men. We behold thee making
the truths of God's government shine brighter and brighter unto the end.
Thou didst bow thine head; and in the midst of the great and mysterious
struggles which impended over thee, thou wert steadfast, calm, and per-
sistent to the last, in giving thy life a ransom for many. All the hidden
things therein we do not understand. We bring our experiences as so many
THE GllUItCII OF THE FUTUBE. 91
lenses to magnify them; but alas! they are wrinkled, and blurred, and dis-
torted. We seek to know what is hidden within, even, as of old, men
sought to know the mystery of the ark, desiring to look therein; but still it
is hidden Yet we know that thou art Love; and we know tliat all the
things which men call terror, and j^ain, and threat, and justice, and indlcfna-
tion, are but so many instruments of love, and that thou art working in the
heaven and throughout the universe for the kingdom of peace, and not for
the kingdom of destruction. We believe that the heart of love gushes and
goes forth toward the realm of everlasting love. There art thou radiant, re-
suming again in thy Father's presence the royalties of the divine nature.
But thou hast left thyself still lingering in the earth. Thou art still a power
among men, enlightening the imagination, quickening the heart, instructing
the understanding. Thou art still the Leaven, and art steadily leavening
the whole lump. And the creation which has wondrously groaned, mysteri-
ously travailed in pain, until now — what shall it bring forth but the ampli*
tude and royalty of that kingdom of which thou wert thyself the Fore-
runner, the Founder? As thou hast been its Author, so thou shalt be its
Finisher. Even so. Lord Jesus, come quickly.
We beseech of thee that we may learn to follow thee, not by the outward
life, and not by the things which are prescribed in the church, and not by
the form of believing, but in our innermost life. Sanctify our remotest
sympathies, the remotest germs of thought and feeling, in us, and wholly
bring us into the mood and disposition of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
May we have thy sympathy for men. May we cease to bound our hearts by
the lines of our households. May we cease to look upon those who are not
of our nation or lineage as indifferent. May our hearts go out, as thine did,
yearning for the world. May we be so clothed with universal sympathy that
all men shall be brethren, until we shall feel that we are brothers one with
another.
Grant, we pray thee, that we may labor less and less by calling fire from
heaven to consume those who are not in agreement with us. More and more
may we labor by showing mercy one for another. May we suffer for others ;
but may we avoid causing them to suffer. We pray that thou wilt make us
wise in winning those who are around about ua. May the summer of thy
love ripen us.
We pray that thou wilt look upon those who are in thy presence, accord-
ing to tlieir several circumstances. Look upon those whose life seems well-
nigh spent in vain. Look upon those who mourn the ruggedness of the way ;
upon those who are weary with their heavy burden; upon those who
scarcely know which way to go, and who need a guide. Disclose thyself to
them, and say unto them, "Come unto me, ye that labor and are heavy-
laden, and I will give you rest." May they take thy yoke and thy burden,
and find rest to their souls.
We beseech of thee that thou wilt draw near to those who are mourning
the hidings of thy face, and who feel that thou art just in rebuking them.
We pray that, whatever may have been their error, and whatever remorse
they may experience, they may not add to their past transgression the
greater sin of doubting the mercy of God. Oh, that there might be such a
sense of God's great compassion and forgiving love, that every soul, how-
ever beset, or tempted, or storm-cast, or driven, might still find thee, and
rest in thee !
Draw near to all those who have experienced thy providence in an
afflictive measure. Why should not thy people suffer, when the Master suf-
fered for them ? Are they better than he ? Was it needful that the Captain
of our salvation should be made perfect through suffering ? and can we be
92 TJiB cnuBcn of the future,
made perfect without it ? When much of the fruit that the trees bear is
wiud-dropped, and the winter binds them, and the storm shalies them, and
all the elements exercise them, why should we stand and ask that our life
should be forever calm, and that no fruit of ours may fall untimely to the
ground? Grant that those who suffer, in thy providence, may feel that it
is the Lord that hath done this for good, and that he saith to them, " If ye
suffer no chastisement, ye are not my sons."
Wilt thou lift up the hands that hang down, and strengthen the feeble
knees, and comfort those who need the consolations of the Holy Spirit.
We pray that thou wilt bless all those who are looking into the future,
or who stand shivering with fear, or with despair. Grant that they may be
Saved by hope. Though fate seems against them; though all their plans
seem to fall untimely and blighted ; though no friends are raised up to en-
courage and help ttiem ; though the things which are against them are more
and mightier than the things which are for them,— may they have faith in
God, and hear him saying unto them, "Cast your care upon me, for I care
for you." Though their father and their mother have forsaken them,
though friend aijd brother have cast them out, though men are averse, and
though the way of life is hard as a flint to their feet, may they still hold to
this most precious treasure— faith in God and his providence— belief that
God will do all things well, and in the end cause all things to work out tor
their eternal good.
We pray that thou wilt bless all those who are strangers in our midst.
Comfort their hearts. If they be in solitude, and if they be homesick, may
they have such a sense of the house of God as their home that their spirit
shall redeem their body. May they feel that they are with brothers and
sisters, and that they are standing in the presence of the heart of God who
teaches all to love. And we pray that their hearts which run backward
may carry with them everywhere the blessings which they desire for
children, for companions, for brethren.
Remember all those whom we love, wide dispersed upon the sea or upon
the land. How near they are to thee, though tliey be far from us! To thee
all things are as in one place; and how easy it is for us to commend our
children, and our companions, and our friends, to the care of our God who
is everywhere. Wo pray that this day they may feel the thoughts of God
which pass all understanding. Be with our dear brethren who may now be
singing the hymns of the sanctuary — some in the solitude of the forest,
some upon the ocean, and some on distant shores. While we sing, may we
feel that we sing with those who are ours, and whose hearts are joined to
ours.
Be pleased to bless thy churches everywhere. Grant that thy ministers
may endeavor to do good in preaching the truth as it is in Jesus. We pray
for the power of that universal sympathy and love which shall unite all
churches and all men. And so may heresy die, and love grow strong. We
pray, O Lord, that thou wilt build up thy cause, and extend thy kingdom,
and fulfill the promises which thou hast made. Glorify thyself in bringiu';
Jew and Gentile— all the earth— into one family, blessed of God and per-
fected.
And to thy name shall be the praise, Father, Son, and Spirit, evermore.
Amen.
VI.
Our Father, the King: Brother-
hood THE Kingdom.
INVOCATION.
Accept our praise, accept our inward thought, O thou that dwellest above
the heavens, and In the light, and m the very source and center of Ught,
which thou thyself art. In thy sight are we smaller than the drops of the
dew to the sun that looks upon all things in the greatness and majesty of his
might— upon the smallest and upon the greatest alike. Shine thou. Eternal
Sun, upon us, in our littleness, even as thou dost upon the ocean ; as thou dost
upon the mountain, so upon us ; as thou dost upon all that are in heaven, and
in the wide domain, so upon us, in our littleness and unworthiness ; and by
thine own soul's power, lift us up into sympathy with thee, that we may know
how to dare to call ourselves the sons of God. Bless us in our communion,
in the service of tlie sanctuary, in reading, in listening, jn singing praises to
God, in prayer, in instruction, in all things. Bless the whole day, and make
it the Lord's day every where. We ask it for Christ's sake. Amen.
6.
OUR FATHEE, THE KIIG:
BROTHERHOOD, THE KINGDOM
" Our Father which art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name. Thy king-
dom come. Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven." — Matt, vi., 9, 10
Day and night, the tides are rising along our shores, filling bay
and estnary, silently for the most part, yet surely. The power that
draws them resides afar off in the heavenly bodies, and is not seen
nor noticed, bnt only inferred. All the goodness of men, their
generous impulses, their loves and faiths and inspirations of purity,
their zeal and enthusiasm in self-denial and devotion — that great
human tide of goodness which is moving in upon the human heart —
is derived from God, who, afar off, silent as the moon in summer
nights, is drawing all men unto him. The rising of the Avaters
toward the planets is by force : the rising of human affections is
by influence. Matter has no conscious jiart in its own motion.
But though God efficiently quickens men, they work together with
him responding to his influence, and are drawn toward Him.
In God's creation we find a steady progress from force toward
voluntary life, from power toward persuasion, from coercion toward
liberty. The lines of development in the human race are running
steadily in these directions. Men therefore worship the worship-
ful ; they love the lovely ; they admire the glorious ; and they sub-
mit to the consciously superior virtue.
Two things are required for the production of any result in a
moral agent — a sentient faculty, and truths which have in their
nature a relation to that faculty, and tend to produce its pe-
culiar and distinctive operation. Two things are needed in a viol :
the string whose vibrations contain the musical impulse, and tlio
hand that sets it m motion. The string can not move itself^
Neither could the hand produce music if it were not for tlie string.
8tmr»AT Morning, Apuil 7, 1872. Lesson : Matt. V., 1-17. Hymns, (Plymouth Col-
lection) : Nos. »12, 705, 505.
96 0 UE FA THEB, THE KING :
Human faculty is like the string, and divine influence is the hand or
power.
It would be folly to condemn animals for the lack of moral
quality, because they have no moral faculty. It is wise to condemn
men for the want of moral quality, because they have in them that
which was created for that very purpose. In dealing with men it is
in vain to expect an answer to any appeal unless something is pre-
sented whose end it is to draw out such answer. It is in vain to
demand that the eye sliall see, if there is no light given it to see by ;
or that the ear shall hear, if there be no sound conveyed to the
ear ; or that the hand shall feel, if there be nothing that touches it.
The moral nature requires, also, its correspondency. And as it is
in the body, still more so: is it in mind and in morals. How shall we
smite if there be nothing wherewith to smite ? How shall ^f e en-
joy if there be nothing enjoyable ? How shall one laugh unless there
be mirth-provoking truth to excite laughter ? How shall one smile
if there be nothing to please ? How shall one weep if there be no
sorrow-breeding presentations ? How shall one admire without
something admirable ? How shall one love where there is no love-
liness, or approve where there is no fitness, or revere where there is
no superiority, or worship without any view of worshipful things ?
On this principle it is that the Bible from beginning to end is
constructed. It assumes and makes its appeals to man's intelligence.
It assumes that man is morally susceptible. It appeals to his moral
susceptibilities, according to their kind and laws. It assumes moral
truth to be admirable, and then demands a response to it because
it is admirable, judged according to the law of faculty by which ad-
mirableness is judged in man. It presents the divine nature as
containing in itself the qualities which, according to the laws of the
mind, should produce every experience commanded and expected
of men. Wrapped up in the divine nature, and disclosed by reve-
lation and experience, are all the causes which tend to produce the
states of mind which are made duties among men.
When we pray for the extension of Christ's kingdom, it must
be from a recognition of the beauty and desirableness of that king-
dom. I cannot pray for it merely because I am commanded to do it.
I am commanded to do it because I have been endowed with a sense
of its desirableness. I cannot admire beauty simply because I am
told to admire it. Can a blind man admire a picture which he can-
not see, or a man asleep rejoice in pleasures which he cannot feel,
upon mere command ? We must have such a sense of God's good-
ness as to long that his will shall be done. We must desire to
have his kingdi^m universal because he is Father, not according to
BBOTEEBEOOD, THE KINGDOM, 97
the pinched and penurious interpretation which we give to that
glorious word, but because he is a Father transcending any earthly
experience as much as the infinite does the finite. When the com-
mand comes to us to worship God, to obey him, to pray to him, and
to ask for the extension of liis kingdom, there must be such a pres-
entation of God to our mmds as shall wake in us a response from
those moral faculties which God gave to us. If men shall make
such presentations of the Divine Being and divine government as
violate the moral judgment which is inherent in universal hu-
manity, and which it is the pui'pose of the Gospel to develop in
man, then we are to reject such presentations. What if one cry,
" These be thy gods, 0 Israel — bow down and worship !" Israel is
bound to worship only the true God. The true God must report
the evidence of his being and nature to man's moral sense, l^o
man has a right to worship a demon because priest or prophet call
the cruel thing God. It is a shame for any one to say to supreme
selfishness, "Thy will be done." Only goodness has a right to be
worshiped. Shall we call darkness, light ? evil, good ? harsh dis-
sonance, music ? Shall a man lie to his eye and bear false witness
of his ear ?
Behind this hideous vision, this horrid and wicked picture which
men have made, there is a nature of God which answers to my moral
inspirations — which answers to that which is best in me, and best in
my whole kind ; and that One I will find out. My heart cries out
for God — but not for a heathen deity, cruel, selfish and hard. If
there be any where, in creed, philosophy or poetry, a revelation of
Love triumphmg over evil, of Power witho^it despotism, of a Father
who chastens whom he loves; who inflicts pain for the sufferer's
good ; who stoops from the height of heaven to suffer for his crea-
tures, rather than to inflict suffering upon them, let such a one be
manifested and I will cry with heart and soul, " Thy will be done ! "
And when that which is admirable is seen, and that which is uni-
versally beneficent is known, to that One I will say " leather " ; to
that One I will say, " Thy kingdom come !"
It is therefore a prime duty in all teachers to clear away the mis-
conceptions and hideous fables which may have grown uj) around
human conception of the divine character, and to bring forth those
attributes which will draw men toward God, not only, but which
will lead them to take hold of Him by their highest and best nature,
and not by their lowest and worst — that is, by love and admiration,
and not by fear and selfishness.
I. Moral qualities are the same in God that they are in man ; other-
wise there can be no sympatliy, no understanding, and in fact there
98 OUB FATHEB, TEE KING :
can be no intelligible God for men. They, therefore, who tell na
that we are so unlike to God, that the transfer in our thoughts of
our knowledge and experience to the divine nature is a falsification
of that divine nature ; that we are so utterly different from God in
quality and kind that there is no significance in our experience, no
interpretation, no analogy between him and us, do practically take
from us the power of forming any conception of God.
What idea do we get of color that is represented by blue, but
which blue does not at all resemble ? What if a man say to us, " If
you wish to know how your mother looked, Avho died when you
were too young to remember her, look at that picture, which comes
nearest to a resemblance, and yet does not look like her at all " !
Why, without resemblance what possible means can there be of get-
ting at the obscure and unknown ? How are we to know divine
being if it is so radically different from anything that we laiow that
there is no analogy that can interpret it ? Honor, justice, truth,
love, purity, hope, fidelity — these are in essential nature alike in
God and in men ; and we can reason from our knowledge to the
existence, the attributes, and the administration of the Divine
• Being. It is very true that human and divine experience are not
identical — that they are not precise measures one of the other. I do
not undertake to say that love exists in so feeble or in so adulterated
a form in the divine nature as it does in human experience ; that
these qualities, when they are divested of those physical conditions
which are fitted to be cradles, but which will pass away when the
child grows to manhood, will be comparable to the same qualities
in the divine nature. In God they are inconceivably more beauti-
ful and glorious than they are in men. I merely mean that the
root-quality which we apprehend is the same ; and that there is an
understanding existing in that wliich we are and which we feel,
which is the basis of a correct interpretation of the divine nature.
The scope, the grandeur, the overflow, the beauty of the divine
character will put all our conceptions at defiance. The fruitfnlness
of the divine nature cannot be compassed by our thought. We are
feeble compared with the agencies of God in natural law ; feeble in
understanding, compared Avith the vitalizing influences of the divine
nature ; feeble and fruitless, comparatively, in the noble qualities
that go to make up' manhood. God will transcend in grandeur and
fruitfnlness any model or magnification of models. The imagination
cannot augment quality so as to represent God. ISTevertheless, the
quality in us and in him is the same in kind, though not in great-
ness.
A little child has never gone out of its native village. Its father
BBOTHEBEOOD, THE KINGDOM. 99
has been a sailor. The child says to him, " Father, what is the
ocean ?" " Oh, my child," says the father, " the occau — why, sup-
pose that little brook there were to widen, and widen, and widen,
till it reached away beyond that hill ; and then suppose it were to
widen, and widen, and widen, till it reached away beyond the moun-
tain ; and then suppose it were to reach farther and farther till you
could not see the banks of it, that would be the ocean." " What,
father ! as big as that ?" " Oh, my child, it is a thousand times
bigger than that." " Well, father, what is a storm on the ocean ?"
The father takes a pail of water, and sets it down, and oscillates it
until the waves roll from side to side, and then he says, " That is
it, on a small scale, my child. It gives only a hint of what a storm on
the ocean is." The child will have a very limited conception, I take
it, of such a storm from what he sees in the pail. But every drop
of that water in the pail is like the water of the oceaei ; and every
one of its waves, in its curves, its motions, its laws, represents the
most gigantic waves of the sea.
Thus the lowest experiences in human nature, of love, of pity,
of fidelity, and of truth, small in us, are of the same essential quality
as they are in God. They are vaster in God, they are in him in-
conceivable in magnitude, in intensity, in fruitfulness and in
beauty, but we have the root-notion ; and it is not an unfair in-
terpretation which our imagination gives.
Moral likeness of qualities in God and men is indispensable to
man's communion with Him.
We cannot send up our affections to God unless there is in the
divine nature something that corresponds to our affections. Any
other view than this seems to me to lead to an abyss of ignorance,
or else to the wastes of atheism. The best experiences of mankind
are fairly analogues of the nature of God. " Blessed," therefore, " are
the pure in heart, for they shall see God."
II. Man is commanded to indue himself with the moral quali-
ties which are revealed in God. When it is said "Be ye there-
fore perfect even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect/'
we are exhorted to practice the virtues which exist in God. God
is our exemplar. His attributes, so far as imitable, are our proper
models. If then pride, self-will, self-seeking, the use of all creation
as a means of self-gratification, are right in God, they are models
for our imitation. Nothing can be more destructive to the moral
sense of mankind, than to regard these qualities which are detestable
among men, as right and noble, because exercised by a being
of larger nature and in a position of irresponsible power. If it is
wrong for a man to make his own fame the supreme object of life,
100 OUB FATEEB, THE KING:
it cannot but be yet more wrong at eacli step upward on tlie scale
of being. If any creatures are to be indulged with license it is the
weak and feeble. Obligations of honor, justice, truth, magnanimity,
meekness, disinterestedness, increase as we rise in the scale of be-
ing, and are supreme in God. To say that God has a right to be
se-lfish because he is Sovereign and can do as he pleases, is to corrupt
our fundame'ntal notions of morality. It is a lesson borrowed from
the most abject form of absolute monarchy. Those moral disposi-
tions inculcated by the Sermon on the Mount, and the sublime ex-
ample of the self-sacrificing nature of divine love, in Jesus Christ,
have educated the moral sense in Christendom. And that Christi-
anity which formed moral sense in us must be tlie criterion by which
to accept or reject the attributes of God, which, from time to time,
tlieologians present. And this same Christian moral sense must
guide us in all our interpretations of the meaning of the inspired
Scriptures, when there seem to be discordant or conflicting represen-
tations of the Divine character. If Christ was meek and lowly of
heart; if he taught men that self-sacrifice was nobler than self-
indulgence ; if he by word, and yet more illustriously by deed,
declared that moral nobility stood rather in suffering for others, than
in inflicting sufiering upon them ; if the examples and precepts of
Jesus teach leniency rather than severity, forgiveness rather than
condemnation, mercy rather than sacrifice, love rather than wrath,
then, in building up in our minds a conception of God, we must
not be deluded by monarchical maxims, nor barbaric ethics, nor by
figures of speech, or poetic and dramatic imagery. We must give
supremacy to the attributes which Christ taught and exemplified,
and construe all other representations into harmony with them.
If the Gospel be not a deluding fable, then we know among moral
qualities which are good and Avhich evil. Selfishness, arrogance,
self-will, pride, Avrath, injustice, are not turned into virtues by
placing them in the sphere of the infinite and giving sovereignty to
them.
That law which binds you and me — the law of the cradle ; the
law of the household ; the law of love ; the law of philanthropy ; the
law of universal sympathy — is nowhere so mighty as in the supreme
Heart-governor of the universe, who does what he pleases because
he always pleases to do good. I will admit that in one sense, looking
at it in one way, God can take no counsel with any man. He
j-udges of what is benevolent as no other being does, because no
other being can equal his thought of beneficence. He does his Avill
merely Ijecause he stands above all other intelligences in the per-
ception of that which is for universal happiness. The law of
BROTREBROOD, TEE KINGDOM. 101
God can receive no augmentation. Who are tliere in the uni-
ferse that have not derived their judgment and knowledge from
him ? And by that hiw, that moral constitution, which he put in
men, and which generation after generation augments and majves
stronger and stronger, I judge him to be one who does not believe
that might makes right, but believes that goodness makes right.
And he does what he pleases because he pleases to do that which is
infinitely good, and fruitful in infinite joy.
There be those who teach us that God acts supremely for his own
glory. That you can put a construction upon this which will disa-
buse it of its first and apparent meaning, I know. It may be that
God's glory consists in the welfare of his creatures, and that there-
fore he reigns for his own glory. "With such an interpretation as
that the sentiment has the heartiest approval of every soul which is
susceptible of moral convictions and intuitions. But that has not
always been the interpretation given to it.
All that in me which is the " fruit of the Spirit " rebels against
a transfer to God, of qualities which I have been trained to hate in
men ! I will not worship a malign Deity. I will not pray, '' Thy
Kingdom come" to a Being who is represented as doing things
which the worst tyrant that ever lived to torment men could not
have surpassed. Such a Being is not God. It is a hideous fiction —
an ideal idol, which every sane and good man should help to cast
down. Hear Theology saying ; " By the decree of God, for the
manifestation of his glory, some men and angels, are predestinated
unto everlasting life, and otheks fokeordained to everlasting
DEATH." Is God, then, One who in calm council with himself
determined to create multitudes of men on purpose that they might
sin, and that they might sufier for sinning, and that forever ? Did
he organize men to produce sin just as the loom is built to produce
textile fabrics, just as the engine is built to develop and utilize
power? Did he build them that they should answer the ends
of creation by suffering forever and ever ?
Look at Chapter Third, from the Confession of Faith of the Say-
brook Platform, adopted by the Congregational churches and minis-
ters of Connecticut, 1708 [cited below, entire]*. It is with a few
*1. " God from all eternity did, by the most wise and holy council of his
own will, freely and unchangeably ordain whatsoever comes to pass ; yet,
so as thereby ueitlier is God the author of sin, nor is violence offered to the
will of the creatures, nor is the liberty or contingency of second causes
taken away, but rather established."
2. " Although God knows whatsoever may or can come to pass upon all sup-
posed conditions; yet hath he not decreed anything, because he foresaw it
as future, or that which would come to pass upon such conditions."
3. "By the decree of God, for the manifestation of his glory, some men and
102 OUB FA THEB, TEE KING :
variations identical with what is called the Savoy Confession, or one
agreed npon at a conference of bishops and dissenting ministers,
held at the Savoy, London, 1661. The Savoy is almost identical
with the Westminster Confession, formed in 1643 and ratified by
Parliament 1690. It was approved and made part of the Cambridge
Platform by the Congregational ministers and chnrehes of New
England, 1648, — a few years only after its promulgation. The
Westminister Confession is also the Confession of the Presbyterian
Church of the United States, and is subscribed, entirely, or " for
substance of doctrine," by every licentiate of the churcli.
I am not finding fault with the Doctrine of Decrees, but only
with the one special decree, namely, the foreordination of men to
eternal damnation. I am not arguing the question of the reality and
justice of eternal future punishment as that dogma is held by ortho-
dox churches. For evangelical churches, at least in our day, declare
that men have sinned willfully, needlessly, against light and dis-
suasion ; that God neither openly nor secretly desired it, or desires
their punishment ; that even after thetransgression he earnestly inter-
posed recuperative influences, sincerely oflFered, and within the reach
and compliance of every man to whom the gospel comes. Now the
angels are predestined unto everlasting life, and others foreordained to ever-
lasting deatb."
4. " These angels and men, thus predestined and foreordained [that is, those
■who will go to eternal happiness, and those who are to go to eternal misery]
are particularly and unchangeably designed, and their number is so certain
and definite, that it cannot be either increased or diminished."
5. "Those of mankind that are predestinated unto life, God, before the
foundation of the world was laid, according to his eternal and immutable
purpose, and the secret counsel and good pleasure of his will, hath chosen in
Christ, unto everlasting glory, out of his mere free grace and love, without
any foresight of faith or good works, or perseverance in either of them, or
any other thing in the creature, as conditions, or causes moving him there-
unto, and all to the praise of his glorious grace."
6. " As God hath appointed the elect unto glory, so hath he by the eternal
and most free purpose of his will foreordained all the means thereunto.
Wherefore they who are elected, being fallen in Adam, are redeemed by
Christ, are effeetualUy called unto faith in Christ by his Spirit working in
due season, are justified . adopted, sanctified, and kept by his power, through
faith unto salvation. Neither are any other redeemed by Christ, or effect-
ually called, justified, adopted, sanctified, and saved, but the elect only."
7. " The rest of mankind, God was pleased, according to the unsearchable
counsel of his own self, whereby he extendeth or witbboldeth mercy as he
pleiiseth, for the glory of his sovereign power over his creatures, to pass by,
and to ordain them to dishonor and wrath for their sin, to the praise of his
glorious justice."
This view of the Divine eflBciency in the production of sin, first rendered
prominent by Augustine, has been, at various periods, the subject of long
and bitter controversy— one part holding that God created man to damna-
tion, not through the foresiirht of his desert by reason of sin, but lor other
reasons, hidden in God's own nature; the other contendiugthat though men
were decreed to everlasting damnation, it was because God foresaw tlie evil
that they would commit, and for which, as subjects of moral goveriiment,
they would deserve the penalties incurred. In its most rigorous sense this
chapter is still held by what are styled High Calvinists. But is believed
that the vast majority of orthodox Congregationalist and Presbyterian
ministers would, at this day, be unwilling to say that the view of God,
BBOTHEBHOOD, TEE KINGDOM. 103
representation of God in tlic cliapter upon Decrees is totally irrec-
oncilable with such views. It represents God as having for some
secret purpose, in which his interest was to be promoted, predestin
ated some men to an eternity of joy, and other men to an eternity
of wretchedness, and that the decree had in it the imperativeness
of absolute fate ; it executed itself with such irresistibleness that the
number of either kind cannot be increased or diminished.
"We do not doubt that pain is a moral element, and that penalty
is consistent with Divine love. But, the creation of suffering for
its own sake ; or the ordination of men to suffering without regard
to its benevolent effects ; and, still more, an idea of justice which
punishes men for acting according to the creative will of their
Maker, and of a glory which would be illustrated by ordaining men
to an eternity of torment without foresight of good or evil in them,
can proceed from nothing less than a demoniac nature. If one's
imagination can sustain him while he flies along the equatorial line
of despair following the endless circle of but one single soul, that
had been " made to be a vessel of wrath, had been ordained to sin,
and then had been passed by, and ordained to dishonor and wrath
"to the praise of his glorious justice!" he would cry out in an
ecstacy of righteous indignation against such monstrous and im-
moral notions of Deity ! To worship such a Creator would be im-
piety. To hold up such a view to love, and reverence, is to insult
the moral sense which has been rooted in the gospel. Such a God
is not only not manifested in Christ Jesus, but sits over against the
exquisite beauty of his revelation of God, as Hell itself sits over
against Heaven. If such views were believed, and widely spread, it
would authorize and justify every species of despotism in human
government, and make the spread of Christian ideas of justice and
self-sacrifice impossible !
naturally and obviously inferred from this chapter, is the view which Christ
came into the world to declare and manifest! So late as 18G5, the Council of
the Cou^rejiational Churches of America, meeting at Boston, Mass., placed
the minister;; and churches in the position of seeming to approve this chap-
ter, although, without doubt, very few of them held it in the sense in
which it was held by the early fathers of New England in 1G18 and 1680. The
language of the Boston Council was:
" We, the elders and messengers of the Congregational ehurches of the
United States in National Council a<stml)led * * * do now declare our
adherence to the faith and order of the apostolic and primitive churches
held by our fathers, and substuniiaily as embodied in tlie confcsftions and
platforms lohich our Synods of 1618 and, 1680 set forth or reaffirmed. We
declare that the experience of th(^ nearly two and a half centuries * * *
has only dccj)encd our confidence in tlte faith and pulityof those Fathers.
Weldess God for the inheritance of tliese doctrines."
The New England divines of 1648 and 1680 held to the doctrines contained
in the chapter on Decrees in a far more vigorous and more nearly litei-al
sense than have the modern New England divines. The Unitarian contro-
versy produced a marked chanae. The writings of Woods, Dr. Lyman
Beeoher, Prof. Fitch, and Dr. Taylor, of New Haven, have well nigh
revolutionized the New England views. And it is at least unfortunate that
the Council of Boston should have inadvertently gone back to 1048", uu-
miadful of the great progress made since that time.
104 OUE FATHEB, TEE KING:
The representation of God made in the Chapter on Decrees, in
the Westminster Confession, is not less blasphemous because honestly
framed. If held as High Calvinists hold it, it is an attack upon the
sanctity of God, and upon the moral sense of mankind. If it be
softened by explanations, and illustrated by other parts of the Con.
fession, as is done by Low Calvinism, it still can never be brought
into agreement with that idea of God which Jesus Christ came into
the world to reveal. Consider what a crime against universal jus- 1
tice and universal benevolence it would be for God to connive at
the eternal loss of a single soul, if he by any means could have pre- j
vented it! But what shall be said if he planned that ruin ; if he
called it justice; if he proclaimed the feat as glorious ? Have you
ever deeply pondered what it is to be lost ? To be shut out from
all joy, from the society of all that are good, to be herded with the
offscouring of the universe, to increase in the capacity of suffering,
through ages that travel forever and never draAV near to the end
of their journey ?
Consider only one being, one single soul, carried on forever, grow-
ing huger and huger, bloated with anguish, pressing forward, swell-
ing the latitude and longitude of wails that for ten thousand years had
shaken with horror the expanse, and which yet were so much less than
the later wails that they seemed like music m comparison I Con-
sider the rolling of the vast orb of damnation with a single soul down
through countless infinities of years ! The conception of one soul
being lost fills every sentient heart with paralysis of despair — with
unutterable anguish. Do not tell me that God created one soul on
purpose to damn it ; that he sat and thought of it, and said, " I
will do it," and started it on its hideous way of wailing and sinning
and sorrowing, and wailing and sinning and sorrowing, and wailiiig
and sinning and sorrowing, forever and forever — do not tell me this,
and then ask me to turn around and say, " Our Father."
Could there be a heaven, if it was known there, that beneath
their feet one single creature Avas traveling an eternal road of woe
for which he had been expressly created ? Praise would be dumb ;
chill distrust would creep upon coufidence.
What then, if not simply one single solitary being were moving in
an eternal pilgrimage of woe, along the infernal marl, but for
ao-es there had been moving thither a huge caravan — a myriad of
victims ! What could be thought of a sovereign who organized pain
not as a sanction of government, but who created beings for infinite
pain, in order to bring out some quality in himself called, by Avhat
strange transmutation of words I know not. Justice and Glory ! If
the astoundino- views of God prevail that are contained in thia
BROTHEEEOOB, THE KINGDOM. 105
immortally infamous chapter, and which deeply color the preaching
of even those that would give them the mildest significance, then
we must believe that a world is continued in existence to pour an
incessant flood of souls into that eternal anguish for which they were
expressly foreordained. The work is going on in every generation.
It will go on. It is known. It was foreseen. It was planned and
ordained. The army of the black banner must already be incalculable.
It is still mustering. Under the broad canopy of blackness and
darkness still troop onward these creatures whom God created ex-
pressly that he might manifest his glory in their damnation ! They
fill the air. They crowd the eternal road. They are swept on to the
sound of that trumpet whose blasts are full of thunder and woe.
The army never shrinks. The world is still going on in popula-
tion ; as they sink at one end of the line, others are born to beghi
the inevitable march to endless doom. God looks on. He does not
stop it. It is all for " the praise of his glorious justice" ! The world
is busy, populating — populating its tides of men broader, its channels
deeper. As Niagara has rolled on for ages, bearing over the precipice
myriads beyond count of drops of water, that plunged whirling
headlong into the boiling abyss below, so we must think that the
endless stream of human life has been plunging the solid breadth of its
waters over into the abyss of blackness and darkness forever. They
move to channels prepared for them. They come into life by an
ordinance. They are met here by a decree irresistible as Fate.
They reach the mark at which God aimed them !
Is not this frightful ? Is it not a hideous dream — a nightmare ?
Do men ever believe it and maintain their reason ? Is it possible
that we can worship at this shrine, if we love Goodness ? Is this
the government of a Father ?
It may be said, that the Divine Sovereign is not Father in any
such low degree as man is, and that it is not safe to reason from an
earthly Fatherhood to the Infinite Father. True. But in which
direction shall we trace the diflerence ? Is God less tender than a
man — less merciful ? Even before the clearer revelation in Jesus,
it Avas said, " Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous
man his thought, and let him return unto the Lord and he will
have mercy upon him, and to our God for he will abundantly par-
don him. For my thoughts are not your thoughts, nor my Avays
your ways, saith tlie Lord. For as the heavens are liigher than the
earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than
your thoughts." (Is. 55 : 7, 8.)
And Jesus, encouraging men to love and trust in God, pointed
to the relation of children and parents, and said, " If ye then, being
106 OUB FATHER, THE KING:
evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, hoio much more
shall your Father who is m heaven give good things to them that ask
him ?" God's Fatherhood rises to an inconceivable majesty of good-
ness. It is spotted by no ignorance, it is creased by no weakness, is
distorted by no selfishness, is clouded by no insincerity. It is full
of that tenderness out of which mothers learn to love their babes.
It is the source of that noble joy with which every father looks for-
ward to the well-being of his sons. He taught the parent to be
patient with weakness, to hide a child's sins till brooding love could
cure them.
Fatherhood is the central light of the Household of the Em-
pyrean, and from it came that spark which glows in every house-
hold of love on earth, teaching men that he is greatest who suf-
fers most for the sake of others. And, lest the faint analogies
should be too dim for our eyes, He sent forth his Son, to save a
world from sin and doom, while yet it was his enemy. As he was
coming to earth, angels cried, " Good-toill to men /" As he was
departing from life, he sent back the cry, " Father, forgive them !"
His life between these points is written in a sentence, " He went about
doing good"
To Him every knee shall bow and every tongue confess to the
Glory of God the Father ! God's glory effulgcs in the many vir-
tues which he has made obligatory upon men — gentleness, meek-
ness, benevolence, sympathy, self-denial, giving forth to others,
rather than coveting all good for ourselves.
Tell me that God fills the heaven, and governs the earth, thai
Providence is benevolent, and that the divine government, when
we shall see the full accomplishment of its final intents, shall bring
forth this proved and approved fatherhood ; tell me that God sits in
the heaven, not so much to think of himself as to pour thoughts
that are benefactions, and affections that are inspirations, upon all
the endlessly increasing universe, and then nothing can restrain me.
I turn to such a conception of God and join that universal cry
which shall acclaim Jesus, Victor, when heaven and earth shall say,
" Tiiou ART Worthy !"
Spurn these hideous dreams of superstition and darkness — these
web-weavings of philosophy run mad ! Take the sweetness of the
mother, her tears over her cradle, her night watchings, her quick and
easy withdrawals from everything delightful and pleasant for the
sake of ministering to those who are dear to her — is not this a holier
iniao-e from which to imagine the divine character, than the mon-
archical and metaphorical picture ?
I often behold with great pleasure the maiden growing up fair
> BBOTEERnOOD, TEE KINGDOM. 107
and fascinating. Wherever she goes, she is admired. She receives
praise on every side. She enjoys it. It has a charm for her. It is
new. She is pure, and imaginative, and artless 5 and she gives her-
self to this round of royal joy ; and all the wise people who know
her shake their heads, and say, "She is frivolous — she will
never come to wisdom." But she is not grown yet. Nobody
is grown who has not loved. The hour comes, however, when love
subdues all things, and she is led to the altar. She becomes a wife.
She walks in a subdued vein already. But not until she is queen
over that which is utterly helpless and dependent, do you see her
whole nature bud and blossom. How she draws back from gaiety
and hilarity! How she gives up the song and the dance! How,
through weary hours, and without a murmur, does she watch the
cradle ! How she cares not, as she looks in the mirror, that the
roses are fading from her cheeks ! Alas ! alas ! the little child is a
cripple ; and all its life it must go hobbling with but one limb
sound, the marked of all eyes ! And how does the mother give her-
self to that child to make up to it its infirmity ! How glad she is
to sins: to it or read to it ! How soon all the world becomes but a
mao-azine to her of things that she can draw from to bless her dear
little one ! How for five or ten years does she sacrifice her own com-
fort and enjoyment that she may minister to its wants !
Who taught her this requisite self-sacrifice of love ? Is it a weed
sprung up from human depravity? or is it the seed of a divine
flower dropped down into her heart from heaven ? And if a mother
uses the forces of her whole life and household, shall not the God,
whose nature inspired hers, employ the Universe for the well-being
of his creatures ? Is she better than God ? Is a mother's love su-
per-divine ? Nay, is not God the Sun, and every human heart but
a taper? Is not Christ's death an everlasting testimony to the
earnestness of God to exalt mankind ? Does not God rejoice over
one sinner that repenteth more than over ninety and nine just per-
sons that need no repentance ? A lost soul could have no such
nipurner iti the Universe as God! What noble protestations, what
solemn warnings against man's self-destruction ! What sacrifice;
what divine sufi'ering, what energy of earnestness in behalf of men !
Oh, Love, thou art medicine ! Oh, Love, thou art God ! From
Thee conies the everlasting summer of the soul ! From such a God
in such a summer could never come those deadly parasites that liave
wrapped around the tree of life, or dropped down poisonous blos-
soms for man's death, rather than love for the healing of the
nations !
I worship sjTch a God as is revealed in Christ I
108 OUB FATHER, THE KING:
I need such a One, fate will not help me. I need such a One;
for I am deformed, I am selfish, I am proud, I am wayward. The
forces that are in 'men drive this engine in me with terrible alacrity,
and I have striven to overcome it ; but day and night it masters
me ; and day and night, to the innermost secrets of my soul, my
consciousness says, " Unclean ! unclean ! Dear Love, be merciful !"
I need a God who shall bear with me, and be patient with me ; and
such is my God ! My God carries in his heart atonement.
Men ask me, " Why do you not preach atonement ?" Have I
not preached about God's love ? What atonement is there greater
than the nature of God ? Atonement is God. Do you suppose God
shoved out of himself a little historic drama which was mightier
and better than he ? What was that but a symbol to interpret what
He is everlastingly in himself? The heart of God it is that over-
comes. This is that grace by which we are saved. This is that
mercy which abounds without depth and without exhaustion.
God the Lover; God the All-good; God that will not by any
means clear the guilty ; God that would save them every one ; God
that will use pain and joy alike in dealing with those whom he
loves, to make them his children — this is the God whom I worship,
and against whom you sin. This is the God toward whom 1 call
you to repent. Eepent of an unfilial life. Eepent of selfishness over
against such bounty. Eepent of all that is low and base and dis-
obedient as against the Father who waits for you in the heavenly
land. I call you to the service of this God, magnificent in glory,
transcendent in beauty, but most of all glorious because long-
suffering, abundant in mercy, " forgiving iniquity, transgression
and sin." To this God I call you. In him trust. Live by him
here. Die in the faith of him. Else toward him. Eejoice with liini
forever and forever.
PEAYEE BEFOEE THE SEEMOK
•
We thank thee, O our Father, that we have this approach to thee by
desire; that our wants suggest thee; that our affections are evermore drawn
up toward thee ; that by gratitude we discern thee through our blessings,
and that by faith we are taught to discern thee through our sorrows and
troubles. "We rejoice that thou hast called thyself by such names; that all
that which is best to us on earth is now associated with thee; that we are
helped to draw near to thee by all our earthly relations ; and that we in-
terpret thee no longer by our fear, but by hope, by love, by wisdom, and by
experience. And yet, thou art greater than anything that we can conceive
of goodness. In all thine attributes thou art more wonderful. In all thy
procedure thou art more glorious. When we shall see thee as thou art.
BEOTHEEEOOD, THE KINGDOM. 109
and know the secret of thy universal realm, we shall behold thee in colors
and in a grandeur that shall put to shame the brightest and best things that
we have seen out of thee upon earth. We beseech of thee, therefore, that
f;hou wilt grant that we may have that purity of heart, that warmth of love,
that blessedness of self-denial, that spirit of laboring one for another, by
which we shall best see God. May we grow in grace, that we may grow in
the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.
We pray that we may not be left to the suggestions of our fancy. May
our thoughts be inspired by thy heart^-by thy Spirit. May we have the
Holy Ghost giving light to us— waking in us thoughts that are of thee. We
pray that there may be abiding in us this witness of God, so that we may be
children of God. As day by day we are surrounded by thee, may we be
affected even as children are unconsciously affected by the surrounding in-
fluences of the parents with whom they dwell. May we cease to think of
this world as something separated from thy government. May we look
upon all the globe as being thine. And though it be but thy footstool— but
a part of thine house and home — may we look upon all the things which are
in it as ministers of God sent to minister to those who are heirs of salvation.
May we rejoice in all the way of thy providence. May we rejoice in all the
lessons which are derived thence in respect to thy gi^ace. If the outer covu-t
and tabernacle are so full of thy glory, what shall be the holy of holies ? Hoav
blessed shall be the heavenly estate, if thou canst lavish such abundance
upon the earthly estate ! If now, shattered or unbuilt, the earth and the
heaven speak the glory of God, what shall it be when thou shalt have made
the new heaven and the new earth in which dwelleth righteousness?
We bring to thee, this morning, the only offerings which we can bring—
beautiful thoughts; thoughts of praise; the surrender of love. Help us to
desire, this morning, the beet things for ourselves, that our Father may be
pleased with his children. Draw us nearer to thee by the abundance of thy
love, so that we may find ourselves beginning to love. And yet, what can
we give to thee? Of all the things that are made bright by the sun, what
thing can glorify the sun ? May we, standing in the light of thy glory, re>
fleet that light and that glory, and so be thy witnesses, though we can add
nothing to thee.
We beseech of thee to draw near to those who are following after thee ;
who desire to know more, to feel more of thee. Help them to subdue every
evil thought, every unruly passion. Help them to bring into subjection
everything in them, that they may be the children of the living God, un-
abashed and unashamed.
We pray that thou wilt help those who are consciously striving with the
imperfections of their nature— trying to adjust and to hold to equilibrium
their warring inclinations. We pray that the Spirit may fight against the
flesh, and overcome it, and that they may have evidence day by day that
they are rising, though slowly, yet surely, into their better self— into their
higher life— into commimion with God.
As the things of the world are passing, and as our experience of them
is not making them more precious to us; grant that it may be more and
more easy for us to give them up, and to have oiu- strength in our hope
and in our eternal treasure.
We pray that thou wilt bless those who mourn. Remember those who
are filled with sorrow for their sinfulness. We pray that thou wilt grant
that none may despair. May those who have done wrong do so no more.
Turn them back from every evil way, and confirm them in the ways of re-
formation and of a holy repentance not to be repented of. Grant that they
may be brought into fellowship with thee, and into that communion tvhereia
is perfect peace. We beseech of thee that thou wilt bless and sanctify to
110 THE KING AND THE KINGDOM.
all the sorrows with which thou hast visited them in thy providence. May
those who are sufFeiiug bereavement feel that their affliction has not sprung
from the ground ; that it is not of the dust, but of God. May they be able
to feel that God hath done all things well. And though he reveal not the
secret of his purpose, may they believe that yet it shall be made plain when
all things shall be disclosed.
We pray, O Lord our God, that thou wilt grant to those who are under
great troubles and trials, those who have great fears and anxieties, that
they may know how to put their trust in God, and rest in his promise, and
gather much fruit of consolation therefrom.
We pray for all the strangers that are iu our midst who have backward
thoughts searching out the friends whom they have left far away. Sanctify
their home-sickness and heart-sickness. Bring them into nearer communion
with thee, and through their faith in thee nearer to those who are absent
from them.
We pray for all the sick and all that are in affliction. And wilt thou be
in the house of mourning. Wilt thou be in the midst of afflictions, directing
them and sanctifying them. Prepare us all for losses. Prepare us for all
the calamities that may come upon us in life. Prepare us for old age, and
for its infirmities. Prepare us for poverty. Prepare us, if it be thy will,
for all those things which shall make the earth poor indeed to us. Prepare
us for dying, for its joys and its triumphs. May we so live that we shall look
for the coming of the Son of Man, as watchers look for the morning. And
when we shall depart, may it be to be with Christ. May we behold his
glory in the kingdom of his Father. May we then discern the things that
are invisible, and be able to speak the things that are now unutterable.
May we rise from glory to glory to be forever with the Lord.
We pray that thy blessing may go forth this day in all directions nnto
the churches of every name, that thy ministering servants may be able to
preach in sincerity, in truth, and with power from on high. We pray that
thou wilt take away from among thy people all causes of division. May
they see eye to eye. May theylive heart in sympathy with heart. And we
pray that thou wilt more and more overcome the powers of evil, and
strengthen the powers of good throughout the world. Fulflll all thy prom-
ises toward the nations of the earth. Enlighten the dark places, and
raise up the places that are lying low in superstition and ignorance. We
pray that thou wilt expel all unjust government, and destroy all rule that
has affliction for its end. And let that latter-day of glory come when all
the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the Lord, and when there
shall be brightness and joy everywhere.
And to the Father, the Son, and the Spirit, shall be praises evermore.
Amen.
»
PEAYEE AFTEE THE SEE]\IOK
Our heavenly Father, we beseech of thee that thou wilt follow w"iSi thy
blessing the word of exhortation and the word ot truth. Cleanse our
hearts, that we may behold thee more clearly. Make us more fit ministers
of the word, by making us better in manhood and better in true piety.
Overcome our many sins. Cleanse us from all uncleanness. Deliver us
from the power of temptation. Purify our tastes. Give charity to our
reason. Lead us by thyself to thyself. And so, when we shall have passed
through the school, and shall have gra laated, may we go home to thee to
be sons of God unrebukedly, without flaw, in the presence of all the holy
angels. And to thy name shall be the glory forever and forever. Amen.
VII.
GoD's Will is Good Will.
INVOCATION..
Look upon us, O Lord, as thou didst upon thine handmaid of old, and
call us by name, that we may know that thou art the risen Saviour, and that
thou hast triumphed over death for us, that our life may stream forth toward
thee, and that we may have newness of life breaking out of sorrow and joy
unutterable. We pray for health. Thou art full of light and life ; give of
that life and light unto us. And especially in the service of the sanctuary
to-day may thy Word speak as first it was spoken. May we receive it by the
inward understanding. May all the services of communion and prayer
be acceptable to thee. May our fellowship and rejoicing in song be of God ;
and may all the labor of instruction be greatly blessed of thee. And we
pray that when we go hence to our homes we may find that peace which
passeth all understanding, brooding the day, here and everywhere. We ask
these things in the name of the Beloved. Amen.
GOD'S WILL IS GOOD WILL.
*' Rejoice in the Lord always : and again I say, Rejoice. Let your moder-
ation be known to all men. The Lord is at hand. Be careful for nothing;
but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your
requests be made known unto God. And the peace of God, which passeth
all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus."—
Phil, iv., 4-7.
In the Sermon on the Mount, although there is commenda-
tion of sorrow, there is also command of joy and rejoicing under
circumstances which seem to be antagonistic to anything like joy.
We find, also, in the letters of the inspired men, the same exhorta-
tion. We find them declaring that joy is one of the fruits of the
Spirit, and so one of the evidences of true piety. We behold an
unconscious evidence of that same truth *in the general tone of the
New Testament writings. I do not believe there is in the compass
of human literature a book that deals with such profound topies,
that touches human nature on so many sides of experience, that re-
lates so especially to its sorrows, its temptations, its sins, its
guilt, its dangers, all the forces which hover over that aspect,
and to its hopes, its inspirations, its possibilities — and yet, which
looks over the whole field of human life with such cheerful-
ness of spirit. The Ncav Testament is a book of radiant joy. Al-
though there are certain passages in it which are terrible, on the
whole it is a book that evidently came from the inspiration of hope,
and is full of courage, and full of comfort. You may say what you
please abouc the inspiration of Scripture, as long as there are tears -
in the world, and sorrows that make them, as long as there are sins,
and the fears which guilt breeds in men, so long the books of the
Ntew Testament will be considered authoritative — and for this
simple reason, that they bring balm to the wants of men where
men's wauts are most immedicable with any ordinary dealing.
Sttn-day Moknino, April 31. 1872. Lesson : Psalm CXLV. Hymns, (Plymouth Col-
lection) : Nos. I'M, 68a, 017.
114 cfOB'S WILL IS GOOD WILL.
Yet, it is a qtiestion whether Christianity has produced as much,
joy as it has sorrow — such have been its perversions ; such the mis-
understandings of its interpreters. I doubt if any other organized
system has been the cause and the occasion of such stupendous
cruelty, both to the body and to the soul, as Christianity has in the
hands of its interpreters from age to age. In looking round upon
tl>e church now, in these better times, when men are released from
many superstitions, if you were to look for the signal of joy as one
of the tokens of Christianity, I hardly know whether I should be
justified in saying that you can tell the difference between men
who are Christians and men who are not, by this : that Cliristians
are more radiant, that they are happier, than other men. That
some are, there is no doubt. That here and there, whether it be
temperament, or whether it be a better disabusing of their minds
of past teaching, or whether it be a peculiarly spiritual constitution
which enables them to seize what eludes others — whatever may be
the application of it — there are many who rejoice, I do not doubt ;
but I doubt if practically it would be safe to make an appeal to the
world, and say that all who are Christians are distinguished from
those who are not Christians by this element of joy in the Lord —
or in anything else.
On the other hand, it seems to me that if it were once to be a
thing settled and certain that to become a Christian was to become
a child of joy, and that the peace which passeth all understanding
was to be realized by every such one — if that were to be a thing ap-
proved by observation and made known by experience, the very cur-
rent of the world would be changed. What is it that every man
seeks but that very joy ? What is the motive of labor, of watch-
.ng, of foresight, of even care and pains, but the fruit of joy which
men expect to reap ? And if there could be found a bay where
the influences were tranquil — if the church were some such bay — all
streams would run into it, or teward it.
Oh, how many there are waiting for peace, watching for peace,
journeying for peace, longing for peace ! Peace — the peace Avhich
passeth all understanding— in search of that blessed boon, how many
pilgrims there are, high and low! and how few there are that
find it 1
When you look at the actual lives of Christians— even of those
vho strive to live in accordance with the innermost meaning of the
erm disciples of Christ, do you find joy ? I do not think that you
5nd it in any such measure as to characterize them and discrimi-
late them from other people. Was there, then, an impossible thing
commanded ? Was that commanded which could not take place ?
: think a^
GOD'S WILL IS GOOD WILL. 115
Our florists make up packages of seeds, and send out for a
dollar thirty kinds, or for two dollars eighty kinds; there are
directions that go with them ; and every package is labeled, " Gor-
geous purple," " Exceedingly beautiful," " Eemarkably fine," and so
on, referring to the flowers. Now, let these seeds go into the hands
of some clumsy person who perhaps has raised corn and potatoes,
but who has never raised flowers ; and let him plant them in cold,
wet, barren soil, and at an untimely season. A few of them will
sprout, and will come slowly up, pale and spindling, and will
be neglected, and the weeds will overrun them ; and when the
time for blossoming comes there will be found here and there a
scrawny plant with one or two stingy blossoms, and men will say,
"Now we see the outcome of this pretense. Look at the labels on
the specimens. It is all humbug. The man says, ' Gorgeous purple.'
Here is what he calls gorgeous purple ! He says, ' Exceedingly beau-
tiful.' That is his idea of beauty I He says, ' Eemarkably fine.' That
is remarkably Jine, is it?" So they go through the whole catalogue,
and say, ''There was the promise, and here is the fulfillment !"
But do not you perceive that the way in which you use the seed,
the manner in which you plant it, the skill that you exercise in
preparing the soil to receive it, and the season that you have to
plant it in, have much to do with its successful growth ? There
are a hundred circumstances which will have a great deal to do in
determining what you will actually get. It is true that beautiful
plants might have been produced from those seeds. They were
deserving of all the praise that was bestowed upon them.
There was no deception practiced concerning them. They might
have been just what they were represented to be. But they were
not what they might have been, for want of knowledge, for want
of skill, and for want of the right adaptation of conditions to ends.
There be many persons who suppose, because Christianity is joy-
producing, that when they become Christians they will necessarily
be joyful. They suppose that they are to take it as they would
nitrous oxide gas, and that when they have sucked it in awhile, they
will begin to . experience the inspiration of joy, that they will be
lifted up, and that they will feel delightfully. There are those
who suppose thai there is a divine magnificent intoxication which
God gives to the souls of his children ; and that when the flash
strikes tliem they will break forth into rejoicings, and say, " Joy ! "
« Glory ! " " Hallelujah !" " How happy I am ! " There are some
who have such an experience ; but how long does it last ? How
quick does the sudden blaze become sudden ashes !
If we are to see the ideal of the apostolic teaching on this point;
116 GOD'S WILL IS GOOD WILL.
if we are to behold the results of a true Christian faith and hope ful-
filled, it must be by taking as large a view as the apostle had, and
looking at the conditions of joy, and the relations of it to the Lord
Jesus Christ. It is said,
" Rejoice in the Lord always; and again I say, Rejoice."
It is not simply a joy that comes from the buoyancy of your
natural faculties. There is in that very phrase " Eejoice in the Lord,"
the opening up of a vast psychology. Let us look a little at it.
He that takes the Lord Jesus Christ as he is revealed in the Gos-
pels, and in the teachings of his servants the apostles, will find that
in him God is brought near, into personal relations with men,,
and into sympathy Avith them. That immense vagueness which
some men call God / that terrible Power ; that Fate ; that unseen
Being who looks down upon the world apparently with supreme in-
difiercnce — (for, though ten thousand groans go up tov/ard God, no
sigh comes back through the air to us to tell us that there is sympathy
there ; though sorrows sweep over the world as equinoctial storms
by day and by night, for all that we can see by mere sense or
natural reason God is as calm and cold as the upper ether) — is he
a reality ? Is there a God ? If so, is he more than an engineer of
this vast and complicated machine ? What token have we ? What
can we gather from nature to teach us of God ? I do not believe
that nature, if you leave out the experience of the human family
(and that part usually is left out when men study Divine nature
to find Divinity) can teach you that God is good. I think
that the argument stands fair hitherto, that either there is a
divided empire, or there is a capricious Governor, sometimes good
and sometimes bad. Outside of revelation, outside of the clear light
which we derive from the Lord Jesus Christ, God is afar off. He is
brought near in Christ Jesus. He came to teach us what God's dis-
positions are. He came to teach us that God is a Father, and that
his purposes run through wide circles, and extend so far that we can
no more judge of the limits of them than we could judge from the
corn-kernel of what the whole harvest would be if we had never seen
one. The beginnings are apparent, but the ultimate ends are
obscure.
Jesus came into the range of human experience to bring down
in himself, in his life and in his teachings, a notion of God that
should bring him near to men, paternal, friendly, sympathetic. We
did not need to be taught that he was powerful. That, material nature
teaches us. We did not need to be taught that he was wise. The
adjustment of affairs in the universe and in the world teaches us that.
We did not need to be taught that God was vast. That is what we
QOD'S WILL IS GOOD WILL. 117
mean by infinity. But that he has a heart of sympathy with men,
and that he is in such a sense a Parent to men as Ave are to our
children, and that he is friendly to us in such a sense as we are
friendly one to another — this we did need to have taught to us. It
was hinted at by other teachers, but it was never brought out in such'
a way by any other one as it has been by the Lord Jesus Christ.
In Christ there is developed a religion which arises from the in-
tercourse between this divine Soul and our human souls. There is a
religion which is not a mere routine of actions. There are myriads
of people who think that religion consists in certain actions — so
many prayers said ; so many postures taken ; so many symbols em-
ployed ; so many ceremonies kept ; so many duties performed.
. There are many who suppose that what are called "religious obser-
vances " are religion. That was very largely the state of the Jewish
mind at the time Avlien our Saviour came. Spirituality had well-
nigh been lost out of sight, and men had pursued a round of obser-
vances which they thought satisfied the divine requirements ; but
Jesus taught that God is a spirit, and that they who worship him
must Avorship him by the spirit — by thought, by imagination, by
emotion.
There is no purchase by our own merit — although there have
been thousands who have supposed that God had rewards of virtue
which were to be exchanged with men for certain services rendered.
Jesus came to teach us that God does everything out of his own
nature — that everything proceeds from divine grace. And what
work men have made of the interpretation of this notion ! I think
the sweetest thought, the very center idea, of the revelation of the
character of God, to me, is this : that he does everything out of his
•own supreme will. There is no one thing that I can say with more
heartiness, or that has in it more echoes of joy, than " Thy will be
done." If anything works righteousness in me or in you, it is God.
If we are saved, it is by the forgiving and sparing mercy of God.
What did Christ teach us to be the root and ground of hope for sal-
vation, but God's generosity ? The divine nature is so constructed
that it loves to do good ; that it loves to recuperate men ; that it
loves to restore that Avhicli sin has blurred or blasted. God loves to
bless men out of the supremacy of a love which carries in it infinite
benefaction wherever there is mental blight, throughout the heaven
and the realms of the universe. Tlie nature of God is fruitful in
generosity. He is so good that he loves to do good, and loves to
make men good, and loves to make them happy by making them
good. He loves to be patient with them, and to wait for them, and
to pour benevolence upon them, because that is his nature.
118 GOD^S WILL 18 GOOD WILL.
Why does a musician sing ? To please himself. It is the very
nature of his organization to sing. His mind loves music. Why
does a painter love to paint ? Because painting is congenial to his
very organic nature. Why does the orator feel the joy of speech ?
Because his whole nature is attuned and attempered to that opera-
tion. Why is it, when you go into many and many a house, that
you see all the children gathered in one room ? Are they gathered
around about the young ? No. Are they gathered together with
those that are full of frolic? No. They are gathered around
tjhe aged. It is the grandmother who sits in her chair, with
her nice frilled cap, white as snow, on her head, and her specta-
cles lifted upon her brow. The little children play about her
chair. They can hardly be coaxed away from her. Why are they
all drawn to her ? Because she makes them happy. Why does she
make them happy ? Because her thoughts are all serene. She does
not do it on purpose. It is her pleasure to do it. She just pours
out of herself the music of harmony, and it fills the child with joy.
It is her nature to do it.
Why does Sir Curmudgeon, who lives in his castle, when his
door has been opened by the hand of want coming in from the
storm, say, " Get out — get out — you vagabond ! I do not want to
hear. Never come here again "? He does it because it is his nature to
do it. He does it because he feels like it. When another man sees
want, why do his eyes flow down with tears ? Why does he instantly
feel, " I adopt this want ; I will bear this burden "? Why do men
watch all day and all night at the door of want, and give, and give?
and continue to give ? Why are they happy in giving ? Is it
because of any agreement or bargain that they have entered into ?
No, they are acting out their nature. That is the way their soul
runs.
Why does God love ? Because it is his nature to love. Why is
he patient ? Because it is his nature. Why is he forgiving ? Be-
cause that is his nature. Why does he promise everything to you
witkout condition ? Because he is just so generous. Why does he
love you, though you are unworthy of love? Because that is just
the way that the mind of God acts. And that this might be made
manifest, he made the most magnificent display of it in this world
in the Son of God, who came to live, to love, to suifer and to die for
men. But that was only a faint representation. I do not hesitate
to say of the royalty of that which is so vast and glorious in the
spheres above, that it cannot be made known in time and in cur
horizon here. God is in himself so generous and good that all he
does throughout the universe he does to please himself.
GOD'S WILL IS GOOD WILL. 119
When I am happy, I smile; and I smile to please myself. When
I feel impelled to sing, I sing ; and I sing to please myself. I sing
to satisfy a sense of song, and smile to satisfy a sense of pleasure.
And God is loving and merciful and long-suifering to please a sense
in him of love and mercy and long-suffering. He is generous toward
men because he has a heart of generosity. His heart is filled full,
from top to bottom, with this feeling. There is no computing the
height or depth or length or breadth of the divine nature. Its
amplitude is absolutely immeasurable and inconceivable, and out
of that grand, glowing center of the divine nature it is that all
goodness, all kindness, all beneficence, all faith, all hope, and all
love are given forth.
God does these things to please himself. And, oh, what a
shame it is that God has been so slandered by those who thought
they loved him ! Oh, what a perversion there has been of the
nature of God ! What clumsy machines have been invented with
which to mar and blur the outline and ideal and interior of this
glorious notion of an all-loving God, who brings out of himself, out
of his nature, infinite atonement, infinite reconciliation, and in-
finite opportunities, and whose mercies are graces !
Consider, then, that in Jesus Christ we have brought near to us
a God personal and sympathetic, in distinction from a God mechani-
cal, afar off, cold, unsympathetic, and engineering. We have
brought near to us in Jesus Christ a God whose nature it is to be
bountiful, tender, sweet, beautiful, so that when we begin to see the
traits that are in him, they draAv out the same traits in us. We
love because he has loved us.
If you go into Stein way's manufactory or ware-room, and strike
certain chords of one of the powerful instruments, the chords
of all the other instruments, though they are covered up, and ap-
parently mute, will sound. Such are the correspondencies which
exist between them, such is the sympathy which is communicated
from one to another by the air, that when one vibrates they all
vibrate. Though the sound be low and almost inaudible, it is
there.
When the grandeur, the beauty and the love of the divine nature
are presented to a man,- they draw some response from every part
of his nature which corresponds to that which is presented. So it
is that there begins to be through this conception of God in Christ
Jesus, a piety which is in the nature of a personal communion or
affiliation. The hearts of men are thus drawn toward the heart
of God, and there begins to be an interplay between them.
This is the basis of reconciliation with God. Not that he is re*
120 GOD'S WILL IS GOOD WILL.
concilcd to ns, but that we are reconciled to liim. God's everlasthior
nature is that of forgiveness. As soon as the soul j^erceives such a
God, and moves toward him in real moral consciousness, it begins
to experience what is called faith — that faith which works by love.
And just as soon as we accept this view of God in Christ Jesus, this
centralization of the universe at the focal point of love, just so
soon the universe begins to be filled with God. Wherever his power
and government are, there is divinity ; and wherever there is divin-
ity, there is the nature of God. Christ has so built up the concep-
tion of God the Father that wherever anything makes suggestion to
us, it is suggestion of infinite and inconceivable goodness, love and
mercy.
I would not have you paint God as all light, without shadows ;
for I perceive that the infliction of pain is a part of the divine scheme,
and is not inconsistent with God's character. I do not hate my
child because I punish him. The schoolmaster does not hate the
urchin because he whips him. Pain and penalty are remedial.
I expressed, last Sunday morning, my abhorrence of the idea
that God should make pain for the sake of making pain. I do not
take back a single word of it. I would rather convert every word
into thunder to express my indignation against the teaching that
there is a Being in heaven who ever gave one pang for the sake of
giving that pang, or who continues pain for the sake of continuing
pain. Such qualities as some attribute to God are our definition of
a fiend. But to say that pain may be created in order that it may
work out good, and that it may cooperate with love and patience, is
in accordance with our experience. God is a God of goodness and
gentleness and patience ; but he is a God that will by no means clear
the guilty. Glory be to his name for that. He will pierce men, he
will give them pain, he will make them sufier, that through suffer-
ing they may come to that which they would not take through joy
or love. These pain-bearing influences are a part of the evidence of
the moral government of God. They are a part of that Avhich is
taught and that which is experienced in life.
I seem to you, probably, thus far, to have only been discoursing
upon the relations of men to Christ. The bearing of this subject of
joy-producing will appear when I say that there is no other power
that has such a regulative influejice as love ; and that if we are
brought by the disclosure which Christ makes of the Fatherhood of
God into a personal relationship of love with him, then we are
brought into that condition out of which will spring love by and by^
spontaneously, fruitfully, abundantly.
Souls in this world are never made to act in solitude. We might
Q0W8 WILL 18 GOOD WILL. 121
as well put a harp into a room and expect it to make music if there
were no harper there as to expect that any individual soul will act
itself out and manifest that which is good or bad if there is no other
Boul to act upon it, or to act in concert with it. We are awakened
to ourselves, often, only by the action of those who are round about
us. Under the general constitution of things men are aroused, de-
veloped, educated; but of all the influences which stimulate, arouse
and ripen, none are as potential as love. And yet, though it be re-
straining, stimulating, constructive, it is so in spite of limitations,
the very announcement of which would seem to make the thought
of love almost impossible. For, in many men love is struggling for
liberty to live. In many men love is as a fire when it is attempted
to kindle grass and leaves with a shower in the heavens beating
down upon the flame and threatening to extinguish it. Love is as
a bii'd singing in the thicket, over which hovers a hawk, and behind
which sits the owl, both waiting to end the song. Love, in this
world, lives under conditions which every moment threaten its con-
stitution, and its very life. Love in this world is as the orange-tree
seeking to grow in Greenland. There is not summer enough, and
there is a great deal too much winter. In its own land the orange
is always in leaf, and always in blossom, and always with fruit grow-
ing and ripening on its boughs. But as an artificial and curious
thing in far northern latitudes it is seldom that it shows any fruit
that is ripe. It struggles to live, and cannot blossom forth into
beauty, or develop into ample fruitfulness. The whole year attacks
it, and is its enemy.
Love, as men are situated in this world, is weakened by our very
ideality. It is with love as it is with our thought of friends. When
we first behold them we'exaggerate our conception of what thev
are ; but by and by life wears away our ideal of them to the bare
reality ; and then comes discontent. Love is chafed by conflict. It
is marred by temper and passion. There are ten thousand influ-
ences which spring up to disfigure it. It is full of imperfections.
It does not answer to our imagination of it. It does not answer to
the ideal which Ave have formed of it. It does not answer to our in-
tellectual conception of it. Selfishness creates warts on it. Avarice
almost undermines it. The appetites stain it, and destroy its beauty.
And yet, love struggles against all these things, and in spite of them
all it is a truer center of self-government than any other that the
world knows.
There are men who are so organized as to pride that they are
discordant with themselves ; but love can harmonize them. Love
ifi the regnant harmonizing center. Eeason cannot so bring into
122 GOB'S WILL IS GOOD WILL.
harmony every part of a man's nature, and make liira content, as
love can. No man can be at peace with himself who has not love.
Woe is he who is not conscious of one great faculty which expels
all enemies ; of one great experience that satisfies every part of his
nature ; of that love to which honor and conscience and pride and
selfishness all bow down and do obeisance ! There are hours when
men feel it. Oh, that it could continue! Then the world would
be no care or burden. Then storms would be as calms. There is
an experience of men in regard to loving in some one or other direc-
tion that moves the center of the soul. That is the element which
harmonizes. Thousands of thousands have had this harmonizing,
reigning element of love.
Now, consider what love must be to Jesus, in whom everything
is perfect, to our conception. Bring home to a man's consciousness
the Lord Jesus Christ ; let him have faith enough to limn the feat-
ures and portray the divine beauty that is in him, and it will in-
spire in him a love which shall transcend all others. And it will
have more ideality in it than any earthly love can have. The
imagination will play more freely and more fruitfully every
day, and every day it will be more admirable. Imagination is
the root of faith. It is the foundation of the conception of the
invisible. It makes it possible for a man to bring near to him the
character of God in Christ Jesus. It gives endless variety to the
thought of the divine nature. No man ever became tired of looking
at the beauty and glory conceived of in the Lord Jesus Christ. The
idea of him will grow stronger because he is invisible.
Many say, " You worship only your conception, your idea,
of God." I say that ideas are more real than things are. Things
appeal to the body : ideas to honor, manhood, the soul itself. And
yet, I do not hesitate to say that there would be much in me which
would be gratified if I could once see Christ. Sometimes, as I have
lain in summer with the blinds closed to keep out the heat, and as
through some little crevice in the window a ray of solar light has
found its way into' the room, I have thought, in my meditation,
" If Christ would descend but as a beam of light that I might see
him, it would be such a help to my senses ! It would be a point for
Tnv memory to dart back to." I have sometimes felt, *•' Oh, that I
could hear his voice I" And I have listened at night , I have lis-
toned in hours of sorrow ; and I have heard nothing. I have called^
and none has answered. I have reached out imploring hands, and
nothing took them. T hav^- said 'My Lord and my God, if thou
ai't, speak to me !"— and <:hert haj- Deen no response. And yet out
s>f these ^jours 1 have come, feeling Btill that a silent and invisible
GOB'S WILL IS GOOD WILL, 123
God can be more to me, taking life all tlirongh, than if he were
actually present and visible in a bodily form. I take hold of the
invisible by more sides than I do of the visible.
My father lived , my mother passed on before ; but through all
my life, though I lived with him, and loved him, and was in-
structed and guided by him, my father was not so much to me as
my mother. Her I created; while he was created for me. Not
able to conceive of an invisible friend ! Oh, it is not when your
children are with you, it is not when you see and hear them,
that they are most to you ; it is when the sad assembly is gone ; it
is when the daisies have resumed their growing again in the place
where the little form was laid ; it is when you have carried your
children out, and said farewell, and come home again, and day and
night are full of sweet memories ; it is when summer and winter
are full of touches and suggestions of them ; it is when you cannot
look up toward God without thinking of them, nor look down
toward yourself and not think of them : it is when they have gone
out of your arms, and are living to you only by the power of the
imagination, that they are the most to you. The invisible children
are the realest children, the sweetest children, the truest children, the
children that touch our hearts as no hands of flesh ever could touch
them. And do you tell me that we cannot cannot conceive of the
Lord Jesus Christ because he is invisible ?
Here, then, are the stores of rejoicing. ■^
" Rejoice in the Lord."
You have such a sense of the divine governorship of the uni-
verse ; you have such a sense of God brought near in the royalty of
his generous nature ; you have such a sense of the Lord Jesus Christ
your Saviour ; he is so near to you, and so present, that the power
of love is excited in you ; love so regulates your soul, so satisfies
your reason, your imagination, and all the passions do so naturally
bow down to the reign of love — especially love inspired toward the
invisible, the spiritual and the perfect — that all the conditions are
now present out of which come peace and joy — for peace is but the
stem and the unfolding leaves of that plant whose blossom is joy.
Men ask me, " If this be the portion of Christian believers,
why is there not more joy in the church ?" Because you do not
know how to plant seeds. You do not know how to cultivate these
flowers. They are real seeds, and the flowers are beautiful, and the
plant bears blessed fruit to those Avho know how to give it proper
culture.
If you have the faith of Christ and heaven and God near to you ;
if you love so that all the parts of your -being are pervaded with a
J 24 GOB'S WILL IS GOOD WILL.
sense of these things ; if the affluence of God reaches down to yon,
and you open your soul and let in the consciousness of Christ
present with you, then you will have joy, and you will have that
peace which passeth all understanding.
" Oh," says one, " I am so harassed with cares ! I might be joy-
ful if I had not so much care."
" Casting all your care upon him ; for he careth for you."
There is provision made in Christ for care.
" But I have such grief ! God has dealt with me severely ; and
a wounded heart cannot rejoice."
" Now no chastening for the present seemeih to be joyous, but grievous;
nevertheless, afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness."
If the earth had sense and sensibility, when the spade oj^ened it
it would cry, "Oh ! why art thou wounding me ?" But in that open
earth I drop handfuls of seed, and I cover them up ; and by and by
I go to that place again, and itis all grown over with sightly, beau-
tiful stalks, which are covered with blossoms. Does the earth
mourn now ?
God is opening the furrow in you and putting in seeds. It is
application to you now ; at present it does not seem to you joyous ;
^ but afterward it will j)rodnce in you the peaceable fruit of right-
eousness, when it has grown and blossomed, and is covered with
fruit.
" Is it possible for a man who is in poverty aad sickness to be
ioyful ?" The apostle says,
" I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me." '* I know
how both to abound and to suffer need."
There is a grace of God through the Lord Jesus Christ that can
sustain you in all the inequalities of life ; that can make solitude
tolerable ; that can turn back all the sharp points of temptation.
There is a grace of the Lord Jesus Christ that can make dis-
appointment itself contented; that can so cover the soul with
the atmosphere of peace that it shall pass all understanding.
No man shall be able to tell his neighbor what is the meaning
of that strange peace. There is a grace of God which shall
enable you to live with joy, and which shall enable you to triumph
m that hour when you are brought face to face with your best
friend, Death, that shall take you Avliere you shall hear the thunder
of that choral song which, though not far from us, is yet inaudible —
/ which, though we cannot hear it, like the ocean itself murmurs and
rolls upon our shoi'es.
Then, Jicjoice in the Lord ; and again I say, Rejoice.
tfOD'/S WILL IS GOOD WILL. 125
PRAYER BEFORE THE SERMON.
We draw near to thee, thou that art unkno-vm, whom the heavens do
hide, whom we cannot see in the flesh and live. We draw near to thee by
that new and Uving way— Jesus. We draw near to thee, because he hath
taught us of thee, and because we behold in his life a.nd disposition those
verv elements of thv nature which it was hard for us to discern— which were
gathered but imperfectly from anything in nature. Now, since thou bast been
pleased to present thyself to us incarnate — a manifestation of God to help
our understanding, and to give us the seed of better thought— we are
touched by thy loving Spirit, and are able to kindle in our souls a higher
and brighter view of thy nature. And we rejoice that it is such a one as
fills us with confidence, and that we long to trust such a God as thou art
made known to be. Now, thou hast by love taught us how to translate even
things seemingly terrible. Now, thou hast by the power of example in Jesus
robbed us of all thoughts of evil and of fear. Though thou art a consuming
lire, as thou didst appear to thy servant Moses of old in the burning bush ;
though thou art a God of truth and of justice, that will by no means clear
the guilty, we believe that the mighty enginery of time and of the eternal
world are for the development of goodness in men, and that thou art the
Father, bringing up thy children into the image and likeness of thyself,
and that thou wilt not suffer sin in them, but wilt cleanse them from it,
and wilt redeem them from its power, and make them kings and priests
unto God.
Grant,- we pray thee, that we may not be of that number who believe
not; who tiirn away toward darkness; who seek but to hide themselves;
who do not feel the need of Ught, nor love it, nor desire it ; who herd with
swine, and eat the husks that they devour. May we be of those who re-
pentantly turn back to thee for the salvation of their souls. We pray that
we may behold thee in such light and glory that all things to us shall ac-
claim thee God.
We beseech of thee, O God, that we may not go heedless into the great and
unknown world, when thy providence is full of warnings, and when thy love
stands pleading that we will accept thee and thy mercy, and that we will not
venture our souls upon all the risks and perils of the future.
O Lord Jesus, we pray that thou wilt lift thyself up to us as the Chief
among ten thousand, and the One altogether lovely, that we may be won to
thy service, and to thy disposition, that we may become the children of God,
and that we may live in this life in the midst of its cares, and under its
burdens, and in its sorrows, and still be strong by the inspiration of thy
Spirit.
We pray that thou wilt forgive us whatever has been offensive to thee.
Every day we know that we sully the purity of our hearts. Every day we
fall short of known duties. Every day we have to depend upon that same
patience wtiich thus far hath borne us, and upon that forgiveness which hath
been our salvation.
Cleanse us, we pray thee, not only from the commission of sin, but
from the love of sin. May we learn so to carry ourselves that with all our
heart and mind and soul and strength we may serve thee, and serve thee
in the spirit of true loving.
We beseech of thee that thou wilt comfort any who are in circumstances
of trial. Lift the light of thy countenance upon any who are sitting in
darkness. Open the way, if there be any who are perplexed and know not
What to do. If there be mourners in thy presence, who mourn ovei their
126 GOD'S WILL IS GOOD WILL.
transgressions, be thou found of them a pardoning God. If there be those
who are burdened with oares, may they be sustained by thy providence. By
thy Spirit may they be able to lift themselves above the horizon where care
doth live. May they look to those other lands, far above, and see what
eternal joys await them.
We pray that thou wilt make us strong in the day of adversity, and able
to bear. May we be clad la all the armor of God, both offensive and de-
fensive, and be prepared to meet every exigency, and yet not be over-
thrown— to be found still standing when the battle is over, and able to
stand.
We pray, O Lord our God, that thou wilt grant more and more unity
of the heart and fellowship of the Spirit through Jesus Christ. May the
hope of salvation be more fruitful in us in godliness and truth and
charity.
We pray that thou wilt grant that thy blessing may rest, this day, upon
all who preach thy truth, of whatever name they may be. May thy Spirit
be with them to help their infirmity ; to cleanse their eyes, that they may
see more clearly ; to strengthen their hearts, and fill them with divine power,
that they may, out of their own living consciousness, preach a living Christ.
And we beseech of thee that thou wilt unite thy x^eople more and more. May
they be united around about thy love, by its attractive power and sym-
pathy.
We pray that thou wilt spread the light of truth throughout all our land.
Bless schools, and academies, and colleges, and all seminaries ot learning.
We pray that this great people may have knowledge spread among them ;
and may knowledge carry virtue; and may vir;ue draw its supply from
piety ; and may all this people be cleansed from filth, and from immorality,
and from ignorance, and from superstition, and from avarice, and from
hardness of heart, and from corruption ; and may they be a people redeemed
of God unto good works.
We pray for the nations of the earth. May violence no longer rule.
Speedily bring in that day of peace when war shall have no echo. Bring in
that day when superstition shall no longer torment with fear, nor ignorance
bring weakness, and so oppression. Oh, may the people be educated, and
brought into a practical and saving knowledge of God, and be lifted up into
the privileges that are their own. May all thy promises which respect this
world at last begin to march ; and may we behold that God is coming forth
for the salvation of the whole earth. Even so, Lord Jesus, come quickly.
And to thy name shall be the praise, forever and ever. Amen.
PEAYER AFTER THE SERMON".
Our Father, wilt thou bless the word which we have spoken, and grant
that it may do us good in our innermost souls. Dear Lord, we are poor,
and we need thy riches. K thou lovest us, Jesus, why are we so tar .from
thy bosom? Why dost thou suffer us to stumble? We are parents, and we
watch our children so that they do not go out of our sight : dost thou so
watch us? We watch them that we may save them from danger, or cure
their harms: dost thou so watch us? Thou who art the Lover of the
sparrow, and art grieved to see it fall, are we not better than many spar-
rows? Fold us to thy heart, and grant that we may have communicated to
us the consciousness of it. Oh, how poor we are in ourselves I Oh, how rich
we might be in thee! Rain down upon us the light of God. Pour from
thyself streams of light and life and joy in the Holy Ghost. And bring us,
at last, amid tears, beyond sighing and sorrow, beyond sinning, into the
land of rest. And to thy name shall be the glory, forever. Amen.
VIII.
The Conflicts of Life.
INVOCATION.
Grant unto us, this morning, our Fatlier, the recognition of thy presence.
In thee is all blessing. Our hope and our yearning are satisfied when we be-
hold thee. Bring near the sacred vision. Lift up those who are weak, and
cannot behold thee, and strengthen them that they may see thee. And fill
all with rejoicing who turn their eyes upon thee this moniing. May we
feel like children gathered home to rejoice in our Father's house together.
And may the consciousness of thy forgiving love, and the greatness of thy
mercy, fill us with hope and trust. May it awake in us fellowship ; and re-
joicing in each other, may we be united in our earthly affection and in a
heavenly love, while yet we linger upon these mortal shores. Bless the sei'-
vices of the sanctuary — the reading of thy Word ; the speaking therefrom ;
the fellowship of song ; the communion of prayer. Bless our homes, and our
enjoyments therein, this day. We pray that thy kingdom may be established
in the midst of us, in our hearts, so that all of us, this day, may dwell with
thee. We ask it in the name of tlie Beloved, to whom, with the Father and
the Spirit, shall ))e pi-aises evermore. Amen.
THE COIFLICTS OF LIFE.
" Finally, my brethren, be strong in the Lord, and in the power of his
might. Put on the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to stand against
the wiles of the devil. For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but
against principalities, against poVers, against tbe rulers of the darkness of
this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places. Wherefore take
unto you the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to withstand in the
evil day, and having done all, to stand. Stand therefore having your loins
girt abouD with truth, and having on the breastplate of righteousaess; and
your feet shod with the preparation of the Gospel of peace; above all,
taking the shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fiery
darls of the wicked. And take the helmet of salvation, and the sR'ord of
the Spirit, which is the word of God : praying always with all prayer and
supplication in the Spirit, and watching thereunto with all perseverance
and supplication for all saints."— Eph. VI., 10-18.
The questions which are coming up in modern days are but the
details and specifications of those great questions or views which
the apostle and the prophets held in their time. As one, looking
out upon the meadows from his window, says, " They are all covered
with flowers ; grass abounds in them all ; the spring has brought
forth its bounteous results;" but afterward, the botanist comes,
and goes into the field, and searches out the individual plants which
go to make up this general effect, discovers their habits, classifies
them, and tells the peculiar habits of each : and as the second man
only carries into detail that which the first man observed in the
general ; so the specific of human nature, the organization of man,
the laws of that organization, the economy by which he is placed in
such a world as this, and the laws of Avisdom by which he shall
carry himself throughout, are modern studies ; but they are only
studies in detail and in specific of the same great field of truth
which was made known by the apostles and to the prophets of old.
There is no language Avhose literature is not marked conspicu-
ously with this one universal observation — conflict, conflict. Wher-
ever there has been a singer — a poet ; wherever there has been a
prophet — a teacher ; wherever there has been an observer — a philos-
opher, there has been just one uniform and universal observation
on this subject ; and the whole creation groans and travails in pain .
Sunday Morning, April 28, 1872. Lesson : Hebrxws, XII., 1-U. Htuns (PlymouU
Collection): Nus. 6C8, 905, 725.
130 THB CONFLICTS OF LIFE.
" Why should it be so ?" say some. " What is the origin of evil ?"
say others. And various answers have vexed various schools.
I do not propose to go into these things at all. I do not even
I propose to glance back and ask what is their origin. I accept the
J fact that the whole world has been a scene, so far back as we have
known anything about it, of conflict, and that all men are called into
life to take some part in this universal conflict. Life is a struggle
with various intermissions and with various emphases of pain or
various experiences of development jvith alternations of victory.
But human life is generically a scene of vast conflict — a struggle.
i No man comes into it but to take part, as a soldier, in the campaign
which is laid out before him. When one is born into this world a
child, he is born ignorant of everything. All material laws are
against him, though they were made for him. He is liable, at every
step, to be crushed by not knowing things. Nor can any one at
once bring him into the knowledge and harmony of those material
laws on which health and happiness depend. He is to find them
out after much rubbing and stumbling and bruising conflict. The
simplest laws which relate to the well-being of his physical form
are to be found out by hard blows, not so many given as taken.
He is just as ignorant of the whole social economy into which he
is born. It is not revealed to him in his organization. It is found
out by him through long and, too often, weary experience. He is
just as ignorant of the civil laws, the economic laws, and the indus-
trial laws. Everything is to be learned by him that is to make him
a strong, stalwart, victorious man.
If it were not for the paternal shield, the race would very soon
die out. So many are the impending laws which, violated, destroy
or maim, that if there were no such thing as vicarious sufi'ering,
if it were not in the power of one being to put himself in the place
of another, if it were not possible for the parent to impute his
knowledge and experience to the child, and to suffer for the child,
it would be impossible for many to be reared into life, and the race
would run out.
This education which begins, then, in material knowledge and
law takes two forms. First, we learn to obey law, and we learn it
through much tribulation. The lesson of caring for ourselves is
learned in a few things. It does not require more than half a dozen
burnings of the hand to teach the child to l^eep out of the fire.
Children very soon learn the diff'erence between going down stairs
voluntarily and going down in a heap. The most common material
laws are learned by children. But the more subtle economy, those
laws on which not only present comfort but ultimate strength de-
TEE CONFLICTS OF LIFE. 131
pencls, those laws -wliicli lie at the bottom of thrift and wise political
economy — these are very seldom learned. Many men never learn
them perfectly until obedience to natural law is learned.
Next, we have to learn the control of material law. For by
obedience Ave govern. He that submits to natural law very soon can
use it as he pleases. Every one who will pursue a trade, and become
an industrial and frugal man, gathering and holding, must have
some knoAvledge of the laws of the globe in which all industry re-
sides and makes itself profitable. So there need to be directions as
to obedience to material laws, and as to learning how to govern by
. the use of them. Every child that comes into life passes through a
scene of more or less conflict, followed by punitive results, or results
of reward.
There is, next, an inward relation of men's faculties. "We
receive, we know not what. A child is born ; and he knows no
more about himself at five years, whether it be of his body or his
soul, than a watch knows of itself when it comes from the hand
of the maker ; and men, for the most part, pass through the greater
portion of their life without any considerable self-knowledge.
Instruction, as society is now constituted, is very general. The in-
struction w^hich is given in the schools, in the family, and in the
church, is as yet remote, and does not half cover the ground of
human necessity. Not only is every man himself who is born, but
in the making of himself there is much of father and mother, or
ancestors. He is not an original creature. He is an effect in a long
line or series of efiects ; and he brings down unconsciously and un-
known to himself tendencies and forces which are incongruous, ill-
adjusted, and of differing emphasis, as a result of the right-doing or
wrong-doing of those who anteceded him. There is a very great
range in which hereditary tendencies move, and there is a great
variety of them.
There are, first, those tendencies which are favorable. There are
those which give a man a constitution ol body which feivors endur-
ance. Men who are organized Avith a body which is in harmony
■with itself, and all parts of w^hich act without friction, or com-
paratively so, are very apt to be despots on account of that in
regard to Avhich they had no sort of choice, and the possession of
which is not in any sense a matter ot merit to them. They are w^ell
organized. Their food digests Avell. They sleep well. They are
always strong and impetuous. They think right straight out to.
what they Avant to do. They have a quick sense of the causes which
produce certain results. They have endurance. At night they are
not worn out by the fatigue of the day which has gone before. How
132 THE CONFLICTS OF LIFE,
vigorous tliey are ! How they enjoy activity ! And how they
despise shiggards ! With what contempt do they look upon shift-
less men ! How they look down upon these slatternly fellows who
never seem to have any purpose ; or who, if they have a purpose,
never stick to it ! How little patience they have with those who
always go limping on one foot or the other through life !
Here are those men Avho received from their fathers or grand-
fathers a sound physical organization which gives them health, tire,
power, and continuity in it. They act as though they got it all,
and put it into themselves, and as though they were deserving of
great credit for having it; whereas it came to them.
" What hast thou that thou hast not received?"
Another man near to them has a scrofulous temperament, but
he inherits it, and is not to blame for having it. He has a poor
stomach, and his food is not properly digested ; but he did not make
his stomach. The blood has a hard time to get into his lungs to be
be aerated ; but that is not his fault, for he did not make his own
lungs. When the blood is aerated it goes feebly on its course ; the
pump does not work very strongly ; but it is not his fault, for he
did not make his heart. And when the blood gets into the brain —
that source of sentiency — it is poor, unricli blood, and it does not
make ideas, does not stimulate thought, at all. His whole animal
system is deranged. Feebleness is stamped on him as a part of his
creation. And how do these strong men triumph over him, and
say, " He is not capable of taking care of himself, and he ought to
go to the poorhouse!" The world is a poorhouse, and he came into
it, or rather was ushered into it, without his own volition; and he is
no more responsible for his physical organization than you are,
strong man ! He is no more to blame for his tendency to vice than
you are meritorious for your tendency to virtue. And do you sup-
pose that that man, whose tendencies are downward, starts in an
equal race with you when he sets out in the course of life ? Has
he, with his organization, as good a chance as you have ?
It would be well if it were only so, but there are many men who
are organized disease. There are many men whose very brain is
supersensitive, as the result of the evil conduct of those who went
before them. Not only is their brain always on edge, but they are
over-sensitive in every passion and appetite.
There are others whose brains are very cool, and who are very
calm. They are organized so. God put them into life to run a dif-
ferent race, and with a different vehicle. Who art thou who domi-
neerest in judgment over thy fellow, he carrying in him a body of
death — sickness of liver, and sickness of stomach, and irritableness
THE CONFLICTS OF LIFE. 133
of brain — and you carrying in you health and strength and cour-
age ? Is there no difference between his chances in Hfe and yours ?
You have your battle somewhere else. He has his battle far down
below your field, it may be. With you, as I will show in a moment,
it maybe be a conflict between selfishness and pride and conscience.
You, taking advantage of the dominance of health and vigor and
power which is in you, may be a despot, and you may tread men
down ruthlessly and selfishly. Your conflict does not come in the
lungs, nor in the stomach, nor in the excitability of the brain : it
comes in the region of the moral faculties. But there are hundreds
and thousands of men with whom the first question is a question
of life. " Can I live, at any rate ?" they ask themselves. They fight
every day for breath, for food, for digestion, for circulation and for
nutrition.
I am not indulging in speculations : I am speaking facts. I am not
deducing theories : these are things that I know. They are things
that you may know if you will look. They are things that every
physician and physiologist knows. You cannot preach the doctrine
of the struggle of life and ignore them. Men are made so differ-
ently, they are started with such different enginery, that the battle
of life, in innumerable instances, ranges from far down to far up —
from hardly any fighting to hard fighting. Therefore it is that we
ought to have very large charity, often, for men who are very great
sinners. I know that pretense ascribes to men physical dispropor-
tions which do not exist : but there would be no counterfeit if there
were not a reality. There is a reality in this. There are multitudes
of persons who are children of vice and crime. They are not so
without their own fault ; but they are so without any such fault as
would inhere in you if the same results were developed in you which
manifest themselves in them. There is many a man who finds that
it requires all that he can do during his whole life to make up for
the inequalities which birth gave to him in physical and in mental
respects.
There are a great many whose problem in life is not physical, but is
inward — namely, the relation of the faculties to each other. I have
observed some things in this direction, I do not undertake to
discuss the whole realm of psychologic truth here ; but this I have
noticed : that there are men who liave faculties which tend to leaven
each other, and which interfere with each other. The good which
is in them works clear down to the bottom, so that the evil that is
in them is constantly restrained. It feels the effect of the good ten-
dencies of their higher faculties.
I have noticed in other persons that their faculties lie in juxta-
134 THE CONFLICTS OF LIFE.
position, but do not keep much company with each other. There
is a minority and there is a majority that never act with each other.
There are some parts that are bad, and some parts that are good in
them ; and the parts that are good do not seem to be affected by the
parts that are bad, and the parts that are bad do not seem to be af-
fected by the parts that are good. The problem in life with them is
how to equalize dynamically these conditions of faculty — how to so
bring them up and bring them together that they shall not interfere
with each other — so that they shall have harmony and unity of mind
by having all their nature run together.
You shall see, sometimes, in the same family, very strange con-
tradictions. The first-born child may be healthy and hearty, and
yet may be, as we say, eccentric, queer, odd. At times he is well
enough ; at times he has splendid streaks ; but at other times he has
most intolerable developments. His faculties are all at jar and dis-
cord. The next child, in the same family, may be as smooth as
cream. Everything goes along equably with liini. He is not subject
to violent passions. He has no excessive pride that rams out in one
direction, and no selfishness that sweeps like a freshet in another,
coming back afterward to great humility and sorrow. . There are no
alternations in his feelings or actions. Every part seems to har-
monize with every other.
In the same household, when one child is born, the line of its
life seems to be in one direction, and when another is born its
line of life seems to be in another direction. They cross each
other's path. The problem of life is not alike in their cases. The
consequence is that they cannot understand each other. One per-
son says, " You say that you can obey, aud that it is easy for you to
obey ; but I cannot obey, and it is not easy for me to obey." I hold
that every man can obey every requisition which God lays upon
him ; but the battle is different in different men. It requires all
the energy and power of life in some men to do things which other
men do without thinking. Some men can be gentle and sweet
under provocation. It does not seem to be any more trouble for
them than it is for a flower to secrete honey in its cell. There are
other men who are sharp and intensive ; and it is no more trouble
for them than it is for a bee when it goes down head-foremost after
honey to carry a sting in the other end. The difference is organic,
constitutional, and is to be marked in men.
These are not so much problems as they are facts — facts that are
to be taken into consideration in any theology which professes to
have a right view of human nature from top to bottom. You can-
not range men up by the side of any one law. If men are respon-
TEE CONFLICTS OF LIFE. 135
sible according to what they have, and not according to what they
have not, then that which will be duty for one man will be much
diminished before it reaches another man. It is the duty of a man
who has eyes, to see clearly; but if a man is half blind, then it is
his duty to see according to the eyes which he has. If he is totally
blind, it is his duty to see with his fingers — to feel his way. Duties
vary according to circumstances. To some, God gives one talent ;
to some, five ; to some, ten ; and to the man to whom he gives one,
he says, " Make it two ;" to the man to whom he gives five, " Make
it ten ;" and to the man to whom he gives ten, "Make it twenty."
He requires them all to be developed, but he makes a difference as
to the starting-point of men — as to how much chance they have in
the great battle of life.
The struggle of life arises, also, from the bad relation which birth
and education institute between men and society. It would seemfl
almost as if men were not born into the same world, so difierenti
are they. Compare the condition at birth of the Esquimaux with a|
child born in a religious household in Brooklyn. Compare his
chances for knowledge and culture with such a child's. Compare
the chances for life of a gypsy child, wandering from place to place,
and taught by his parents in all that is sharp and deceptive and
evil, with the chances for life of one of your own children. Com-
pare the chances of the child of a negro man, even in America, with
the chances of the children of the Caucasian races. What expecta-
tions in life has he compared with theirs ?
Men are born into life so related to society and its remunerations
and penalties that they might almost as well have been born into
different worlds. Every one has a peculiar struggle which belongs
to the place where he was born. There are children of converted
families who are born into positions where all circumstances favor
them. There are childrcn who are protected from vice and tempta-
tion on every side. There are children who have model parents
whose example is a perpetual blessing to them. But on the other
hand there are those all of whose circumstances, from the begin-
ning, are unfavorable to their development in right directions.
When I look at my own childhood it is iridescent. There were
rainbows above every storm. The sun rose and spoke a language
to me which I shall never forget ; and when the sun went down its
glory was around about me. Years came — summer and winter —
Sabbaths and week-days — with all their various associations, which>
have been a literature of beauty to me. I can think of nothing;
that is more restful to my mind, and nothing that quicker brings
tears to my eyes, than the old country home where my mother
136 THE CONFLICTS OF LIFE.
brought me forth, and where I was surrounded with everything thai
could contribnte to love and consolation. But, when I speak of the
beauties of childhood, and the memories of home, are there some
here who learned the language of oaths at the lips of their mother ?
Are there children here whose first remembrance of mother is that
of seeing her reeling drunk ? Are there children here who remem-
ber that their father's coming was like the coming of a wind-storm
with rage and violence, and whose childhood was an experience ot
blows and kicks and cuffs ? Are there children here who knew
nothing of tenderness, or who escaped out of the region of home as
one would escape from hell? And what are their associations?
"What have they in store that came down with them from the past ?
What was their early life? Mine was as a silver arrow shot from a
golden bow at success. Have they the same chance that 1 had, and
that your child has ?
Consider, also, that the moment one begins to move forward in
life every step is a conflict, if he undertakes to move according to
any high ideal of right — if he undertakes, for instance, to live a
Hfe in which the principles of truth and honesty and goodness are to
be held inviolate. I think that the time when one goes out of the
household is the most royal period of his life. A young man who has
received an education, who has a conception of what is becoming in
manhood, who is sensitive to the honor of truth and to the dishonor
of untruth, whose aim is noble, and who is just stepping out into life,
presents a sight than which there is none at once more beautiful
and more sad. It is sad because the moment he begins to act with
high purposes he will find ten thousand fiendish influences brought
ito bear upon him. If he love the truth, ten thousand things will
Itempt him to warp and break it. If he love honor, he will find
ieverything tending to lead him to lower the standard of his honor,
(It is hard for a man to take the ideal of honor and truth and recti-
^ tude and plow through life with it. Many a root will throw the
plow out of the furrow, and there is many a stone which it will
■catch against. Life is a hard field in which to learn to plow. Men
(meet all these things in life. It is seldom that a man can carry an
ideal of any kind straight through life without meeting conflict,
disaster, and often defeat.
You see, from these views, that the conflict and struggle to which
we are all called, is not a conflict and struggle that springs merely
from our misconduct. If men tell you that persons have conflicts
in life because they are so bad themselves, you may fearlessly deny
it. You may say that they have a single section of the truth, but
that the broad sphere of men in this life embraces many more mat-
THE CONFLICTS OF LIFE. 137
ters than tliey are themselves responsible for. There are doubtless
many evils that they allow to triumph which they could vanquish,
and for Avhich they are to blame ; but when you consider where men
are born ; when you consider with what temperaments and consti-
tutions they are created ; when you consider what temptations they
are subject to; when you consider how little knowledge they have
of themselves and of the influences that act to draw them away from
good and toward evil, while there is much to blame, there is much
to pity; while there is much to lead us to thank God for favorable
circumstances, there is much more to lead us to pity men,
and hold them as not only blameworthy and sinful, but as having
gone tlirough an experience of having been sinned against mightily.
Causes that inhere in the very structure of the material globe, causes
that are inherent in the very organization of a man's own nature
and soul — the body he lives in, the way in which he is put together
in that body, the society into which he is launched, the institutions
that meet him, the varied experiences whicli he goes through — these
great influences, these mighty forces, which the apostle spoke of, are
at work. It does not at all lower the sense of a man's responsibility
in that sphere in which he is reponsible, nor of his guilt for those
things which he ought not to do, having power to restrain himself;
but there is a great deal more in this world than sin. There is much
that is called sin which is constitutional, and which belongs to men,
not because they will do wrong, but because it pleases God to put
them where they are obliged to fight their way out of animalism
into manhood.
The conflict and struggle, then, is so universal that we must be-
lieve that it is the design of God — that it is organic. I do not
believe that sin was ever created by God purposely ; but that con-
stitution which works out into sin, and which before it comes to it
has in it an element of pain and of penalty, I believe is divinely
guided. You cannot look at the world as it is, you cannot count
up the facts of nations and individuals as they are, and escape, it
seems to me, the deduction that the world was constructed, not as
a harmonious machine by the hand of the Lord, but as a vast realm
of experience through wliich men were to be emancipated from their
lower nature and condition, and brought up to a higher plane, and
into better conditions.
So, then, when it is said, in the Word of God, Work out your own t
salvation with fear and trembling, it is not an interjected, novel/
truth : it is what nature, if we had been enlightened enough to un-l
derstand her, would have said. All things in nature say that ex- 1
ertion, efl'ort, struggle, with pain and sorrow, are a part of thaj
experience of human life.
138 TEE CONFLICTS OF LIFE.
Why did not the apple-tree gi'ow on the top of a hill ? and
•why did not the slope of the hill run down into every man's
cellar, so that every apple that dropped should roll into a bin in his
cellar without any effort on his part ? How nice that would be !
Why did not every man find, as snails do, a house on his back, so
that he would be saved the trouble of building a house, and learn-
ing how to build ? Why is it that everybody was not healthy and
"wise and good ? Why were not all sparrows bluejays, and all doves
eagles, and all eagles doves ? Why was not everything something,
and something everything ? In short, "what did God make every-
thing that he did make for ? When you find out, tell me, "will you ?
This we know : that the world was so made that men, emerging
from lo"wer conditions, come up to higher ones step by step, and
that e"very upward step is like a new birth, and has its birth-pangs.
As the child comes crying into the "world, and the mother moans,
so every added ten years, climacteric — the sevens, the fourteens, the
twenty-ones — every period of advance — has been through other
"Wombs, other births, with other cryings and other sufferings. And
so it is that every step of the way down to the last, it only needed
one divine authentication to show that this -world "was built so that
by struggle and suffering it should come up to final perfection —
namely, the authentication of God's own Word,
We have the scene of the Sufferer who was lifted on Calvary.
Men say, " My God cannot suffer." Then he cannot be God to me.
Men say, " It wasnot just that Christ should suffer for the sins of the
"world." Is it unjust that the mother should suffer for the inexpe-
rience of the child ? That doctrine would turn every cradle upside
down. To suffer for others is the higtiest mark of nobleness and
heroism. The whole world is suffering, and by suffering is coming
up — or might come up. That is the law. That is the direction.
That is the true hand which points to the light sky. It is wailing
and sighing that lead up toward manhood. It is not suffering in
excess, it is not enduring beyond what we are able to bear, but it is
pain and sorrow and trouble adapted to our condition, that is the
medicine by which "vve are healed, and the hammer by which we are
released from the imprisoning rock, and the harrow or plow by
■which the harvest is cultivated. The way toward perfection is a way
toward strife and tears; and over it stand the cross and the Sufferer
who died for the world to make harmony between the universe be-
yond and the experience of men on this side.
No man can pick out his own campaign in life. Every man
must fight the battles that meet him, -whatever they are. Nothing
is more common than for men to justify their own cowardice and
THE CONFLICTS OF LIFE. 139
defection in life by saying, "If I had been in such circumstances I
could have done so and so." Your trouble in fighting the battle of '
life is that you break down at every step. You see others fighting
with the tireless wing of the eagle, but you fly from tree to tree, and
take breath at every step, and say, " Oh, if God had made me an |
eajjle I could have taken care of all the troubles that I have down l
o i
here, but I am a sparrow, and every little bit of a hawk, and every il
owl of the night, and the shrike, and the bluejay attack me, andl
how could I, small as I am, get out of the way ? If I had only been |
an eagle — " Oh, yes, if you had only been an eagle ! But you are{
not made an eagle ; and the question is simply this : Will you grum-
ble and die as the fool dieth ? If "God chose to put you into life at
the point of vigor, there is an end in that campaign — there is a dis-
closure in that problem. There is victory in every one of these
things. There may not be victory in them at the present time ; but
I believe that there will be victory in them beyond the present. I
believe that when you come to measure and see what the fruition of
the future is compared with the present struggle, you will be satis-
fied with the wisdom of God in the economy of life. If you could
know now what you will know by and by, you would see that what
God is doing for you is better than what you desire for yourself.
I have seen men who said, " Who could expect a man to do any-
thing Avho was stricken in life as I have been ? What do you sup-
pose a man can do who has to work twelve hours a day, and is only
just able to get his bread and cheese, and sweats at that ?" What
do I suppose he can do ? I suppose he can do a great deal. I sup-
pose that poor living and high thinking are worth every man's en-
deavor. A man Avho can take the place which God puts him in,
and stick to it, and fight it through, and stand a man every inch,
has, I think, awaiting him, an estate of glory such as has not been
known in this world.
" Why," you say, " I could have borne this yoke, only it cuts
right across the sore spot on my neck."
When I was a boy, nothing suited me so well as to have my
father whip me Avhen my clothes were on. Then I could bear it
with the utmost equanimity. It was when he took me at advan-
tage, in the 'morning, before I was dressed, that I did not like
whipping 1
I have heard many people say, " If God only tempered aifliction
so that it came on the spot where I did not feel it, I could bear it."
But what sort of affliction would that be ? What does the bullock,
with his tough, hard skin, care for the yoke ? But if it be a young
ox, whose neck is yet tender, on which the yoke is put, how hard it
1^0 THE CONFLICTS OF LIFE.
is for him to bear it ! And so in youth it is hard for persons to
bear affliction. But that way comes patience. That way comes
Belf-control. That way comes knowledge.
Now, men must take themselves as they are, and they must take
troubles where they come, and they must do the best they can in
the place where God puts them. You may not know the meaning
of the trials that you are called to endure, and you may not like
them. I do not suppose anybody likes troubles. We all like lazi-
ness. We would all like to go to heaven through self-indulgence.
But that is not the way that men were meant to go to heaven.
That is the way to make sloths, but not fully-developed men. We
want to have our path made clear. We want all the hills brought
low and all the valleys exalted. We want all rocks taken out of the
way. And then we would like to walk as on holiday occasions,
with music and banners and acclamations. "We would like to be
crowned soldiers before we have fought the battle ; but it is not
then that God crowns us. It is after many campaigns and much
night-and-day work. It is after we have been toughened in the
struggle, and have come out veterans. It is after we have faith-
fully done our duty, and have had the experience which a faithful
performance of duty alone can bring. Then it is that our manhood
comes to us, and then it is that we are crowned, and are worthy of
a place in the midst of the heavenly host.
There is one thing which we do not take out of this world with
us. No man, I think, will take his house through the portals of
the grave. No man will take through the grave his body. That
drops at the grave, thank God. No man will take his bonds and
mortgages through the grave. No man will take through the grave
his pictures, or statues, or books. No man will carry through the
grave those dishes which are full of delight to the palate. There
are ten thousand things which will, as a part of the furnishing of
the school-house here, be left behind, as the child, when he goes to
the college or the university, leaves in the school-house his grammar
and arithmetic and spelling-book. And when we come to the
grave's mouth we leave many things behind us. But there is no
man that has learned patience who does not carry that through.
There is no man that has learned the art of subduing pride who
does not carry that through. There is no man who has gained the
lore of love who does not carry that through. There is no man
that has developed in himself any Christian virtue who does not
carry that through. You will not learn one attribute of manhood
that you will leave behmd you. You will not cultivate a single
Christian trait that you \vill not carry with you. Every particle of
TEE CONFLICTS OF LIFE. \i\
truth or love or goodness tliat you acquire here will be yours in the
life which is to come. All the higher elements which you possess
in this world you will carry with you beyond the grave — and some
of you will have the smallest load that you ever carried, if you do
not look out!
I remark again, that in this universal conflict of life, the victory
is not to be looked for outwardly. You will remember that when
Paul had that strange, mysterious thorn in the flesh, whatever it
was, he prayed thrice that it might be removed from him ; and the
Lord answered, " My grace shall be suiScient for you. I will not
take away the trouble, but I will give you a grace that shall enable
you to bear it, and give you a victory over it." In this world we
frequently gain victorie? in ourselves, although outwardly we seem
to suffer defeat. There are many men who are not prospered when
they seem to be prospered. It is the worst part of them that is
prospered when they are only prospered outwardly. Many men
who have gone down in bankruptcy are themselves conscious that
there is something in them that is better, sweeter, more noble than
material prosperity has been able to develop. They are conscious
that they are more men in their trouble than they would be if they
were out of it. Grief opens the door of heaven to many souls.
Just go to those who sit in the shadow. There is many a man
who has sought success, and struggled for it, and come short of it,
and who seems to be defeated, but who, after all, has had a victory.
The best side of him has been victorious. That which made him
victorious was more manliness; it was more godliness; it was more
of that spirit of hope by which we are saved. It was that faith
which inherits heaven by foresight.
If there be those, therefore, who seem to themselves to be over-
borne; if there be those who say, "Look at me : here I am, right in
the middle of life with nothing to stand upon," let them take com-
fort from this view.
There are those who watch men, and make contrasts. One says,
" Do you know Mr. Bumblebee ? He never had any of the virtues,
but see how he has rolled up money ! See what property he has
got ! Do not you know how at the last Black Friday he was the ,
only man who did not suffer ? Do you not remember how he man-
aged so that every thing came into his dish ? He got everything!
into his hands, and then just as he saw that there was going to be
a smash he got rid of it ; and the next day, when everybody else
went down, he went up. And so it has been with him for twenty
or thirty years."
I have seen beetle bugs, in summer, on the road, rolling up and
142 TEE CONFLICTS OF LIFE.
rolling up their pile ; but I never felt the least disposition to be one
of those "bugs !
On the other hand, I have heard men say, " See that man ! It
seems really mysterious that one so adapted to do good, one who
has always been so kind and generous, should be where he now is.
He is thrown aside entirely. All men respect him ; but they can-
not stop to notice him. They are too busy with their own affairs.
He is bankrupt, and will never get on his feet again. He is of no
account. His name is no longer on the commercial register. He is
never seen on the street where he used to be so busy. He failed,
and is forgotten. The waves have rolled over him. He came to
nothing."
Go trace out that man. Trace him by the flowers which spring
up by his feet. Trace him by the sweetness of his teaching to chil-
dren. Trace him by the noble conceptions which he has given them
of the future, and which will breed some of the noblest men of the
present generation. See him consoling the poor, and teaching the
dying how to hope. See him when his own hour comes. He is
almost a pauper. How few follow him to the grave, as he is carried
in an open wagon in the country by a plain man who has got used
to burying folks, and who cannot be supjjosed to have much senti-
ment on such subjects ! He is put into the ground, and the dirt is
shoveled on him without much regard to delicacy. But oh, what a
funeral that is ! I cannot see for the wings that flash. I cannot
see for the multitude of those who have come at God's command to
take the soul of his servant up through the heavens. They move
as the leaves move when winds sweep through the summer forests.
They move as the waves move upon the sea. I hear them shout. I
see the battlements gleam. I hear the universal outcry, " Well
done, and welcome !" as he enters the heavenly land. Give me his
poverty, give me his obscurity, give me his disappointments of suc-
I cess, if they will only work in me such hope and faith and love as
\ they worked in him ! Woe to the man Avho is bankrupt outside and
I inside too ! Blessed is the man who is bankrupt outside that he
I may come to his inside and give it room to expand !
Most men, I remark once more, come to their conflicts in life as
if they were evils, pure and unmixed ; but if the facts which I have
stated are true, and the general view of the moral constitution of
this world by which men are wrought out by suffering as well as by
joy is a correct view, then for us to seek ease, and to try to dodge
and run away from any conflict which comes up before us, is
as foolish as for a soldier on the field of battle to run away from the
enemy. There are stragglers in the army who are timid and fearing.
THE CONFLICTS OF LIFE., 113
and who in the day of battle are not to be found ; but good
soldiers, hardened in the field, are pleased by nothing so much as
being drawn into the conflict. When there is figliting to be done
they want to have a hand m it, and they say, " Put me where I can
get at the enemy." And they chafe if they are thrown behind the
hill as a reserve, and are allowed to take no part in the battle. And
welcome to their ears is the cry, " You are ordered up." And out
they run, and fall upon the foe, and strike as if they were but iron.
They pitch into the fight with eagerness and gladness. There aj'o
no laggards among them. There are none of them that want easy
places, or that would like to fight out of range. Every one of them
wants to meet his foeman face to face and hand to hand. And yet,
in life, in a greater battle, and under a greater Captain, how many
there are who are afraid to meet the conflict, and seek in every way
to avoid it, and brnig up their children with the effeminate idea
that the great happiness of life consists in fortifying themselves
against dangers, and making themselves so high and so strong that
nothing can get at them !
It is better to bring up your children nobly to endure whatever
is put on them. Do not seek temptation or danger ; but when in
the exercise of duty God brings you face to face with temptations!
or dangers, do not be a coward and run away from the field in thei
day of battle. You are called of God to your conflict, and you must \
meet it manfully, every one of you.
Once more : Remember that it is not a vagrant and aimless
suffering which we go through in this life. If you look over the
face of the deep in its stormy hour, it would seem as though the
demon of confusion had possession of the sea ; and the spots
of hideous light which come through the clouds seem more hateful
than even the raging of the waves ; but after all, there is not
a drop of the ocean that stirs except under the influence of a law
which is as steady as that which holds the oak to its place. The
wind and the water move according to laws which God established
in eternity. And in this great and wild conflict of life there is a
power that administers and controls. There is a supervising Provi-
dence. There is a loving heart of God. There is a God who is
willing to inflict pain, as he declares, because he loves. As a father
chastises his child that he may whip the evil out of him, and whip
virtues into him, so God chastises those whom he loves.
If you be shielded from trouble and care and annoyance; if you
be surrounded by circumstances which make the present hour
delightful ; if you have no conflict and bear no burden ; if you do
not suffer, then God says that you are bastards. If you are God'a
144 • TEE CONFLICTS OF LIFE.
children, and if you have the vei-y touch of manhood in you, it is
because you have had such an idea of what was right and pure and
true and noble in this world that you have strained yourself to the
work and borne trials manfully.
Under the supervision of Providence every man's conflict ia
marked of God. Every man is helped who will permit the ingress
of the Divine Spirit to his soul.
J The battle of life is a battle the result of which we need not fear.
I' It is a battle which God himself guides. As in the field of battle
the general is not seen, but from afar off gives his commands,
- saving himself so that if the battle go wrong he still may counsel it,
so God hides himself ; but we are watched by him, and by and by
the cloud will roll away, and then, sitting in the inexpressible
grandeur of love and mercy and beauty. He that hath helped us
all the days of our lives shall, be seen by us, and we shall be wel-
comed where there is no more conflict, or sin, or sorrow, but eternal
manhood and victory and joy.
PRAYER BEFORE THE SERMON.
We thank tbee, our Heavenly Father, that there reraaineth a rest for
the people of God. How full of storm is life! How full of care aud uncer-
titudel What agitaHons are continually beating upon us as the surf beats
upon the shore! We are not sure of to-morrow. How bright soever the
day may be, storms may be chasing it in the night! We perpetually pass
from sunshine to cloud; from summer to winter; from calms to storms.
We have a moment's rest, and then are scared away till our wing is weary
with flying from danger. We are perpetually chased up and down, when-
soever we attempt to live according to tny law, sought out of pride, over-
whelmed with vauity, selfishness, avarice and envy, tried and tempted, and
too often overcome. Our svay is wearisome while our conscience wakes;
and when our conscience sleeps, and we plimge onward, and get into inex-
tricable trouble, O Lord, then come despondency and despair. And so we
go through dark and ligtit. So we go over the rough and over the smooth.
So we are strangers aud pilgrims, who confess that this is not their home ;
that they are seeking another country and a better one. Aud we rejoice to
believe that far up above every storm there is still a calm and the shining of
the sun. So above all the trouble, and all the temptation, and all the trial
of life, there is a rest that remaineth. The lights which are blown out here
are not extinguished there. The sobs and the wails which we hear so
plentifully here die long before they reach that shore of peace. No sorrow
stains its air. No contentions beat like fierce winds upon that land. Into
it from off the stormy sea have run how many voyagers ! Out of our arms
some have flown as the dove flies away— little ones ; and we are glad that
TRE CONFLICTS OF LIFE. 145
they are saved from so much that awaited their earthly experience. From
our side how many have gone of our companions! They are at rest; we
toil on.
Grant, we beseech of thee, that we may feel more and more the goodness
of God in what we call bereavements and afflictious, and that there may
come to us, through our sympathy with what is high and benevolent and
generous and just, more and more a sense of the divine mercy in chastise-
ment. Though thou art hiding thy hand under the dark robe, may we
never fail to see that it is the hand pierced and stained with blood for us.
Though we at times wonder why the bitter cup is put to our lips, may we
remember that it is the cup of which we take only a sip, but which thou
didst drink to the dregs. And while we see thy providence thwarting us at
every step, may we hear thee saying, " What I do now ye know not; but
ye sliall know hereafter." Into that great hereafter may we put our cares,
and all our reasoning questions, and all our doubts and fears, and all our
unbelief, and feel that God will make that plain in the end which is obscure
now by reason of our ignorance.
O Lord, grant that high above every other experience may be the belief
that thou art, and that thou art good, so that we may lean our whole
weight upon thee; so that we may not be daunted from trusting thee by
any apparition of terror. May we disbelieve everything but thee; and may
we believe thee to be a God of love whose justice is but the instrument of
love, and who is seeking everywhere, in heaven, and on earth, and through-
out creation, to purge and to cleanse, to give strength to weakness, to heal
sinfulness, aud to lift up and perfect the whole kiagdom of men.
O Lord our God, we triumph and rejoice in thee. How poor we are !
now we stumble every day ! How full of mixtures of sin are our best
things! How languid is our compassion! How strong is anger in us ! How
poor is our humility! How dominant is our pride! How do we snatch
selfishly on every side, and return with empty hands which should be
stretched out in bounty. If we look at ourselves, and think of what thou
art and what we have been, and have better and nobler ideals of life, we
are discontented with ourselves, and are ashamed, and do not dare to lift
up our faces toward thee, even though we know thou art our Father, and
dost heal our iniquity and transgression and sin, and art long-suffering.
Ou ! grant that thy goodness may lead us to repentance ; that we may not
tread it under foot, and plunge headlong into darkness and misrule and re-
bellio'i. We pray that thou wilt vouchsafe to all who are in thy presence
this morning the manifestation of thyself with them. Nay, accept the
gladness of hearts that come full of thanksgiving to-day; that, looking
upon thy dealings with them, and their own experience, have occasion to
make mention of thy name with songs and thanksgiving.
We pray that thou wilt grant that no hearts may forget to be grateful
for all the meicies which thou dost bestow upon them, though they come
thioliset with judgments. We pray that we may remember, day by day,
how thou hast attended us unweariedly, bounteously supplied us with out-
ward blessings and inward consolation, and opened wider and wider the
horizon of hope, and granted us by faith more and more insight into the
spiritual, and more and more nearness to the eternal world.
Grant, O Lord, that we may have perpetual gratitude that no wild
chance is driving through the universe, and that God rules, and tliat it is love
that is providence, and that in the end all things shall appear, and we shall
be safishe 1. Therefore may we be content, striving against sin, and over-
coming whntcver is evil in us. so far as in us lies. H?re and there seek-
ing the be^t things, may we rejoice that Christ is i)rovi(k'nce, that
1 -iG TUE CONFLICTS OF LIFE.
God is providonce, and that all things shall work together for good to them
wlio love thee.
We pray that thou wilt bless any who are feeling present and smarting
afflictious; and grant to taem help according to their several needs. O
L ird, administer consolation to them. May th-^y find strangely by their
side the Spirit of all consolation — the Spirit of promise — the Comforter.
We pray that thou wilt maiie houses upon which the cloud rests light
with thy presence. Wilt thou dry up the tears of those who weep. May
those who are mourning find consolation in thee. May those who are in
trials a'd perplexities, who are bearing burdens wliich seem at times
heavier than they can carry, know that Grod carries their burdens for them,
though they thij^k it not, and that he who will not let a sparrow fall un-
heeded, counts tiiem as worth many sparrows. May they trust when they
behold, and may they trust when they can no longer see. M'ly they trust
and rejoice in the Lord when there is nothing else In which th3y can trust
and rejoice.
We pray that thou wilt be near to those who are in the perplexities of
daily duty, fighting the battle of life mautully, and wlu are overwearied
and overljurdened. As their day is, so miy their stren :th be also.
We pray that thou wilt grant thy blessing, to-day, to rest upon the poor
and outcast, upon the afflicted of every name. Send foi'th those who shall
minister consolation unto them.
Grant that this day of rest may bring consolation and rest and rejoicing
to those who are not gathered in churches ; to those who have no friends ; to
those who are neglected; to those who are poor and ignorant, and do not
know the meaning of blessings that are wrapped up in this Lord's Day.
We pray that thou wilt bless all thy churches, and all thy ministers who
shall preach to-day; and may the Gospel have power, and may it sink as
good seed into the soil of the hearts of men, and bring forth fruit a hundred-
fold.
Be pleased to bless this land. Remember the President of these United
States, and all who are in aut^iority with him. Remember the Governors
of the several States, and their counselors. Remember judges and magis-
trates. Remember all who execute the laws of the land. Graut that they
may be God-fearing men who shall faithfully administer justice between
man and man.
Bless all who are in the Army and Navy, and who serve their country at
home or abroad. Remember all those who are in ignorance, and who are
seeking the way of knowledge out of bondage. Bless our schools and
academies and colleges and universities and all the sources of light and
intelligence.
Unite the hearts of this great people. May those who come to us from
afar mingle with us, and become one with us; and may wise laws, temper-
erately executed, may wise institutions having in them the welfare of the
nation, more and more prevail against animalism and injustice and wanton-
ness; and may this great people be held together by the living spirit of the
Gospel of Ctirist Jesus. And may its prosperity lead all things from dark-
ness and barbarity toward intelligence and true and undeliled religion.
And grant that the day may be hastened when all nations shall know the
Lord the world over. And may all thy glowing promises be fulfilled.
Hear us, O Lord, in these our supplications, and answer us according to
the multitude of thy tender mercies. And to thy name, Fathei', Son, and
Spirit, shall be praises, everlasting. Amen.
IX.
The Unity of Men,
INVOCATION.
We beseech of thee, our Father, that thou wilt enlarge our understanding.
By thine own inspiration render sensitive all our best affections, that they
may reflect something of thee this day. May we lay aside our careless
thoughts, whereby we have tarnished thy glory. Give us fuller and clearer
and sweeter views of what thou art, and of what shall be revealed in us when
we are brought home to our Father's house. Grant, we pray thee, this morn-
ing, that thy truth may be received in simplicity, and with power from on
high. Grant that the services of devotion may rise from our affections, and
be grateful to thee. May it be to thee what the coming home of our children
is to us, when, having been long absent, they gather around about us. May
we worship thee by better lives, and liy a more holy surrender of ourselves
to thy great goodness and mercy. We pray that every service — the fellowship
of song, the communion of prayer, and the meditation of our hearts— may
be acceptable in thy sight, O Lord our God. Amen.
THE UNITY OF MEN.
" Ye are come unto Mount Zion, and unto the city of the living God, the
heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of angels, to the
general assembly and church of the first-born, which are written in heaven,
aod to God the Judge of all, and to the spirits of just men made perfect,
and to Jesus the mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of
sprinkling, that speaketh better things than thatof Abel."— Heb. xii., 22-24.
There is much, particularly in the later writings of the New-
Testament, which we cannot fully understand unless we go back
and put ourselves, to a certain degree, in the places of those to
whom the words were written. The early believers in Christ sub-
jected themselves to almost every inconvenience, and in many in-
stances to every persecution, which it was possible for men to meet.
They were regarded as unpatriotic — as having forsaken the religion
of their fathers ; for with the Jews civil and religious liberty were
so blended that to leave one was to leave the other. It was a thing:
hard to be borne (especially by a generous heart conscious of loving
his country) to be supposed to be indifferent to that country, and
a traitor to it. They were charged with having taken up a new
and idolatrous faith. The whole history of God's dealings with his
chosen people, chastising them for wandering from a belief in the
true God to a belief in impostors and idols, was employed against
them. They were cast out. They were, so to speak, set up as a
mark. They were reviled on every hand.
That was not all. If you consider how much men depend for
their stability in life upon the senses ; if you reflect that while the
immediate Jews were not cast out of the temple, nor forbidden the
use of the Mosaic economy, they were taught that tlie religion of
Christ was an interior and invisible religion, and that ordinances
had come near to their end, and that they might be dispensed with
without any breach of fiiitli or fidelity ; if you take into consider-
ation what it was, in the midst of a community who had been
educated under the influence of the most gorgeous ritual ever known,
and wlio had been accustomed to express their thoughts and emo-
SrxDAY MOKXINO, May 5, 1872. Lessox : 1 COR. I. lS-31. HYMNS (Plymouth Collec-
tion): Nos. 364, 531.
150 THE UNIT! OF MEN.
tions by some symbol or type or physical method, to bring in a sys-
tem which set at naught all symbols and types and physical
methods, and substituted that which had no outward manifestation,
nothing but exposition — as the apostle says, to bring to naught that
which was by that which was not — in other words, to present truths
which had no visible exponent ; if you ponder these things you will
perceive how these men must have been embarrassed and harassed.
They were bewildered. On the one side they were reproached for being
unpatriotic and irreligious, and for abandoning their families and
their faith ; and on the other side they were told that ordinances
were done with ; that days had no more sanctity ; and that there had
been ushered in a spiritual invisible kingdom of the Saviour — a
kingdom that they could not see here, but that they would see in
heaven. They seemed to be entangled in a net which drew them
away from the visible without giving them any clear revelation of
the mere invisible which was to take its place.
The long line of old Jews was therefore summoned up. " Do
you suppose," said the writer in Hebrews, " that you are disbranched
from the tree, and that that to which you are called amounts to an
unpatriotic abandonment of old historic grounds ? You are called
to a life of faith, and every one of these worthies became what he
was by faith. Every one of them relied upon the exercise of that
principle which we call you to exercise." The roll was called, and
from the ages that had passed rose one venerable head, and another.
One after another responded, till the Jewish mind fairly thrilled
with ecstatic pride in its national history. Name upon name was
enumerated ; and it was declared, " These died in faith ; and these
suffered in faith ; and these lived by faith ; and these conquered
by faith."
What is faith ? It is the power to see things which have no
visible nor sensuous representation. It is the power to apprehend
principles instead of things material. It is the power to live in the
presence of things invisible, not incarnated, and to perceive them
more clearly than the things which come in ab the eye-gate or the
ear-gate. And all the great heroes who had gone before lived by
faith.
Then, after the enumeration of these men who died by faith,
comes the twelfth chapter of Hebrews. And a blessed chapter it
is. That twelfth chapter of Hebrews is a mountain of conso-
lation. That twelfth chapter of Hebrews, if it were sounded in
music, would overtop Beethoven's noblest symphonies. It is
one of those chapters which deals at once with things of the
present and things of the future — with things relating to this
THE VNITY OF MEif. 151
world and things relating to the kingdom of the invisible : and it
stands pouring down the tide of time a song of consolation, every
word of which is sweetness to the souls of those who suffer. It
opens with the declaration that God is a Father, and that men must
suffer, and that suffering is the evidence of God's paternity, and
of their filial relations to him. It goes on, after turning the theme
in various ways, to declare that in suffering they are not cast out by
reason of God's anger, but that, contrariwise, by reason of their
adhesion to Christ, they are called, through the very road of suffer-
ing by which he came to a glorious unity, and to a companionship
most august.
And then, in order to touch the Jewish imagination as sympa-
thetically as possible, the writer told them that they had come, not
to the august things which their fathers saw, but to something
transcendently nobler. The old lay level with the earth ; but the
ncAV was something that was exalted into the invisible realm.
" Ye are come unto Mount Zion."
Not unto the Mount Zion which was so dear to every Jew, but
unto that other Mount Zion, compared with which, as they looked
upon it, this one was as a little hill. If they had stood, looking
from the east upon Mount Zion, seeing it, as in a summer after-
noon we often see lifted up against the sky mountain ranges, or
clouds, Avhicli look like vast mountains, magnificent in altitude
and innumerable in aggregation, the apostle might have told them
that they had come to Mount Zion as thus typified. Mount Zion as
seen from over the hill of Bethany ? No ; but Mount Zion above
that, glorious, transfigured.
" Ye are come unto Mount Zion, and unt# the city of the living God, the
heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of angels [for at this
time, to the apostle's eye of faith, all the heaven was filled with angels.
Round and round the whole circuit, to his eye, fire flashed from their wings],
to the general assembly and church of the first-born, which are written in
heaven, and to God the Judge of all, and to the spirits of just men made per-
fect, and to Jesus the mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of
sprinkling that speaketh better things than that of Abel."
Ye new-born creatures ; ye that are solitary and alone ; ye
homeless ones ; ye without a country ; ye cast out, behold that
wliich has happened. See that you have come to a nobler Zion than
the old Zion, and to a nobler Jerusalem than the old Jerusalem. To
the city of the living, all-creating God, full of light and glory, ye
are come. Ye are come, not to the temple ring, not to the syna-
gogical clique, but to the general assembly and church of the first-
born, which are written in heaven. Ye are come not to tliis teacher
nor that instructor of narrow mind, but to the spirits of just men
152 THE UNITY OF MEN.
made perfect, gathered out of every age. Ye belong to their com-
pany. And ye are come to Jesus, the mediator of the new covenant,
and to his blood, to that which labors on earth and reigns in
heaven. All these are yours.
The outside of their religion was ignoble enough ; a very plain
and a very poor thing it was to the physical eye ; but to one who
would shut his eyes, and view the inside, it was royal.
To be a Christian in those early days was a thing of great glory.
It joined a man to that which was best in the experience of the
human race. It took hues from all that had passed, and borrowed
radiance from all that was to come. It went above the horizon, and
took something from the Father, and something from the Son, and
something from the whole heavenly host. It derived something
from all that was noble and divine from the earliest to the latest
period of the world. And the apostle says to men, " This is yours."
What a comfort it Avould be to them if they could but realize
it, and live consciously in such a glorious unity I
It' is of this unity of men with all that is t];^nscendent, all that
is best, and all that is universal, that I shall speak this morning.
All men are united together in the world in various external
ways. They are important ways ; and yet they are not the most
important. We are united to nationalities who speak the same
tongue that we do. We are united in states, in cities, and in
neighborhoods. In neighborhoods we are united by affiliations of
the household. And these things we do not despise ; we recognize
their benefits ; but we recognize that there are unities which trans-
cend these ; that are larger than they are ; that have a significance
which does not belong to them.
All men are united together by a common weakness. They are
united by a common origin. From the dust they came, and they
bear the marks of it. All are united together by their liability to
temptation ; by the ease with which they fall ; by the power of the
senses and the feebleness of faith. All are united together by a
common struggle — that struggle by which they seek to subdue the
flesh to the control of the spirit. "Whatever may be the philosophy
of sin, whatever may be the theory as to human origin, there is a
struggle going on in the world among all men who seek to be good,
or wise, or true, or noble, and consequently among all who are under
the light of Christianity ; and they are united together by this
common struggle.
As men in a hospital come thei'e from everywhere — from this
battle-field and from that battle-field, from this camp and from that
camp — to overcome disease, and break away from its entangle-
THE UNITY OF MEN. 153
ments, and gain the freedom of health again ; so, not stopping to
discuss the different philosophies of the various schools, but recog-
nizing them all as of relative importance, there is one fact that all
unite in acknoAvledging. It is admitted by all that everybody is
seeking to rise from the low to the high ; from the weak to the
strong ; from the impure to the pure. And point me to that man
who has had no struggle ; point me to that man who has never
reached manhood by any hard climbing or by any battles ; point
me to that man who has never said to his pride, nor had occasion
to say to it, " Why doest thou so ?" point me to that man who
has had no combat with selfishness, and appetite, and passion ;
point me to that man who has had no trial nor struggle with him-
self ; for I have his name. I know who he is. God has baptized
him, and called him Bastard.
" If ye be without chastisement, whereof all are partakers, then are ye
bastards, and not sons."
The sign of royal birth is that men all start together at a low
point, and that they are all together striving up toward a higher
and an ideal manhood. It is this strife that is common to us all, and
that unites us all. All of us are of the earth earthy ; and all of us,
in varying degrees, are, through suffering, through tears, through
anxieties, through struggles, and through anguish often, working
our way up from a low point to a higher one. We are all in a great
conflict. And as no flowers grow in our gardens unless it please God
to send dews and showers upon them ; so tears make the heart rich.
It is by trials that God develoj^s men. Sufferings and sorrows are
but birth-pains ; and we are born into a higher realm if we survive
them. If our faith fail, and we g(j down under them, they destroy
us ; but if we understand the organization in which we are living,
if we recognize the fact that we spring from the dust, and are all
seeking, not knowing what it is, our divine nature, then we are
more than we seem.
Is there no call in you, the meaning of Avhich you cannot tell ?
Have you never sat on summer evenings, and heard sounds that
seemed to you to come from the forest or from the mountain, or
that seemed almost to drop down from the heavens, playing weii'dly
Avith your imagination ? Has it never seemed as though voices
called you starward and upward ? Men have yearnings and long-
ings and importunities which are inchoate, and which they do not
understand. The Spirit is praying through us with syllables which
cannot be articulated.
Men are good or bad relatively. They are all good, and they are
all l)!^d. There is something of good in the worst of them, and there
154 TEE UNITY OF MEN.
is something of bad in the best of them. Not that I would take the
foundation out from under anybody's feet ; but that which is more
common than any other one thing is limitation, circumscription,
weakness, imperfection ; breaking out, as men grow in strength, into
wrong, into sin, with all its attendant manifestations of fear,' and
remorse, and repentance, with all those elements which constitute
man as a fallible, erring creature, and with all those aspirations
which by the Spirit of God are breathed in upon the soul. Man,
himself, an imperfect being, is joined to the great band and brother-
hood of imperfect beings in human life.
Men are united, too, in the reign of care in this world. In other
words, nobody comes into life with a trade in his hand, but with a
hand that is set to learn a trade. Nobody comes into life with a
philosophy in his head, but with a head that is set to learn philoso-
phy. All men come into this life unskillful, not knowing the sea-
sons, nor the soil, nor the ways and manners and methods of society.
The whole world is born ignorant. The entire race come into the
world as blind as a bat, stumbling over the threshold. Everybody
has to learn through endeavors and mistakes. No man learns with-
out finger-cuttings, and weariness of feet, and toil of arms. Every-
thing has to be learned. Nobody can transmit anything except
mere tendencies. Wisdom has to be acquired ; it is never inherited.
Shakespeare's children, if he had had any, would have had to learn
what they knew in the great school of toil and care and effort
and mistake. All mankind are united in learning how to get
through life. The great problem of this world is how to main-
tain manhood while you are feeding through the mouth, through
the ear, and through the eye. .That which concerns us most is to
know how to be a child of God while we are trying to subdue the
earth, and all the methods of it.
Into this fellowship, into this school, into this great primal ne-
cessity, all men are born. There is the great unity of care and bur-
den and toil which joins the race together. Some shoulders are
broad, and cany the load easily, but other shoulders are narroAV and
collapse under it. Apparently, some are meant for conquerors, and
some for captives, in the great struggle. But wherever, under the
heavens, men aspire, everybody has the dust-mark on him. lie treads
the road of toil, and bears its impress.
We are -not half as anxious to trace our pedigree in this direction
as we are in the other. If we can trace our ancestry back to
some great Earl; if we can trace our lineage back to Alfred,
or along some line of illustrious men, how noble, we think that!
But when Mr. Darwin suggests that we should trace our pedi-
THE UNITY OF MEN. 155
gree the other way, we are not so anxious to do it — though I think
that in many respects it would be easier ! Disguise it as you will, the
points in which we are alike are more in the animal direction than in
any other. AV'e are of the earth, earthy. Our attributal qualities are
those of earthiness. And for ages to come men will be more united
by their infirmities and troubles and infelicities, than by their at-
tainments in other directions.
Men are also united in the essential ideas of Christian manhood.
We are united in those germ-ideas which belong to all races. They
are undeveloped in some, fully developed in others, and largely fruit-
ful in still others. We are united in all those constituent elements
which inhere in men as discriminated from any of the lower races.
We may differ as to the magnitude of our excellences, as to their
order, and as to their causation ; but the fruits of the Spirit, as they
are revealed in men, and as they are catalogued in the Word of God,
are the creed of Christendom.
It is said that you never can unite men on any one creed. I say
there is a creed which by and by you cannot keep men disunited
upon. It is contained in the fifth chapter of Galatians. The arti-
cles of it I will read. I Inay call it a creed. It is not the Apostles'
Creed; nor is it theNicene Creed; neither is it that Chinese puzzle
called the Athanasian Creed. It may be called, I think, the Creed
of the Spirit. The articles of it are Love., Joy., Peace., Long-suffer-
ing., Geyitleness., Goodness, Faith, Meekness, Temperance. These
constitute that creed. And I declare that it is what every man on
the globe, in his better moods, recognizes as the ideal of his true
manhood. Men do not know what they believe about the churches,
for the best of all reasons, that the churches themselves, half the
time, do not know what they believe. They do not know what they
believe in respect to rituals. They quarrel about these, and about
the whole machinery of religion. So it is until you rise to a con-
ception of true manhood. But no man ever sees true manhood that it
does not touch something in him. Everything responds to it. We
go back to history and glean for those traits of which is composed.
If we find meekness in a man of power, it glows as a jewel on the
bosom of beauty. If we find a man who abounds in goodness, how
all the world bows down to it! We go around gathering these
traits, one here and another there. We dive for them as men dive
for the pearl oyster. We seek for them as men seek for hidden
treasures. And all the world admires them. They are traits which
unite men.
I go out among men and say, '^Do you believe in religion?"
"No," they say, "I do not believe in religion." "Do you not be-
156 TEE mriTJ OF MEN.
lieve in the inspiration of the Bible ?" " No, I do not believe in the
inspiration of that old book, which was juggled together, and which
has come down from generation to generation, musty and dusty, to
us." "Do you not believe in Sunday?" "Sunday! that priest's
noose by which to catch the silly and weak ? No, I do not believe
in that." " Do you not believe in the divinity of Christ ?" " T do
not believe there was any Christ." "' Do you not believe that men
need a sovereign change ? Do you not believe that they need to be
born into the church ?" "The church ! I would overturn every church
on earth if I could." " You believe in something, do you not ? Do
you not believe in love ?" "' Oh, yes, I believe in love." " Do you
not believe in joy, when it is a pure article ?" "Yes, yes, I believe in
joy. That fell from the crystal spheres. Certainly, I believe in joy."
" Do you not believe in tranquillity, inward and outward ?" " Oh,
yes, everybody believes in that." " Do you not believe in peace ?"
"Why, yes, I believe in peace. I sigh for it. Oh, that I might have
one hour of such peace as I can think of!" "Do you not believe in
long-suffering ? When you see a man, in great exigencies, stand
up firmly for what he believes to be right, and suffer persecittion and
want, and never say a word, then do you not believe in it ?" " Yes,
I believe in that. It is magnificent, sublime. There is but one man
in a thousand who could suffer in that way." " Do you not believe
in gentleness ?" " Oh, yes. My mother was a very angel of gentle-
ness. She used to move like the moonlight by night, and like the
sunlight by day. No clock was ever so steady in striking the hours
as was she in the exhibition of gentleness. It reconciles me to the
sex when I think of my mother." " Do you not believe in good-
ness ?" " Well, yes — I should believe in it if I could see it. I be-
lieve • there is mighty little of it, and that what there is is a poor
importation. Oh, yes, I believe in goodness. Those bountiful
hearts, those summer-souls, those great natures which are often-
times sprawling like an apple-tree, and yet full of blossoms, as next
week the apple-trees w^ill be in all our orchards — I believe in these,
as the exponents of goodness, making everybody haj)py where they
go, and shedding fragrance, like gardens in the night, which men
perceive, though they cannot see the source of it. I do believe in
goodness." " Do you not believe in faith ?" " Ah ! now you are
coming to theology. No, I do not believe in faith." " I suppose
you believe there is a great realm of thought and aspiration?"
" I believe that no man should live like a crawfish, or like a pig. I
believe that a man ought to have elevated thoughts and lofty aspi-
rations. I believe that a man should be as large as the universe in
his conceptions." " Well, that is what we mean by faith — living
THE UN ITT OF MEN. 157
for ideas — for things ineffable — for that whicli appeals to something
higher than the senses — to something which does not belong to the
animal." " All right, then, if that is faith. Yes, I believe in that."
" Do you not believe in meekness ?" "What do you mean by
meekness ?" " Well, suppose a great nature, in the midst of
traitors, should stand for his country ; suppose he should stand faith-
ful among the faithless multitude ; suppose, while everybody was
beating on him as the surf beats on the shore, he should stand, full
of calmness, and full of soul-gentleness ; suppose under such mighty
provocation he should remain steadfast, immovable, but without
violence or irritability, do you not think that would be glorious ?"
" Yes, it would be glorious, magnificent, beautiful, if it were possi-
ble ; but it is not possible." " Do you not believe in self-restraint ?"
" Of course I do. Every man should have self-restraint. A man
without self-restraint is like a barrel Avithout hoops, that tumbles
to pieces." "Ah ! then, you believe in all these things : you believe
in love, in joy, in peace, in long-suffering, in gentleness, in faith, in
meekness, in temperance."
Now, men and brethren, these are the fruits of the Spirit. These
are embodied in the ideal work of God in this world. That work is
to create in the hearts of men just these fruits ; and I call this
enumeration of them the Creed of Christianity. I believe the time
will come when we shall see this creed, not alone in books, but in
men and women, and in multitudes of them. I believe the time
will come Avhen it will be so believed and practiced that there will
not be an infidel left. Let me take a Christian who is one, and who
is fruitful in these qualities; and I will quench every spark of infi-
delity that there is in the world. Let me show Christianity, not in
ideas but in living men, and in companies of them, and it will be
triumphant wherever it is seen.
Is there anything that Protestants repudiate so much as Roman
Catholics ? Is there anything that they have a more salutary lior-
ror of than these same Eoman Catholics ? And yet, when the war
is raging, and there is pestilence in the camp, and men are sick and
dying in the hospitals, let those meek-eyed Sisters of Mercy go there
and minister to the wants of Protestant boys, being tender and
gentle with them, never seeking to breathe any ideas into their
minds that their mothers would not, night and day walking in and
out full of disinterestedness and delicacy, and diffusing about them
an influence of cheer and hope ; and let those noble boys go home ;
and let any man dare to speak a word against these kind creatures,
and they will turn with clenched hand, and say, " I will beat you to
the dust if you speak against them, just as quick as I would if you
spoke against my mother or my sister !"
158 THE UNITY OF MEN.
What has overcome their prejudice against the Catholics ? Is it
the edict of the Pope ? Is it the arguments of the priests ? Is it
the influence of the adherents of that church ? Is it any chann
of its service? Xo, it is the pure lives of some of its members.
Those are arguments which no man wants to refute. If there were
more such lives there would be less atheism.
Do you suppose that men would conspire to kick out of the
heavens the sun, which is the source of their harvests, and all that
is beautiful, and everything that makes life desirable ? Men want
the sun. And do /ou suppose that if God were pictured to men as
transcendent in beauty, as glorious in holiness, and as in sympathy
with men, they would want to be atheists ? They would call out
for him. They would watch for him as in the night men watch for
the morning. But if God is held up as a crystal, cut on the edges,
I do not wonder that men are atheistic, pantheistic and infidel.
And if you take Christianity according to your sect, or church, or
creed, and offer it to men, I do not wonder that they feel that
they are fed with sand or bran. But if you bring the fniit of the
Spirit to men they will not reject it ; they will accept it with glad-
ness.
That church which has the power of generating the most of the
spirit of Christ, in feeling and in conduct, will triumph in tlie end.
For Christ shall triumph through the goodness which he implants
in the bosoms of his disciples.
How sad are the battles Avliich we are fighting!' I suppose we
have a great many Arminians here this morning. Ah ! you do not
know what a temptation I feel to give a shot at Arminianism !
There are a great many Episcopalians here. How I should like
to give a slap at the Bishops ! There are a great many Unitarians
here. What a capital chance this would be to bring my artillery to
bear on their theology ! There are a great many Universalists here.
How I should like to hold their ideas of the goodness of God up to
ridicule and contempt !
At a horticultural show, there is a table running through a long
hall for the exhibition of fruit ; and this table is divided up into
about tAventy-five compartments which are assigned to as many
exhibitors for the display of their productions. I go along the table
and discuss the merits of the various articles. Here is a man who
has pears, and apples, and peaches, and cherries, and plums. They
are not very good ; they are fair ; they are about as good as the
average of the fruit on the table ; but they do not beat anybody
else's. I see fruit that is just as good all the way down the table.
But the man to whom it belongs says, " Mine ought to take the
THE UNITY OF MEN. 159
premium." " Why ?" I say. " Because it was raised on ground whose
title goes back to the flood. No man has a right to claim the premium
unless he can show that the title of his land goes clear down to the
flood. I can prove that my title is clear, and I insist upon it that I
ought to have the premium. That other fruit may have some
ground for pretense, but it is uncovenanted."
I go to the next compartment, and I say to the man there,
" Your fruit looks fair. It is about on an average with the rest."
" On an average with the rest ! There is nothing like it on the
table." "Why so?" "Because it was raised under glass. Those
other fellows raised theirs in the open air. This is church-fruit. It
was all raised in definite enclosures, according to prescriptions which
have come down from generation to generation. In judging of my
fruit, you must take into consideration that it was raised according
to the ordinances. It is pattern-fruit." He insists that his fruit is
better than any of the rest on account of the way in which he raised
it.
I go to the next compartment. There I see some magnificent
fruit, and I say to the man, " Where did you raise this fruit ?" He
says, " It came from the highway near my house." " From the
highway ?" " Yes. It grew on a wilding that I found growing
there. I cleared away the brush that w^as choking it, and trimmed
it a little, and it produced this fruit." " Well," I say, " I think that
is the best fruit on the table." From the whole length of the table,
on both sides, there arises the exclamation, " What ! are you going
to give that man the premium, who has no title for his land, no
greenhouse, and nothing but the highway to raise his fruit in ?
What sort of encouragement is that to regular fruit-growers?"
The whole commotion is stopped by the man who has the awarding
of the premium, saying, " The order of this show is, By their fruits
shall ye Tcnoxo them." And in determining which of these men
shall have thei3remium, he does judge by their fruit.
When the Lord comes to give his decision in the great pomo-
logical fair of the future, I think he will judge in the same Avay,
and say, " By their fruits ye shall know them."
My brethren, look at the lives of Christians ; look at the mag-
nanimities of the sects ; look at the disinterestedness of men who.
arc living for others instead of themselves ; look at the men who.
lay down their lives for their fellow men ; look at the men who shed
the most tears for the poor and needy; look at the men who
have the least self-indulgence and the least selfishness — look at these
things if you would see an exhibition of true Christianity— if you
would see real orthodoxy. The fruit of the Spirit— love, joy,
160 THE UNITY OF MEN.
peace, long-suffering, gentleness, faith, meekness, temperance —
this is the orthodoxy which brings men nearest to God. You
believe it as well as I do. And yet, to-morrow, when you get into
your niche again, you will turn round and defend your sect, and
attack your brethren.
There is a growing consciousness in Christendom, not that ordi-
nances are of no yalue, but that they are subordinate ; that they
are relative ; that they must be tested and ranked by their power to
do something more than make externalities, or excogitations, or
creeds. It is manhood that all men believe in. That comes from
the power of the Holy Ghost.
No fruit ever ripens in the night, nor in the winter. It takes
sunlight and warmth to make sugar in fruit. And in the soul of
man nature never ripens spiritual graces : it is God ; and that is
what we must come more and more into the conception of. Man-
hood is the true church. Every true man is in the chiirch wherever
he is. God is the sun that ripens manhood in man. Every yearning,
every aspiration, every feeling, and all growth, are of that God who
is drawing us toward the great consummation for which we are des-
tined.
Men are also united in the great experiences of sorrow — in the
shadows through which they walk in their endeavors to perfect
holiness in the fear of God. We must look upon life with an
eye instructed by faith.
I have stood at the junction of Atlantic and Flatbush Avenues
about where Fifth Avenue comes in, and seen the cavalcades coming
and going — a funeral on one street going to Greenwood, and on
the other street a dozen carriages filled with people bent on pleasure,
going to Prospect Park, jolting along, all mixed up ; and funerals
and pleasure parties returning the same way. It is pretty much
so all through the city. People are mixed up. Light and dark-
ness, joy and sorrow, are over against each other. There are
tears in one part of the house, and there is joy in another part.
We are all gathered together under one general economy. We
are all open to bereavements. The storm breaks down the door
of one man's house. Another man's house does not have its
doors broken down by the storm, but the lightning may strike
it. Some of you are overthrown by your relations to prop-
erty. Some of you are brought to shame and sorrow and anguish
through your relations to business. Some of you are excruciated
by the conduct of your children. Some of you are borne down by
one trouble, and some by another. No man goes unbaptized in the
waters of affliction. Where the Jordan flows is just above the Dead
TEE UmiY OF MEN. 161
Sea, whose waters sometimes set up there, and are very brackish ;
and the waters we all are baptized in are bitter with the taste of
sorrow and trouble.
When men do wrong, commit sin, in life, and know it, they feel
guilty and remorseful ; but the guilt and remorse will be according
to the fineness of the nature that experiences them. One man
does a great wrong, and apparently suffers but little or not at all.
Another man does a less wrong, and suffers night and day in con-
sequence of it. And for the comfort of those to whom it seems as
tliough the worse a man is the less he suffers, and the better a man
is the more he suffers, and as though it were a strange administra-
tion of suffering that we are under, I say this : that we are all
suffering according to our constitution and nature ; and the more
severe the training, the sooner the perfected nature comes. We are
rising under suffering. We are stumbling and getting up again.
We are sighing and breaking out into joy. We are cast down but
not destroyed. In our experience there is darkness and light ; there
is night and morning; there is midnight gloom and noontide
brightness ; there is disappointment and transport. There are all
sorts of experiences strangely commingled in our lives. And we
are all united in these experiences. For they are universal. But
we are to look on beyond the time-line. We are to rise into the
life above. We are all of us, thank God, all of us, tending toward
higher conditions — toward a better life. That is the direction.
I am thankful to God that there is not a sect in Christendom, of
which I have any knowledge, that I do not believe is tending toward
the zenith of final holiness. It makes the feeling of brotherhood
very strong in me. When I began my ministry, I began as a fighter.
I have learned to lay down (except occasionally !) the weajions of
my warfare in these matters, and I feel more compassion, more sor-
row, more sympathy, and more sincere and cordial rejoicing in the
progress of all the different sects which belong to Christendom. It
might not do for me to say what I think of those who do not
belong to Christendom, but in respect to all those who are within
the great cincture of Christ I have this feeling : that according to
their various methods they are all traveling one road toward a higher
and better life in the world to come. 1* shall meet them there, and
see them there, and I cannot afford to despise one of them. I should
not know who it was that I was despising if I spoke a word against
any one whose soul was calling out to Christ. Christ taught him
to call him by name ; and however rude his language I respect him.
When the little child of the most vulgar peasant says to her, " Ma,"
no matter how shrill the voice or homely the face of the creature
162 THE UNITY OF MEN.
that speaks, I dare not treat it with contempt. The yoice eyen of
a child uttering words of love or distress should command our
reverence. And the voice of any soul crying out toward God, and
longing for him, whether through doctrines, throiigh ordinances
or even through superstitions — this, everywhere, I have learned more
and more to think of, to feel for, and to rejoice over. It is a matter of
rejoicing to me that the union of the outside, which we see, is be-
ginning to measure the real unity among those who are seeking the
heavenly land.
All of us are united, likewise, in another way which I rejoice
in. We are under angelic convoy. The angels may be afar oif, but
they are guiding us. I wish my children that have gone to heaven
would sjjeak to me sometimes; but they will not. I wish they would
at least let me see the soft gleam of their wings as they disappear;
but they will not. How many hours have I sat looking up, and up,
and up into the starry depths, until I almost thought I saAV the out-
line figures of real invisible spirits coming to me ! But they came
not. HoAv many times when the summer made the air tremulous
over field or hill, have I, in that strange, indescribable mood which
summer brings to the soul, longed to see, in the morning, coming
from the east as definite as the sun, something to limn to me the
aspect and form of God ! But it did not come. Though my soul
cries out for God, my spirit finds him mostly in offices of kindness
performed toward others. God comes to me mostly when I am en-
deavoring to rescue others from the pit. Sometimes when I rise
from my book and arguments I feel as though doubt sat where God
should sit. Then my heart is bitter within me, and I say, " 0 God,
why dost thou hide thyself ?" I never came from doing the work
of God, humbling myself, giving my soul to ransom other souls
from the path of suffering ; I never came out of night bringing
with me others that were benighted ; I never did that which would
liken me to the attributes of God, that the way was not full of God
to me. By my faith and experience he has interpreted himself to
me, till I know him as I know none of you.
We are all coming, under the convoying of angels, and of God
himself, to that Name which is above every other name, and which
is to be more to us than aTl other names. When all angels shall
have sung, when all choirs shall have chanted, when all things, con-
spiring in harmonies, shall have made heaven full of music, if there
shall come a pause, and there shall be called out the one name
Jesus, the music of that song eternal will be sweeter than has been
all the singing of the whole host of heaven. We are all under the
loving care of this blessed Jesus.
THE UNITY OF MEN. 163
It seems to you as though you were growing old, as though you
were becoming aged ; but you arc not : you are going down toward
youth. It seems to you as though with your declining years and
waning strength you were coming nearer to a condition of limita-
tion and circumscription ; but as the shell is broken that the eagle
may come forth and be free, so your outward tabernacle is being
taken doAvn that you may enjoy a larger freedom. It seems to you
as though you were given over to weakness and infirmity ; but
what you call weakness and infirmity is but the taking away the
pegs and cutting the cords that this earthly habitation may be re-
moved, and that you may have perfect liberty. It seems to you as
though you were alone ; but ten thousand times ten thousand
sainted beings God sends from heaven that they may be watchers
and convoys for you.
Christian brethren — you that have just come into our midst —
do not think that you have ended the catalogue of your felici-
ties because you have joined yourselves to those who are to teach
you — because you are received into the fellowship and communion
of this visible church. These are blessed things; but they are hardly
the punctuations of that blessedness which God will minister to
you when you enter the spiritual realm. You may call yourselves
his sons. You may call yourselves heirs with Jesus Christ. You
are on the road, not that your feet tread, but that your soul is
treading. You are a citizen with the whole blessed company in the
heavenly land. Let tears flow, let cares weigh, let sorrows pierce,
let night come, let the soul dwell in darkness, if that be best ; but
remember that you are called " to the general assembly and church
of the first born, which are written in heaven."
Yours is a very noble inheritance. You have a relationship to
every church under heaven. You have a relationship tP all that
goes on between the earthly church and the heavenly church. All
of God's people belong to you. All the forces which, under God's
direction, arc operating in this world, are sweeping you on toward
your celestial abode. As the mariner who comes up the Gulf Stream
and is carried by the tide, and swept by the wind, rejoices that
everything in the ship is being carried — even the smallest child
among the crew as well as the captain himself — so it is a matter for
rejoicing that the poorest and least of us are 4jeing swept on in
the current of the Gulf Stream of divine love and mercy.
Heaven is yours. It is your home. Some of you that have come
among us to-day have no earthly home. Some of you have no father
and mother on earth. Some of you are children of sorrow, and
have walked to your present experience through much tribulation.
164 THE UNITY OF MEN.
But there is rest just above you. Just beyond the storm there is
the calm. You are very near to the end of your journey. There-
fore go forward, and rejoice as you go. Do not waver ; or, if you do
waver, do not despair. If you stumble and fall, God will pick you
up. If you sin, God will forgive you. If you sin till not one on
earth forgives you, Christ will remember you. His love is more
' than a mother's love. The height and depth and length and breadth
of it pass understanding. To that infinite love I commend you.
Living or dying, ye are the Lord's.
"We shall now proceed to administer the Lord's Supper ; and we
invite to remain and partake of this ordinance with us, all those
who love the Lord Jesus Christ ; all who are seeking to live a life
of love and of faith in Christ ; all who aspire to rise above the
dominion of their sin, and are in earnest to reach their true man-
hood in Christ Jesus. We invite all such, whether they are mem-
bers of any visible church or not, because they are members of
Christ's household of faith, and are inwardly Christ's. I do not
own that table ; this church does not own it : it is spread in the
name of the Lord ; and any soul that needs Christ, and knows it,
and is willing to accept Christ's mediation and love, has a right to
help himself from his own Master's table. Come, and come freely
and rejoicingly.
TEE UNITY OF MEN. 165
PRAYER BEFORE THE SERMON. *
O Lord, thou art ascended up into the heavens ; and yet, where is not
thy Spirit? and where is not thy power ? and where are not thy wisdom and
thy goodness? Thou art working through fear. In the invisible realm thy
power goes forth. We know not what is the fruitfuluess of thy nature
everywhere. But to us, afar off from this earth, thou art making manifesta-
tions of thyself. Not alone by the outward world, but through our owu
souis, thou art continually making thyself known, creating iu us more ex-
alted ideas of life and of manhood. And from our own limited sphere we
derive higher conceptions of what thy nature must be. How it must trans-
cend iu all excellences anything that we have ever seen among men ! What
must be the scope, the riches, and the glory of our inheritance iu thee !
We rejoice that thy word which has been sounding for so many ages
is not yet without power. We thank thee that the tidings of salvation
through Jesus Christ are still awaking gladness in many and many a heart.
We thank thee that there are so many who are drawn toward him ; that
there are so many who seek to live by faith of the invisible; that tiaere are
so many who are endeavoring to conseurate all their powers to the service
of the Lord God in loving fidelity.
We praj' for thy blessing to rest upon all these thy servants who have
joined themselves with us, and who are to be a part of this pilgrim band in
days to come. O Lord, grant that this hour, so full of brightness, so full of
cheer, and so full of comforting associations, may abide in their memory as
a blessing all the days of their lives. And if, when they are scattered, they
shall find in their way poverty and suffering and temptation; if they shall
be left lonely and friendless; if they shall find themselves seemingly the
sport of time and chance, may there still be in their souls this invisible bond
of faith that shall unite them to us, and unite them with us to thee. May
they never forget the Throne of love. May they never forget the Heart of
love. May they never forget that Voice whose call they have heard — His
voice whose name now rests upon them.
We pray that thou wilt guard them all from the dangers of prosperity,
so that^they may not by it be seduced to self-indulgence, to worldliness,
to selfishness. Grant, we pray thee, that thy blessing may rest upon them,
and that they may be sanctified therein. We pray that thou wilt keep
them, at home and abroad, in the house of God or in their own dwelUngs,
in mid-life and in old age.
Grant tliat not one of this blessed band may drop out; that not one link
of the chain may be broken ; that every one of them may inherit eternal
life.
We beseech of thee, O Lord our God, that those who are young, and who
have had but little experience in life, may have thy guidance, by which
they shall grow up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. And we
pray that all the households from which these have come may experience,
through them, a blessing of the Lord. May that Spirit which Ave trust rests
upon their hearts be diffused as a sweet fragrance wherever they go. May
they seek to win men ])y their gentleness, and by their meekness, and by
tlieir humility. May selfishness and pride be put away from them. Llay
they walk in all helpfulness, in all sweetness of love, in all obligingness of
disposition. May men see that day by day they draw their strength from the
'Immediately following the reception of members Into the ehsrch.
166 THE UNITY OF MEN.
invisible. May they abound in prayer. May the power of God's Spirit
rest upon them. May they be thy faithful witnesses everywhere. May
they, upheld by thee, be able to overcome that which is greater and mightier
than they are. May they know how to clothe themselves with the invisi-
ble armor of faith, and every one of them fight the battle of the Lord man-
fully. And having done all, may they stand invincible in soul.
We pray that thou wilt bless all those who have labored to bring
these dear creatures to thee, that they may stand around about thy
throne among the bands of the blessed. How many tears have been
shed ! How many prayers have been offered ! How many persuasions have
been spoken ! What watching and what following there have been ! What
long care of love has ministered to some of them ! They had been left to
tbe world; they were without friends in Christ Jesus; and it is to the
fidelity of those who were not mothers nor fathers to them, but who have
proved better than father or mother, that they are rescued from the world.
It is through their labor that they have come into the kingdom of the dear
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. And we pray that thou wilt repay a
hundred-fold those who have been benefactors to these thy scattered ones,
for their acts and thoughts of mercy toward them.
And wilt thou, we beseech of thee, encourage all those who go out tc
labor in schools, and in the street, and among the poor and sick and im-
prisoned. Everywhere may they be faithful to the cause of their
Redeemer, and bear his very spirit with them. May they see that what
they sow in tears shall come forth in joy. We pray that thou wilt more and
more give to every one of thy people enterprise in the service of the
Lord.
Build up, we pray thee, thy churches everywhere. For all the manifesta-
tions of thy grace and kindness which thou hast shown them, we thank
thee. We pray for those whose pastors are absent from them. May they
all be kept safely until their pastors return. May the life and health of
those who are going abroad or returning hither across the sea be preserved,
and be precious in thy sight.
We pray that thou wilt be pleased to remember the Convention which
is assembled in our midst to discuss those things which concern the interests
of thy kingdom. Bless its members. Give them wisdom. In their deliberations
may there be such sweetness of Christ's Spirit, and such true love fraternal,
that all men shall see that they differ from those who are around about
them. May their churches be kept in their absence. And we pray that all
the interests of that great and honored and blessed Zion may come up be-
fore thee, and be abundantly blessed.
We pray for thy churches of every name. We pray for the universal
church. We pray that we may be so joined to it in spirit that not death
itself can separate us from the cloud of witnesses ; from the great army of
the blessed ; from the general assembly and church of the first-born.
And to thy name shall be the praise, Father, Son, and Spirit. Amen.
X.
Apostolic Christianity.
INVOCATION.
Accept our thanks and our desires, this morning, not according to the
goodness that is in us, our Father, but according to the mercy which is in
thyself. Out of thine own heart take the measure of bounty with wliich we
are to be blessed this day. Think as a father thinks ; think as a Father in heaven
thinks ; think as God over all, blessed, and blessing forever, must think, of
those who are infinitely needy and weak and low and helpless. For all that
is within us pants after thee to-day. As the hart panteth after the water-
brook, so our souls pant for thee, O Lord our God. Inspire us, then, by thine
own Spirit. Breathe understanding into us. Kindle and direct the flame of
love and devotion. Accept the service of song, and our communion in
prayer, and our fellowship one with another, and our endeavors after know-
ledge. And may all things this day, both in the sanctuary and in our
homes, be of God, and unto God, through Jesus Christ our Redeemer.
Amen.
10.
APOSTOLIC CHRISTIANITY.
'' Grace and peace be multiplied unto you through the knowledge of God,
ajvii of Jesus our Lord, according as his divine power hath given unto us all
things that pertain unto life and godliness, through the knowledge of him
that hath called us to glory and virtue : whereby are given unto us exceed-
ing great and precious promises ; that by these ye might be partakers of
the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world
through lust. And besides this, giving all diligence, add to your faith vir-
tue; and to virtue, knowledge; and to knowledge, temperance; and to
temf)erance, patience; and to patience, godliness; and to godliness,
brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness, charity. For if these
things be in you and abound, they make you that ye shall neither be barren
nor unfruitful in ttie knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. But he that
lac'iifcth these things is blind, and cannot see afar off, and hath forgotten
that he was purged from his old sins. Wherefore the rather, brethren, give
diligence to make your calling and election sure: for if ye do these things,
yo shall never fall : for so an entrance shall be ministered unto you abun-
dantly into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ."— 2. Pet. I. 2-11.
Men are very fond .of looking at the divine government from
that side where it can be the least seen, the least known, and where
they are most subject to the errors of their own fluctuating imag-
inations, and to the obscurities of philosophy, falsely so called. It
is far better, wherever we can, to look at the great truths of the
divine moral government, at the mystery of God's dealing Avith men
in this world, from the human side. Although there are obscuri-
ties, still the chances are better, and the instruction is more fre-
quent, more clear, more comprehensible. And this is what is done
in the passage that I have selected this morning. It is, in brief,
the inspired disclosure of the purposes of God in respect to men.
What it is tba.t the grace of God is attempting to do with those who
are called in the Lord Jesus Christ, is set forth. "We are called of
God. The voice that we hear is, therefore, no voice of nature, as
something exterior to God. If man grows a certain way up, he
grows according to that call of God which takes place through
physical or material law, and addresses itself to his material or
Sunday Morning, May 12, 1872. Lesson : 1 Pet. 1. 2-16. Hymns (Plymouth Collec-
tion): Nos. 286, 655, 1251.
170 APOSTOLIC CEBISTIANITY.
physical being. But there comes' a point of time in whicti that
which is the true manhood has a higher call. There is an in Juence
that is not exerted on a man by light or electricity, or by auy of the
curious phenomena in nature. There is a call that proceeds from
God himself.
"According as his divine power hath given unto us all things that
pertnin unto life and godliness, through the knowledge ol him that hath
called us to glory and virtue."
In our version, it is " to glory and virtue," but in the original it
is " by glory and virtue," as if the call was not by the nature ol
man, but by the nature of God. By his own being, by the glorious
and virtuous power of his own spirit, he calls us up out of our
lower life — out of that nature of ours which is physical.
"Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises :
that by these [promises which are yea and amen ; which are never broken ;
which are always fulfilled— for by promise we understand fulfillment], ye
might be partakers of the divine nature, having o soaped the corruption that
is in the world through lust [through the workings of the appetites and
passions which belong t ^ this physical frame, and which minister to being,
to growth, and which give way, or are to give way, to the development of a
higher life— which higher life is true Christian manhood]."
To that we are called by all the promises of God througli Christ
Jesus, that at last we may accomplish our destiny in becoming par-
takers of the divine nature. In what conditions and to what extent
it is to take place, what is the limit of being, what is to be our
equator, no one knows. It is only in this general viigue way re-
vealed that the destiny of the human soul is to come into the like-
ness and participation of the divine nature. ,
The apostle goes on to say,
" On account of this, [besides this, it is in our version : by reason of this,
or on account of this, is the meaning of the origintil] giving all diligence."
You are called. The call is one which is to be answered. There
is to be working together of the inspiration of the divine Spirit and
human endeavor according to that other passage, " Work out your
own salvation with fear and trembling; for it is God wliich Avork-
eth in you.
" On account of this, giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue."
What is faith? Superseusuousness. Well, what is supersen-
suousness? It is all that truth which exists beyond the discern-
ment of the senses. Whatever the ear can hear, or the eye can see,
or the nose can smell, or the tongue can taste, or the hand can
handle — that faith has nothing to do with. That belongs to the
senses. There is a large range of truth there. But above this line —
that is, beyond the realm of physical science— there is also a large
APOSTOLIC CEBISTIANITT. 171
amount of truth, both of existence, and of law, and of various at-
tributes; and faith is that moral intuition, that spiritual insight,
that sense of the soul, by which we discern the great invisible
world, and all its realities.
" Faith is tlie substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not
seen."
In its most general, in its generic definition, faith is the mind's
perception of tlie great interior realm — of that substantial truth
which is above the senses, and which therefore cannot be discerned
by them.
A Christian man is one who lives as seeing Him who is invisible.
He lives by faith — by eyes that are not on the outside — by soul-eyes
— by moral intuitions.
Now the apostle says, " Add to that faith virtue." What he
meant by the word virtue was not what we mean by that word.
Our understanding of the word virtue usually is that it signifies the
opposite of vice — purity ; but in the apostolic mind the idea was
that to this faith, which is the mind's mode of dealing with invisi-
ble things, should be added, I will not say work, but rather con-
duct, practicalness, development. The word virtue, according to its
old meaning, carried the implication that what^a man wrouglit out
was right and noble ; but its principal idea was practicalness. It
was substantially righteousness. So the apostle says, "Add to this
vision-seeing tendency of yours, which may etherialize itself and go
ofi" in a cloudy dream — add to this the practice of a wise and right-
eous kind. Add to your faith virtue, in the old Roman sense — true
manhood."
By the way, I have jumped a thought. It does not say Add to,
in the original ; it says, Provide, or develop, in. It is the preposi-
tion in and not the preposition to, that is employed. It is as if he
had had in his mind the thought of a plant, and had said, " Now,
let the first joint be faith ; and out of that develop another joint,
and let that be virtue ; and then, in your virtue — that is, out of
your virtue — develop knowledge ; and out of your knowledge
develop temperance ; and out of your temperance develop patience ;
and out of your patience, opening and unfolding, develop godliness ;
and so on, showing the idea of the successive evolution of one out
of another. According to our version, it is simply as though ducat
were to be thrown upon ducat, and there were to be an accumula-
tion in the sense of juxtaposition ; but the idea which is conveyed
by the original is that of unfolding one grace out of another, or
adding grace to grace by extension and evolution.
Says the apostle, " Add to your faith, or in your faith, virtue ; in
172 APOSTOLIC CEEISTIANITT.
other words, develop out of your faith virtue — that is, practical god-
liness ; and in your virtue or from out of your virtue, develop knowl-
edge."
By this is not meant, evidently, that knowledge which we gather
by uar senses — scientific knowledge, ideas, facts ; but a higher
Kuowfewige — that subtle intuition of truth which men have who live
high and noble lives. A man of great conscience has a sense, a
knowledge, of principle which is higher thtiu any law or custom can
point out. A man who cultivates his taste has a finer sense and
knowledge of beauty than a man who does no . A man who dwells
largely in figures and mathematics has a sense vf numbers and pro-
portions which does not belong to other mtai. The knowledge
which is spoken of here is that knowledge which is in the nature
of moral intuition.
That which is meant by temperance is not that almost local sig-
nification of the term which we are accustomed to give it. By tem-
perance is meant self-government. Originally that word signified
moderation, not only in eating and drinking, but in everything.
Now, it signifies, technically, restraint from drinking alone; but
originally it signified restraint of every kind, self-government of
every kind ; and it may better be rendered self-government or self-
restraint.
And in temperance, or from it, develop patience — endurance —
the spirit of bold, courageous, quiet waiting, so that you can go as
an arrow goes shot out of a bow, or hang as an arrow hangs in the
quiver through unnumbered days, and be an arrow still.
It is a great and glorious thing for a man to have vigor, power,
accomplishing energy ; and it is equally great and glorious, and it
is harder, for a man who has energy and vigor and power to have
also restfulness and endurance and waiting ability. No man can
beat down time and events ; but many a man is too much for time
and events, by reason of patient waiting.
"Add to knowledge, temperance; to temperance, patience ; and to pa-
tience, godliness."
That is, let your patience be not stoical. Let it not be stubborn,
oV^^inate, sulky. Let it be the waiting and endurance of a man Avho
-eves that God reigns, and that all the afiairs of the universe are
,xi his hands, and shall work toward good. Let it be that patience
which comes from godliness.
" And to godliness, brotherly kindness."
That is, let there be in your godliness a warm sympathy and
afi'ection, not only for yourself, but for your family ; for all your
near neighbors ; for all your neighbors that are more remote; for
APOSTOLIC CEBISTIANITT. 173
all your townspeople ; for your church ; for other churches ; for un-
church folks ; for all the world.
" And to brotherly kindness, charity."
That is the universal form of love. Local affection and universal
affection — add these.
" For if these things be iu you, and abound, they make you that ye shall
neither be barren [idle or ungrowing] nor unfruitful in the knowledge of
our Lord Jesus Christ."
That is, we gain a knowledge of Christ by becoming like him —
not by studying, not by thinking, not by meditation, except in an
indirect way; but by imitating him. He who puts his mind in the
attitude of the divine mind, and gathers within himself the virtues
which constitute the divine nature, and holds them in supreme ac-
tivity or supreme rest, as the case may be — he, out of his experi-
ence, shall neither be idle nor unfruitful in the knowledge of the
Lord Jesus Christ. So, we learn of Christ here that new Gospel
which the Spirit is continually interpreting in the heart of every-
one who lives according to the mind and tlie will of God.
Here, then, is the apostle's conception of a Christian man's char-
acter, development and destiny; and I remark:
L This ideal destiny of man is one that shall lead him into the
likeness, into tlie sympathy, and into the participation of the divine
nature.
John tells us that we are sons of God ; but what that means he
did not know, and nobody has found out. The knowledge of what
we shall be is reserved until we shall have a better imderstanding
than we can have in this state of being.
Men are striving to extricate tliemselves from environment. But
we know little with certainty. It is hard to draw the superior down
within the grasp of the inferior. We cannot take in, with our un-
derstanding, the truths of the higher sphere. The reason why we
know so little of the divine nature is, that we have so little in our-
selves that interprets it to us. We have a few hints and dim an-
alogies of the other life ; but it is evident that we are unfolding and
rising toward something higher. We are tending away from the
point at which we began. We are not simply lengthening the chain
which links us to the future, but we are evidently carrying up a
nature and a character by successive steps from a lower to a higher
condition. We are building a structure of precious stones; and
the work will be continued until the top-stone is laid. Wc be-
gin our characters at the point of selfishness : wc ai'e to end them
at the point of disinterested benevolence. We begin in the realm
of animalism: we are to come to true manhood by that path which
174 APOSTOLIC CHRISTIANITY,
leads us in the direction of the divine nature and of divine excel-
lence. No man has reached his own proper self until he has in him
the recognition of all that is around about him. As no mother is a
full mother who has not in her heart the sense of her household ;
as her mother nature is that nature which includes in its wise gov-
ernment all her children; so the time is to be when a man will
come to himself, not by what he has, biit by what he is — by his
sympatliy with others, when selfishness shall be gone, and he shall
be like God, and shall have touched that large sphere of benevolence
which shall make him recognize in every other man a brother.
There are dim intimations of man's experience by Avhich he devel-
ops his way from the physical into the spiritual.
The Bible says that we are growing toward the divine nature.
Men may scoff at it, or they may blindly rejoice in it. I have
groped to see if there are not at least some traces along the line of
this march, and I think I see some. I observe, for instance, in the
progress of the lower animal in man up toward the higher — in
this progress from mere physicalness toward intelligence — that
when it reaches the human race, the difference between unde-
veloped men and men who are developed, is, the power to
discern, the invisible. That is, men whose forces are muscular
are inferior to men whose forces are mental. When we come to
judge between one and another of the higher classes of civilized
life, it is observable that the development of those men who
have the most power of working in a vacuum, if I may so say,
are men who have the largest spiritual developments — men who
have developed away from the physical. The line of dignity and
refinement and earthly immortality does not run from the ineffable
and spiritual toward the coarse and physical, but from the coarse
and physical toward the spiritual and ineffable. So that, looking
at it as a scientific fact, as men grow in life the line is aAvay from
the sensuous toward the super-sensuous. And when the Apostle
says that we are to be partakers of the divine nature, I say that the
declaration is in harmony with everything that I see going on in
human nature. "We rise away from the animal toward the spiritual.
We advance from lower manhood to higher manhood. The line is
from the flesh toward the spirit. Therefore, it might naturally be
expected that Christian character would consummate itself in the
development of the divine nature. That is the highest form of
spiritual existence ; and when the Apostle says this is so, I am pre-
pared to receive it and to rejoice over it.
Many able scientists are investigating the road through which
men came up to their present state; but it is of little conse-
APOSTOLIC GHBISTIANITY. 175
quence to me where I came from. It is of a great deal of conse-
quence, though, where I am going to. I confess to some curiosity
as to my origin ; and I am far from saying that it will not do any
good to trace the history of the origin of the human race, and of
everything else in this world. I regard the labors of Mr. Darwin
with profound interest ; and I believe the world owes him a great
debt of gratitude. Although I may not accept all his speculations,
I thank him for any facts, or any deductions from facts, which have
the appearance of nearly definite truth. I do not participate a
particle in the revulsion aud horror which some feel at the idea that
men sprang from some lower form of existence. Only show me
that J am clear of the monkeys, and I am perfectly willing that it
should be true that, millions of years ago, my ancestors sprang from
them. Let there be diflFerence enough, and distance enough, be-
tween these animals and me, and I do not care how nearly my pro-
genitors may have been related to them. I would as lief have
sprung from a monkey as from some men that I know of If I look
at the Patagonians, or the Nootka Sound Indians, or the Esqui-
maux of the extreme North, it does not seem to me that there is
much to choose, as to parentage, between them and our lower ani-
mals. I do not care so much about the past, as I do about the fu-
ture. It is not of the slightest importance that I should trace my
early associations back to a million years ago. All my life is look-
ing forward. I do not care where I came from: I want to know
where I am going. If I am going with the animal, earth to earth,
that is sad enough ; but if I am under that attraction, that mighty
Power, which calls the sun to make summer in the bosom of winter,
which all the winds and ice cannot resist, which generates heat,
and which out of heat brings life universal, infinite, multitudinous,
innumerable — if I am under that Power, and it is still drawing you
and me and all along in these paths, and it is vouchsafed that we
may be partakers of the divine nature, then that is something that
I want to know, and something that I want to feel.
Now, let men bore in the rear if they will: it is for me to look
up and see where I am going. For, if it is life and immortality,
and joy ineffable and full of glory there, I care not for the nest. I
care not for the skin that I sloughed off ages ago. It is the future
that I care for. The Christian has little to fear, I think, if it will
only lead on to this. Not to deny the past, nor to be indifferent to
the things of the past, it is not probable that we shall, in your day
or mine, find out everything that God ever thought of or did. It is
far more important that we should have faith in the future, and
know which way to fly when we have the inspiration of emigration,
176 APOSTOLIC CEEI8TIANITY.
than that we should know what took place myriads of ages ago, or
what was the condition of the race then.
11. No man was ever converted to Christianity at one flash.
No man ever built a house at a single blow, except in a summer
dream. When we shut our eyes, and are architects of reverie, we
can build worlds ; we can multiply the dew-drop till it swings like
a crystal sphere in the realms of space. We can create cities, we
can cause millions of troops to spring up, we can populate heaven
and earth, by reverie; but no man ever did anything worth doing —
anything complex, large, noble — by reverie. Many suppose that
when a man is converted by the power of God, the Spirit of God
acts as the lightning acts — instantaneously. But suppose it does,
did you ever know the lightning to strike a mountain and instantly
clear away all the dross and leave nothing but pure gold, in the
shape of coin, with the superscription of the government upon it,
and waiting for men to use it ? When you see the metal in a
mountain set free by a stroke of lightning, you may expect to see a
man set free from the cu-cumstances of life by conversion with
overpowering suddenness.
The conversion by which the spirit of God starts a man, just
starts him — that is all. It turns him away from the wrong direc-
tion. It turns him toward the right model. It gives his heart an
inspiration for things higher, and then says to him, " Work out
your salvation." He is salvable in whom God has built a salvable
character ; and the work of building such a character is complex,
and must be accomplished by successive steps. You cannot antici-
pate the various stages of its growth. It is impossible for a man to
begin a Christian life with those virtues which come" only through
patient waiting. There are many joys which are experienced at
the beginning of a Christian life. There are many songs that are
sung then ; but they are generally songs which, compared with the
highest experiences of Christian life, are like ballads compared
with the symphonies of Beethoven. A man, on entering a Chris-
tian life, has some sweet experiences ; but they are rather excel-
lences, exhilarations, novelties, rarities, as it were, than those more
blessed experiences which a man has in a ripened Christian state.
They are like the experiences of early love. I believe in early love ;
but I believe that it is ungrown love. Beautiful to the eye is the
apple-tree that to-day spreads abroad its vast dome of blossoms ; but
when October comes it will be more beautiful in its erimson fruit,
bending its boughs till they touch the ground, than it was in its
blossoms. And I hold that where a man loves truly, affection in
him grows all the way up from the beginning to the end. Young
APOSTOLIC GHB18TIANITT. 177
love is foolish compared with old, disciplined, matured love. Love,
like everything else, must be educated before it can reach its per-
fection. And in Christian life I believe there are great triumphs,
and joys, and ecstasies at the beginning ; but ah ! let nobody look
back to the time of his conversion, and say, " I would that I could
feel as I did then !" You ought to feel transports now where you
felt one single emotion then. Early Christian experience is a single
instrument playing : late Christian experience, where it is genuine,
is a band of twenty instruments playing in harmony. No man is
born into a full Christian life. If he becomes a completely de-
veloped Christian, it is by the attainment of one Christian quality,
and then the evolution of another out of that, and then of another
out of that, until he shall reach the sphere and element of the God-
head. Christian character is to be wrought out by long experience
and by constant endeavor. Who ever threw an acorn into the
ground and at once got an oak all ripened ? Christian manhood
is the result of a mighty education and of long evolution.
I think that the ideas which are popular in respect to the
cleansing and converting power of the Spirit of God have an ele-
ment in them which it is important and desirable to retain ; but to
suppose that the grace of God does the whole work for a man is
contrary to the uniform testimony of Scripture, and contrary to
the universal experience of God's people.
I may also say here, that while I have a great respect for those
who are seeking a higher life, I would thank them not to use lan-
guage which misleads. I believe that a man can find a realm of
peace and of sympathy with God which shall be like summer to his
soul ; but when men tell me that they have reached perfection in
Christian life, I laugh. I do not laugh in ridicule or scorn : I
laugh for the same reason that I do when I see a child building its
playhouse, and making believe that it is a real house, or going
through its play-life and making believe that it is real life. Do you
suppose that any man is built according to the proportions of those
elements which I have enumerated to you ? If that faith, and that
virtue, and that knowledge, and that patience, and that godliness,
and tliat brotherly love, and that charity, or love universal, of
which I have been speaking, are to be unfolded in a man till he
shall be a microcosm of God himself, do you suppose the work is
perfected in this world ? When a man says, " I have perfect peace,"
I believe him. I believe there are conditions in which a man may
lean on God. But I believe that there is a great peace which is far
from being completely perfected, and which is always unfolding.
A man who has a musical ear goes into a workshop and sees
178 APOSTOLIC CHBISTIANITT.
lying there large quantities of material of various kinds — iron, and
steel, and copper, and brass — and he says, "Let me make these
available." And he takes the various kinds of metal, and puts
them into a furnace, and melts them, and pours the liquid which
they form into a mold ; and when it is cool and brought out it is a
bell. Such is the result of the combination of all these incoherent
substances. And when it is struck it is musical. And he says, " I
have hit it! It is perfect !" But it is a monotone; and after some
thought he says, " No, I have not reached perfection yet. There is
more material here. What if I should make another bell ?" So he
goes to work and makes a second bell. And then he makes a tliird ;
and then a fourth. And some musician says, " Hang them up in
yonder tower" ; and they are lifted up into the tower ; and, swing-
ing there, they ring out through the air glorious chants which
call men to God's house. The man has now, not one bell, but
eight bells — and they are but a few. If you have listened, in Ant-
werp, to the vast chime of bells in that great tower, as they swing,
filling the whole atmosphere with music ; if you have stood there
and heard its notes as they sounded out through the frosty air of
the morning, how imperfect would seem to you a chime of eight
bells, as compared with the swarm of bells of which that chime is
composed !
God has lifted up the spire or tower of the human soul, and has
set in it some thirty bells ; and they are all to be brought into
accord. There are two or three that strike bass notes musically ;
but it is our business to bring harmony into the whole mighty col-
lection of musical instruments that are swinging in the belfry of
man's soul.
No man is perfect until all his faculties are brought into harmo-
nious play. There is not a single thing in my watch which, being
taken out, would leave it good for anything. God never put a
faculty in a man which was not necessary ; and if we arc to be per-
fect, every one of our faculties must be developed and used. As
God looks upon men, they are not perfect until they are built up
into the lines and lineaments of the Lord Jesus Christ, and have
partaken in part of the divine nature. Then they are sons of God ;
and to be a son of God is something transcendently glorious. Eye
hath not seen it. Ear hath not heard it. I would go around the
world on a pilgrimage of curiosity and holy ardor to look at such a
man. For I think there is nothing on earth that could be com-
pared for glory and marvelousness with a man who has been builded
by the hand of God into all those proportions which are to make
him a son of God.
APOSTOLIC CHBI8TIANITY. 179
III. The glorious ideal of Christianity, compared with all the
current ideas, stands up in bright and rebuking contrast. How
many are calling' men to church-membership! IIow many are
calling men to morality ! How many men are called to philosophy !
How many men are called to philanthropy! But such is not the
call of God. God calls men to be partakers of the divine nature.
And the providence of divine grace is working on that pattern in-
cessantly. What the gardener means, and what Nature means, are
very different things. "What the grape-vine means is to drive out
its branches, rank and strong, far and wide. "What the gardener
means is grapes; and therefore he cuts back the vine on every side.
" Let me grow," says the vine. " Bear," says the vintner. " Give
me more room for my leaves," says the vine. " Then give me more
grapes for my wine," says the gardener. Men in this world are
seeking to develop forces that shall be for their pleasure. God is
meeting those who are his own with blows at every step, and beat-
ing them back. He is tempering this man's zeal by various over-
throws. He is tempering that man's pride by various shames. He
is subjecting another man to such tests as shall compel him to
come to endurance. In various ways God's providence is meddling
with us. "We are all praying that God's will may be done ; but we
do not like the answer to our prayer when it comes. A man prays
in tlie morning, and says, " Dear Lord, be pleased to let thy will be
done in me as* it is in heaven," and he goes to his task ; and forget-
ting his prayer, which he did not know the meaning of, and feeling
what a lordly man he is, and carrying himself in an arrogant way
in business, he arouses the opposition of men, and he meets with
perplexities at every step. This man is swindling him ; that man
is demanding more than he is entitled to ; another man is drawing
him into some difficulty; and he says, " I do not know v/hy I should
be so vexed and harassed." The man is praying that God's will
may be done in him. God's will is love ; but man's will is pride
and self-seeking and domineering. He wishes to be governor. He
Avishes to draw everything toward him; but God wishes to draw
everything out of him toward his felloAV men. God is kind to this
man. He would educate him to a higher conception of manhood.
But the man would educate himself to a lower and earthly con-
ception.
There are ten thousand experiences which befall us in this life,
we are so susceptible to the influences that are at work around
about us. There are spheres of phenomena that apparently lie out-
side of the influences which affect us ; but everything works
together for good to tliem who love God, we are told, whether it be
180 APOSTOLIC CHEISTIANITY.
tears or smiles ; whether it be groans or laughter ; whether it be
sorrow or j oy ; whether it be prosperity or adversity ; whether it be
success or failure ; whether it be love or hatred. All things, what-
ever they may be, work together for good to them that love God.
Love is the universal reconciliation — the universal solvent. This
glorious idea of Christian character is that which is in the mind of
Grod, though it may not be that which is in the mind of man.
I send my child to one school or another with a view to his
future life. He may be too young to be in sympathy with the
object for which he is sent, and may ask for this indulgence or that
change; but I deny his request because I do not think it is com-
patible with that better and nobler development which I am seek-
ing for him.
God, who is the universal Father, tells us that he is seeking,
not what we wish, but what we need. He is seeking to bring us
into that glorious estate in which we shall be partakers of the di-
vine nature. And so this work is going on.
It is said of Solomon's temple, that it was built without the
sound of the hammer. The soul is a temple ; and God is silently
building it, by night and by day. Precious thoughts are building
it. Disinterested love is building it. Joy in the Holy Ghost is
building it. All-penetrating faith is building it. Gentleness, and
meekness, and sweet solicitude, and sympathy are building it.
All virtue and all goodness are workmen upon that invisible temple
which every man is.
" Ye are the temple of God."
The foundations are laid, the lines are drawn, and silently, night
and day, the walls are carried up, tier after tier being laid ; and
when the temple is built it shall seem as if it were composed of
precious stones — of beryl, and amethyst, and topaz, and diamond —
so that at last when it is completed, and there comes the shout of
" Grace, grace, unto it !" it shall be a temple built in darkness to
reveal light; built in sorrow to produce a joy which shall never die.
God is building in us something that transcends anything that man
ever knew ; he is building it by the power of his might ; and
he is building it by us, and in us, and through us, and in spite of
our implorations that he would desist. Blessed be God, who builds
though we seek to hinder his building, and though we would some-
times even pull down and destroy that which he is building !
IV. If these views are generally correct, we may see in them the
correction of many of the popular sayings and tendencies of the
day. I am met at every step by those who say, " I ought to conform
to the laws of my being." I read ad nauseam about going back to
APOSTOLIC CEBISTIANITT. 181
th(-. laws of nature, or back to nature; and people are saying, "If
we only could get back to simple nature, how easily society would
get along !"
I toll you, natui-e does not lie in that direction. Nature does
not lie backward. Which way is the eagle's nature, where he lies in
his nest, or where he is, in the might of his power, poised under the
sun, on a summer day ?
Is a man's nature that which he is born to, or that which he
comes to by unfolding ? Is a man's nature that which is furthest
from, or nearest to, that which God meant should be the final estate
to which he is to come ? Is a man's nature in the cradle, or in
perfect, ripe manhood ?
You tell me that the state of nature is a state of blessedness ?
What you call nature is a state of savageism. It is weakness. It is
ignorance. It is inexperience. At first, nature is nothingness.
Then comes gradual acquisition. But a man is all the time grop-
ing toward himself. A man's real nature lies far beyond his present
sphere. Nature in a man is not what he came from, but what he is
goin^ to.
I am not, therefore, to take my models and patterns from be-
hind ; but this one thing I am to do : I am to forget the things
which are behind, and to Jook on beyond, and to take my concep-
tions of true manhood and noble nature from the ideals which I
form of God ; and they are interpreted in my experience by God's
Spirit. In what, therefore, are men more deceived in this world,
than in those who seem to have been, or who are supposed to have
been successful ? They wrap themselves up in self. They build
houses for themselves. They live in them with great outward
splendor. I do not object to any amount of outward splendor, pro-
vided that the inward filling up is equivalent to or in proportion
with it. But men of great learning, men of great managing power,
men who have wealth, men who have force, men who have carried
through vast worldly enterprises, are pointed out to the young as
successful. Alas! That which they have achieved is not true
success. It is outwardness. It is success for this world only. True
success lies far deeper than that. He has succeeded who, in spite
of envy, and jealousy, and selfishness, and pride, and every
demoniac influence, has learned still and steadily and always to love.
Love is the fulfilling of the law. That supreme law of God's uni-
verse by which we are being transformed into the likeness of God,
is fulfilled in that one word. He only is a truly successful man who
has something more in this world than outward life can give.
Wealth has its uses, and knowledge has its uses ; and we have the
182 APOSTOLIC CEBISTIANITY.
apostle saying, " I am but sounding brass and tinkling cymbal if I
have notliiug more than that."
On the other hand, if these thoughts of the unfolding of man's
nature toward the divine, be true, then men around about us have
more in them than we have been wont to suppose. Men are not to
be estimated by their values in society. We are to value them ac-
•cording to the standard which God gives us when he hands down
the golden reed of the sanctuary by which all things in heaven are ,
measured, and by which all things on earth are to be measured. He
who is meek, and lowly, and patient, and self-sacrificing, and Christ-
like, may wear weeds, may be covered with sackcloth, may be clad
in a beggar's gabai'dine, may be poor outwardly ; and yet he may be
great by the signs and tokens of sonship inwardly. But we do not
know what men are by that which they have reached here.
When Shakespeare lay in the cradle, like any other child, and
made soft and cooing sounds like those of a dove, who ever could
have dreamed, listening to that infant's prattle, what songs he would
yet sing for the ages to hear ? And yet, it was in him ; and by
working he came to himself.
In life, who can tell what men are ? When I lived in Cincin-
nati, as I was going to the city one day, I saw a man breaking stone
by the side of the road. He looked like any other stone-breaking
man ; but he was an educated German gentleman who came to this
country, and had no employment. He had the common sense, ra-
ther than to starve, to take the first business that he could find. So
he hired himself to break stone with ordinary workmen.
I remember a hostler that my father hired in Cincinnati, who
used to sit in the kitchen. As I went in and out I saw that he
was constantly occupied with his book ; and I found that it was a
geography on a mathematical projection ; and I found that it was
as familiar, almost, as A B C to him. I questioned him about
Latin (for I saw that he had a Latin book), and I found that he
could read and speak Latin. I asked him if he was acquainted
with Greek, and he said, " I can read it, but I cannot speak it."
Here was this man scrubbing my father's horse, and he knew
more in his little finger than I knew in my whole body. If you
look inside of men, and see Avhat is there ; if the dross is purged
away, and you behold that which is to constitute manhood, and
which is to be glorified, and Avhich is to last throughout the eternal
ages, the last shall be first, and the first shall be last. There
is going to be a great coming down and a great going up in the day
of disclosure. For, he who has the sovereignty of God in him (and
that is not might but quality) ; he who has the creative power, the
AFOSTOLIG CEBISTIANITY, 183
vision-power, the enduring power of divine love, however poor he
may be on earth, whatever may be his lot, whatever may be the
function of his hand — ^he, if our eye could but see it, is already be-
ginning to shoot out the light of glory that is in him. The proudest
man that lives in the city, and rolls in tides of wealth, and indulges
in pride and selfishness and self-seeking, may be outshone by the poor
cripple, who goes limping through the world, and who manages to
get only just enough to keep soul and body together, and creeps
down night by night to divide that with some other miserable
wretch. Your queens, your kings, your merchant princes, your
great men of the earth, when God looks upon them, go down, down,
down; and the poor in spirit, the humble, the outcast, go up, and
up, and up. The great men of the earth — those that seek them-
selves, and those that are the most consiDicuous — in the sight of
God have not the development, though they may have the seed of
that nature which is to be eternal and divine.
Christian brethren, how hard a thing it is to be a Christian !
How hard ? No, not any harder than it is not to be one. To live
is hard. Whichever you take is hard. You may change the kind
of hard, but all life is hard. A man has to take up his cross as
much to serve the devil as he does to serve God. It costs him as
much pain and care and trouble to be wicked as it does to be vir-
tuous, and after a little while a great deal more ; because the ways
of providence are ways of work toward purity and disinterestedness
and nobility ; and men who are in those ways have on their side
God and all his angels ; while wicked men are working against God
and his angels, and are therefore working greatly against the cur-
rent. To begin to be a Christian may be called a dijQScult thing ;
but it is so only at the beginning. How great a thing it is to be
a Cliristian, if it be — not to join a church, not to say prayers, not to
pay for the support of the Gospel, not to perform any outward ser-
vice, but to aspire to the royalt.y of that glorious manhood which
shall make us children of God, so that we shall resemble him; so
tliat looking into our souls as into a mirror, we shall gather some
small but real conception of the nature and beauty and desirable-
ness of that God toward whom we are going.
I call you, young men and maidens, not to any church ; I call
you not to any mere low conception of morality; I call you not to
sectarianism ; I call you to the spirit of the living God ; I call you
to the acceptance and recognition of the mercy of God which awaits
you in heaven ; I call you to remember that by the spirit of Jesus
Christ you are made, if you will, the sons of God, and that you are
to live toward God in the hope of being like him, and rejoicing
with him forever and forever.
184 APOSTOLIC CHEISTIANITY.
Oh, to them who hear the call of God the earth is conquered !
To them there is no poverty ; to them there are no sorrows. The
beginnings of triumphs which are to be consummated in heaven,
are sent down to God's people here. They who are living so as to
develop in themselves this divine likeness have already that power
which makes all things theirs. The heaven is theirs. The earth is
theirs. They belong to each other. They all belong to Christ.
His providence enwraps them. His grace is cheering them, even as
the summer warmths cheer the whole continent to-day. They are
surrounded by the love and mercy of God.
I call you to a higher destiny than any which lies within the
bounds of this horizon. I call you to a better companionship than
any church can give you. I call you " to the general assembly and
church of the first-born, which are written in heaven, and to God
the Judge of all, and to the spirits of just men made^ perfect, and
to Jesus the mediator of the new covenant." I call you by the aspi-
rations of your better nature. I call you by those vague longings
which you have, but which you perhaps cannot interpret, and which
make you feel like a child that is homesick, or that has lost its
father, and knows not where to find him. I call you by all the sor-
row which you have experienced on earth, and by all the joy that
you know yourself to be capable of experiencing in the land which
is to come. I call you to glory and honor and immortality.
Count not yourselves unworthy of this blessedness. Go not
with the grunting swine. Go not with the lion nor the bear. Give
not yourself away to power, or lust, or momentary pleasure, that,
like the light of the sun on the agitated waves, flashes and goes out.
I call you to thatVhich is behind the stars, and higher than they —
to the God, unalterable, ineffable, eternal.
APOSTOLIC GEBISTIANITT. 185
PRAYEE BEFORE THE SERMON. *
Why hast thou granted unto us, O Lord, such treasure in our children?
How couldst thou spare them to us ? How didst thou dare to send their
unsullied souls into this world? Why were we so ignorant and so inex-
perienced ? Why should we love so much, and know so little ? Why should
we be unable to transmit to our children the knowledge which by mistake
or under trial and divine guidance we have gained, so that every one must
try again, and learn through his own mistakes and ignorance and wayward-
ness ? Why were pride and selflshnessness set to bring up these children
that they may become thie sons of God ? Why is our ignorance put over
against their dark minds to give them light ? We wonder that thou shouldst
do so — thou whose wisdom is inscrutable. This is only one of the multitude
of those things around about us which tell us that Thou art still saying,
"What I do now ye know not, but ye shall know hereafter." Yet, much
are we learning of thy purposes. Thou hast sent these precious children to
us to teach us. Who of us all would care to bend the back of pride and
yield ourselves up one to another ? Strength will not give way to strength ;
but to weakness how supple is pride, and how does all our manhood kneel
down to worship at the cradle ! Who of us could teach another the self-
sacrifice of love? And yet, thou art in every household awakening that
love which knows no weariness, and which yields itself day and night.
Who could teach us how to live, not for self, but for another? But thou art
teaching us to pour out the best gifts of our Uves in thought and in feeling
'or our cbildren. Oh, that there were the understanding in us to teach us
how to widen our sphere, and to live for all as we live for ourselves, and to
rise through the majesty of weakness and the divinity of love and self-
sacrifice, in the royal character of the children of God !
Lord, we tbank thee for this blessed revelation of the cradle. Holy men
have spoken, and by thy Son Jesus also we have learned, the counsel and
the will of God ; but there are voices still chanting thy will in the household.
Angels still are calling to us. We are still taught by the power of the heart
through the little children that are granted unto us.
God bless the little children that have been this morning brought forth
by rejoicing parents in the midst of sympathizing brethren. These parents
have signified their purpose to bring them up in the fear of the Lord. Help
them to do it. May their hearts never be discouraged. May they never
give up hope.
If these children should not grow up, have compassion upon the hour of
darkness, when love weeps, and the heart seems broken. Lord, thou who
hast known the very sepulcher itself, and all the sorrows which lead to it,
canst counsel those who are bereaved. Sorrow is vincible by divine love.
But if these children grow up may they not depart from the nurture and
admonition of the Lord. May they be so trained that virtue shall be the
habit of their life, and that piety shall spring from virtue. May they blossom
into the manhood of Christian life.
We pray, O Lord, if any of them shall wander off upon their voyage, and
strange currents shall take them from their path, or winds, descending,
shall sweep them away, that thou wilt bring them back again. Thou who
didst rise up and rebuke the wind and the wave and save the ship, remember
those whose bark is tempest-tossed; those who seem perishing in their
children while thou seemest to them to sleep. For years they bave cried
*Immedlute:y following the baptism of children.
186 APOSTOLIC CEBISTIANITY.
out uiitj tlijee, and longed for succor; and thou hasf not come; and still
the wind blows, and their heavens are dark. Lord Jesus, appear for such.
Appear for all those who are seeking thee in the way of self -sacrifice and of
love for others, and whose way is hard, and whose purposes seem to ripen
into near blessings. Will the Lord inspire them with faith ; with a patient
waiting for the Lord; with a trust which death itself cannot move. Thou
canst not do evil. Thou wilt fulfill thy promises. Thou wilt not forsake to
the uttermost, nor to the end, those who trust in thee.
And now, we beseech of thee that thou wilt grant thy blessing to rest
upon all the young who are in our midst. May they grow up in* o loveliness,
and strength, and fruitfulness, in all things that are just, and true, and
noble before God and before men. Bless all the efforts which we are
making for their instruction iu the Sabbath-schools under our charge, in
the Bible-classes, and iu all the ways in which we seek to redeem them from
ignorance, aud to sbield them from temptation, and to arm them with
knowledge and with virtue.
We pray that those who go forth to visit the wandering and the outcast,
those who go to minister to the sick and the imprisoned, may more and
more be clothed with all the sweetness and power of the love of Christ.
And may their Grospel— the Gospel of a living and loving heart^never have
an end so long as they dwell upon the earth.
^Ve pray for all thy dear people of every name. We beseech of thee
that thou wilt remember, this morning, all who are gathered here with
their thanksgivings or their sorrows, with their hopes or their fears. Look
upon those who consecrate themselves anew to the service of the Lord. Look
upon all those who are just beginning the service of Christ openly and
avowedly. Look upon those who are ia the midst of the battle of life, and
who are still striving though they are drawing near to the end of it.
Prepare thine angels to convoy them, and to bring them with great joy
and rejoicing to t leir Father's house.
We beeseech of thee that thou wilt grant a blessing to rest upon the
preachers who are among us. May they feel the ties of brotherhood and
the inspu'atiou of God's blessing resting upon them and us in common. And
may our hearts go out after them. May we feel that we are related to all
who love and strive iu the name of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Grant thy blessing to rest upon the churches of this city. Revive thy
work in them. Fulfill all thy gracious purposes which thy providences have
indicated.
Remember thy servants who are in convention assembled from all parts
of this land, met, in t'.iy providence, to take counsel together on important
subjects touching thy work. We pray that they may be fillc-Hl with the
Spirit of Jesus Christ the Master, and that piety may be adorned aud made
lovely in their midst, and that all their deliberations may bo inspired by
tbat wisJom which cometh down from on high, and that they may return
to their several sphe.es of labor for a year of more abundant ingathering.
Look upon all the churches whose representatives are gathered
together and are holding couneil upon things which pertain to those
interests of thy Zion which are under their charge.
Unite ITiy people more and more. May they cease to dispute with each
other. May they cease to build high walls of division. May they cease to
magnify the exterior. More and more may the inner spirit grow; and
more and more, by the spirit, may there come that unity which has long
been si2;hed for and sought after by thine own children on earth, and which
was prayed lor by our Master.
Grant that the name of the Lord Jesus Christ may be known in all the
APOSTOLIC CHE18T1ANITF. 187
earth as a name of power. Give victory to thy servants who are preaching
in foreign lauds, and making known the unsearchable riches of the
Saviour among the heathen.
We pray for all classes and conditions of men everywhere— for the
oppressed; for the ignorant; for those who are bound by superstitions.
We pi-ay lor the coming of that day whose morning 'light we see upon the
edge of the mountains. Star of the Morning, come down, that the Sun of
righteousness may come up. Oh, grant that, at last, the light may burst
forth in universal radiance, and tbat all the earth, redeemed at length
from sorrow, may cease its wail and its requiem, and chant its song of
victory, until the voices of thy people throughout the world— the whole
family named of God in heaven and upon earth— may unite together
praising the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost I A7nen.
PEAYER AFTER THE SERMON.
Our Father, we pray that thou wilt open to our souls the realms of thy
truth. May we feel thy drawings if we cannot hear thy silent voice. The
ear hath not heard, the eye hath not seen, it hath not entered into the heart
of man to conceive, what things thou hast laid up for those that love thee.
And though in olden times thou didst reveal to thy servants, and though
in later days thou hast disclosed to thy people, great and WKiiderful things,
there are yet more things to be made known than we have dreamed of.
But, O God, while we know our weakness, this one thing we know : thou
art; thou art love; thy realm is universal; thou art the victorious God;
thou art the longing and the loving God whom Jesus Christ came into tbe
world to set forth before us. We behold his suffering. We read the secret
lesson. Thou art the healing God. Thou dost bear and forbeai', and art
willing to suffer. And in thine infinite altitude thou art not sitting in
leisure and enjoying thyself. Thou art everywhere the Nurse. Thou art
the Father of the father and the Mother of the mother. Thou art the
working God. Thou art the God that by tears dost interpret something of
thyself to men; that by heart-ache dost interpret to men the household;
that by parental solicitude, by yearnings, by forethouglit and caie of men
one for another; by all the sweetness of early love; by the plentitude and
variety of things good; by the discipline of life; and by all that is noblest
and best in us, art giving us the letters which spell thine own self, above all,
above ages, above the accumulated treasures and riches of other genera-
tions. Thou art grpater than our gi-eatest and best things. Supernal, thou
art still everywhere on earth. Thou art full of justice; and though thou
dost use pain as a means of chastising, yet love is regent, and all things are
swayed by it, that thou inayest bring home to thyself sons and daughters
for everlasting joy and glory.
Let us understand our calling in Christ Jesus. Lead us into that higher
thought of thee. Make life more sacred to us. May the inside of our soul-
life seem to us more real thap the outward flaming of the sun. What
matters it what we oat, or drink, or whether we lie down or rise up, or how
wc are clad ? 1 1 is after these things that the Gentiles seek. Oh, that we may
seek the kingdom of God and its righteousness, and that this may be our
Joy in life, our stay in conflict, our hope in dying, and the realisation of our
waking!
And to the Father, the Son, and the Spirit, shall be the praise forever
and forever. Amen.
XI.
Signs of the Times.
SIGNS OF THE TIMES.
" When it is evening, ye say, It will be fair weather : for the aky is red.
And in the morning, It will be foul weather to-day ; for the sky is red and
lowering. O ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the sky; but can ye
not discern the signs of the times ?"— Matt, xvi., 3, 3.
An account of the same interview is given a little differently in
the twelfth chapter of Luke :
" When ye see a cloud rise out of the west, straightway ye say, There
coraeth a shower; and so it is. And when ye see the south wind blow, ye
say. There will be heat; and it cometh to pass. Ye hypocrites, ye can dis-
cern the face of the sky and of the earth ; but how is it that ye do not
discern this time?"
The Scribes and Pharisees were so busy with the instruments of
religion, and the doctrines of religion, and the customs of religion,
that they had little opportunity to take care of men, or to be inter-
ested in them, or to see what the providence of God was doing
among them, or to watch the movement of things, good or bad.
The ground was shaking under their feet ; they were standing
on the eve of events which were to eclipse the glory of the Jewish
people ; they were within a hand's breadth of the greatest catas-
trophe that had ever visited their nation j they were within an arm's
length of that revolution which was to bring down their capital
and scatter their people ; already the symptoms were in the sky,
and the tremblings were in the earth j and yet they did not see them
nor believe them. And Jesus reproached them, that they were so
observant of the mutable appearances in the heavens, but were
blind to great moral events. In other words, their refusal to look
and see what God was doing by his providence in the time in
which they lived was a matter of reproach, and of just reproach,
on the part of the Master.
Let us not fall into the same condemnation, nor consider any-
thing which deeply concerns the welfare of our country and our
kind as unworthy of our consideration.
I am going to speak, to-night, upon a theme suggested by the
" strikes " of the working men ; and in respect to the whole matter
ScxnAT EvExiNo. May 19, 1872. Lessox : ACTS XLX., 23-41. HYMNS (Plymouth CoU
lecttOD): Nos. G08, 705, 10-^2.
190 SIGNS OF THE TIMES.
to ■wliicli that particular thing is incidental, or of which it is but
an accident or development — the universal stirring up of the work-
ing men of the civilized nations of the globe, the present tenden-
cies, what they portend, and what relations they sustain to Chris-
tianity and to civilization, and what duties they impose upon us if
we are wise enough to discern the signs of the times.
I remark, first, that never before, probably, in the history of the
world, was there such organization of laboring men as there is
now. There have been times when guilds were formed, each par-
ticular trade organizing a self-protecting guild. This is an inheri-
tance which has come down to us from the mediaeval days ; and it
stretches back in ruder forms far anterior to those. The peculi-
arity of our time is this : that each industry which organizes for its
self-protection and helpfulness is coming into affiliation with its
neighboring industries, so that working men everywhere, and all
kinds of working men, of the scores, and scores of difi'erent trades,
are having an understanding with each other. And that is not
all. The working men of contiguous nations are coming into rela-
tion^ of amity and sympathy and cooperation, and are stretching
out their afiiliations so that now it may be said that the working
men of the civilized globe are in sympathy," and that there is an
understanding among them which is becoming more and more
perfect every year. The power of organization I need not ex-
plain to you. It is a tremendous poAver. Wisely made, wisely
managed, wisely directed, it may be said that it gives the scepter
to Labor. And it holds the scepter only because it has the vote.
For the vote is the opening vial or bottle of the fable, and the genie
has gone out and swelled to incredible proportions, and never can
be put back again. Men who have the vote have access to every
single element of power in society ; and if they understand them-
selves, and organize skillfully and wisely, they will be stronger
than the throne. Every government stands on the vote ; every
administration stands on votes; every policy stands upon votes;
the security of property, of order, and of life itself, stands on
votes. And the working men of the globe have in enormous
disproportion the elements of universal power. That is, they have
numbers ; and numbers will carry the day, where they are wisely
organized and directed.
The great trouble of past times, so far as the working men are
concerned, has been that they have been outwitted. They have not
had the wisdom to regulate their forces. They have failed for want
of guidance. They have had power, — physical power, and even po-
litical power ; but they have not known how to use it. As a slen-
SIGNS OF THE TIMES. 191
der man with a little rapier, can, by his dexterity and skill, slay a
hundred Goliaths, any one of whom could crush him with a finger-
stroke ; as the great, coarse, animal strength of a giant is not a
match for the rare skill of the subtle fencer, slight though he may
be ; so the great mass of the working men have been swayed hither
and thither by the dexterity of wily politicians, of managing men,
who have had power and skill in state-craft ; but now, in this later
day, with a growing intelligence, and with an increase of wealth
among men, organization means something different from what it
meant a hundred, or five hundred, or a thousand years ago.
I do not know but you think that the organization of the
working men of the globe is a thing to be laughed at, and turned
off with a word ; but I do not think that it is a matter to be passed
over lightly. I cast the plummet of thought into it, and I perceive
that the depths of it are too great for men to despise. And on
the Avhole, Avitli all their mistakes, with all their errors, and with all
the heresies that are for the present wrapped up in their doctrines,
I am in hearty sympathy with these working men. I hail this
movement of theirs. It is a sign of life. Society does not lie like
unleavened dough. It is leavening. And although it will bring
some disturbance, and create some revolutions, and lead to a great
many errors, and Entail a great deal of mischief, nevertheless, I
thank God that there is a rising of men from the bottom of so-
ciety toward the top. My heart goes with the men who are poor
and ignorant, and who are working for liberty to be larger and
better.
Quite independent of the fact that it is the spring-time and ger-
minant period of the classes who have been neglected, there are
special reasons why I look upon this development with sym-
pathy. I sympathize at heart, thoroughly, with the feeling that
labor, as a thing which has been trodden under foot and de-
spised, should be elevated. I know very well what the old philoso-
phies were. The Jews have been ahead of civilization in almost
every element. You cannot afford to despise the Jews. You are
the sons of Abraham yourselves. Your commonwealth was born
out of Jewish ideas. Your civilization was borrowed from the
Jews, very largely. I honor and revere that stock. They honored
labor, and were ahead of others in honoring it. They honored it
at the time when many of the republics of the Orient despised it.
When Greece, by her philosophers, was determining that her com-
monwealth should expel from citizenship all mechanic craftsmen,
and all who engaged in manual labor, then the g^'eat Hebrew com-
monwealth was making labor honorable. But almost only there was
192 SIGNS OF TEi: TIMES.
it honored. Generally speaking, taking the world together, labor
has not been regarded as honorable. If a man has been obliged to
earn his living by the sweat of his brow, that fact has been con-
sidered prima facie evidence that he lacked manhood and worth.
It has been considered vulgar for a man to work with his hands ;
and men have not been disabused of that idea even to this day. A
lawyer may go to the plow — that is no disgrace ; a minister may
own a farm — that is very creditable; a merchant may carry on
agricultural pursuits — there is nothing out of the way in that.
That is, if a man has other means of gaining a livelihood, it is well
enough for him to engage in what are called manual occupations;
but if a man is neither a lawyer, nor a minister, nor a merchant,
but is a poor man^ and has to work, guiding the plow, or perform-
ing other duties on a farm, or engaging in physical labor of any sort,
to earn his bread, people think it is vulgar.
" No, I do not think it is vulgar." I beg your pardon, you do.
If your daughter were going to marry a man of slender stature, and
no brains, but with much property and a good standing in fash-
ionable society, you would think that that was a favorable connec-
tion; but if she were going to marry a man who was a worker in
the soil, and who had never been out of his native town, but who
had a nobleman's heart in him, and was every inch a man, you
would think that that was a mis-alliance — a poor match for your
child. The only reason in the world that you could give would be
that he was a worker, and that your daughter was not intended for
such a connection as that.
Now, I hail the day when work becomes discontented — for there
is a sense in which discontent means aspiration. I do not say that
all discontent is honorable ; but I say that that discontent which
thinks, which plans, which waits, which means improvement, which
organizes for improvement, and which is taking every step that it
can toward improvement, is honorable. I hold it to be a result
of the working of divine providence.
I believe that the day will dawn when work will come up, not
simply in skill and intelligence, but in moral Avorth. The day will
come when a man will go through college for the sake of being a
better mechanic ; when a man will acquire a thorough education
for the sake of making a better farmer ; when a man will educate
himself for the sake of larger manhood, thougn ho be a worker.
I perceive, also, in this impatience of the great working mass
of men in civilized nations a token of growth in another way. Tliere
are circumstances in which men who are degraded do not find their
oondition burdensome, and are not impatient under it. The lower
SIGNS OF TEE TIMES. 193
classes who lived in Queen Elizabeth's time did not find their con-
dition burdensome. They lived almost as stalled cattle live. They
were essentially rude and undeveloped ; and their condition was
more nearly fitted to their actual interior state than a higher con-
dition would have been. But as civilization has increased, and as
the comforts of life have increased, the working-meu have perceived
that a higher condition is preferable; and the condition which they
Avould have taken contentedly in the time of Elizabeth, they would
resent now.
That is the law of development. We rise from a lower state to
a higher ; and when we are in the higher we resent the conditions
of the lower. Our appetites increase, and our tastes increase, and
our wants increase. That is barbarism which says that sim-
plicity is the highest condition of mankind, and that he is the
richest man who wants the least. I say that a man is on the way
toward civilization in proportion to the number of mouths which
you get opened in him. I do not say that he is the most civi-
lized who has the greatest number of things put into his mouth—
the most wine, the most meat, the most bread, the most of all
forms of luxury. A superfluity of these things, and the enjoy-
ment of them by the appetite, I do not believe in ; but I do believe
that when a man grows, God opens a mouth in him, not for the sus-
tenance of the body, but to feed tastes which lie deep within.
Uncultivated men in civilized society begin to have affectional
wants. They begin to have refinements. They begin to have
aspirations. When a degraded peasant comes to America, creep-
ing out of his turf hole at home, he is quite willing to nuzzle again
in the dirt in America ; but becoming more familiar Avith things
around about him, and' buying a little piece. of ground, he settles
down in a village, and his ideas begin to enlarge. He sees what his
neighbors children are ; and as his own children increase abont
him he has a pride and ambition for them. He is discontented with
his one room, and wants more rooms. He begins to want a floor.
He begins to want a place to sleep in which is not a kitchen. He
begins to want something finer on his bed. He is no longer satisfied
with straw. A box does not seem to him good as a table any
longer. It makes a diSerence to him whether he cuts his food with
a jack-knife, or eats with a knife and fork. He sees the difference
between his and other people's manner of spreading the table. His
taste developes. He covets things for their beauty. He has other
desires than those which the senses feed, higher, purer, finer. And
what do these things indicate but the development of finer relishes
and appetites in him ? He comes, gradually, to a state in which
194 SIGNS OF THE TIMES.
he is pained by things which ten years ago were matters of indif-
ference to him.
This is right. It is a sign of growth. There is a sense in which
the whole condition of the globe is elevated when men manifest a
desire for greater leisure. The desire for leisure is a worthy desire
when it is inspired by an ambition for culture in order that there
may be a fuller development of manhood. I honor a man who can-
not forever live in the presence of men who are higher than he and
not desire to rise higher himself. I do not mean that a poor man
should desire to live in a four-story brown-stone house with the
" modern conveniences," because there are men around about him
who live in such houses ; but if a man is living in a community
where there are those who have finer tastes and feelings than he has,
he has a right to desire those tastes and feelings ; and he has a
right to say to himself, " Give me time enough, and I can develop
them in myself — or in my children, if not in myself" I honor a
man who has an ambition to groAV. I glory in that growth which
crowds off the leaves of last year in order that there may be de-
veloped a new and better crop on every branch this year.
Then there is another thing which I mark as peculiar to large
towns and cities, and which is as true of this city as of others. I
refer to the irregularity of progress, the partialism of progress,
which may be seen by those who will observe it. There is in almost
every community a separation going on in society. This separa-
tion is becoming more and more apparent. The distance is becom-
ing wider in every decade of years between the cultured and the
uncultured ; between the rich and the poor ; between the different
sections of society. The top goes up all the time faster than the
bottom does. The distance between the top of society and the
bottom measures the unhealth of society. The top cannot healthily
go up unless it takes the bottom with it. At first, when men
are undeveloped, they may all live together, and may be in fellow-
ship, though they may be low ; but as they begin to be stimulated
and developed, good men go higher than bad men ; educated men
go higher than uneducated men ; skilled men go higher than un-
skilled men ; but they still have a duty of fellowship and brother-
hood. Every man ought to be solicitous of his own development ;
but every man should also be solicitous to draw up those who are
around about him. The business of any class is not to help them-
selves alone, but to help all other classes. As men begin to be re-
fined, you will see evolving out of their new condition a gradual de-
velopment of the pride of refinement, and the selfishness of refine-
ment, and the fastidiousness of refinement, and the revulsion oi
SIGNS OF TEH TIMES. 195
refinement at those vulgarities which characterize the great mass of
their fellow men. Men in society organize, stratify and divide;
the bottom remains at the bottom, and perhaps sinks lower, while
the top shoots upward.
Society is not and cannot be homogeneous. There are causes for-
ever at work to produce classes. If the classes are in mutual an-
tagonism, society is full of intestine Avar. If society is a unit, like
the human body, made up of superior and inferior members, but
all in vital sympathy with each other, and all serving a common
end, then no harm, but much good may result from classes. The
mischief begins with class indiflference, proceeds with class selfish-
ness, and is consummated in class despotism. Even those influences
which, like intelligence and religion, tend to bring men together,
when they act upon only a portion of society, produce inequality
and relative disturbance.
Anything, then, that shall work up the great mass of men from
a state of indiflference or torpidity, and which shall teach them in-
dustry, self-government, cooperation, patient striving and waiting
for a better condition, will tend to their benefit and to that of so-
ciety at large. That cannot be a healthy condition in which a few
prosper and the great mass are drudges.
Then I must call your attention to another great danger —
namely, the increasing power of organized and combined capital in
our land, and the despotism which tends to grow out of it. There
is probably no other nation where there is so much wealth per head
as there is in the great northern tier of States in America; aud
there is no other nation where the capacity to make wealth is so
great as here.
I do not mean that there is not sagacity and skill in England,
or in France, or in Germany, or in Italy. We have much to learn
from these nations. They surpass us in many things. We are in-
debted to them for what they are teaching us in various depart
mentsof industry. But taking the populations through, the wealth-
earning power of the industrial citizenship of America probably
transcends that of the citizenship of any other nation on the globe.
While the best workmen of other nations may surpass those of
America, taking all the working men of America together, there is
no other land in the world which is so productive of wealth as ours.
We are not only producing wealth but we are increasing it at
a fearful ratio in the hands of a comparatively few. You have
seen, many of you, and I have seen (for I have lived through a
generation of men), almost a revolution in the matter of wealth.
When I was born, and where I was born, a man that was worth ten
196 SIGNS OF THE TIMES.
thousand dollars was a rich man. He that was worth fifty
thousand dollars was looked up to as very rich. I remember
when a man who had a hundred thousand dollars was considered
surpassingly rich. But a man that has a hundred thousand dol-
lars to-day, says, "I have some yeast, and if I could get some
dough to put it in I think I could raise a batch of wealth.*'
A man is not looked upon as rich until he has many hundreds of
thousands of dollars. It is easier nowadays to find a man that is
worth a million dollars than in my day it was to find a man that
was worth a hundred thousand dollars. It is not strange to find
men who are worth five or ten millions. There are some men
who are worth fifty millions, and even a hundred millions. Tliere
are not a few in our cities wlio are millionaires, literally ; and the
number is increasing. They do not all like to have it known.
They do not all show their wealth. There is a Nemesis of taxation
which makes many men humble, so that they do not like to have it
known how much they are worth.
Such is the power of Wealth, that when held by a class, and used
ambitiously, it becomes as despotic as an Absolute Monarchy. An
ambitious Plutocracy has in its hands, I had almost said, manners,
customs, laws, institutions, and governments themselves.
But, over and above all these inequalities which work mischief to
the less favored classes in society, there is one danger of Wealth
that demands the serious attention of every patriotic citizen. I
mean the alarming increase of enormous wealth in gigantic Cor-
porations.
Consider the capital in the hands of a few men represented by
the New York Central and Hudson Eiver Eailroad. " Their line
has gone out into all the world." It owns or can control hundreds
of millions of capital. Its dependants are an army. Its contracts,
by the promise of gain, hold under cogent influence all who deal
in wood, iron, wool, stone, oil, machinery, and general merchandise.
This huge capital, in the hands of one or a few men, can build
up or beat down ; can enrich or impoverish whom it will. At its
touch gold becomes ashes and dirt becomes gold. The Erie Rail-
road, of fragrant memory, has a power scarcely less. The State of
New York is shut in between these iron walls. Hanging over the
State is this enormous body of coi-porate wealth, subject to the will
of a handful of men, and growing in amount, facilities, and dan-
gerousucss, every year. The Pennsylvania Central, with its arms
and hands stretched out to the very Pacific Ocean, is liable to be
an even more gigantic Despot.
I do not lose sight of the benefits conferred on the com-
SIGNS OF THE TIMES. 197
munity by these great thoroughfares. Kept witliin rightful bounds,
their service to public wealth is incalculable. They are wings and
feet to commerce. They stimulate a universal industry. They bring
near together the widely separated populations of this continent :
they give coherence and unity to scattered industries; by their
swiftness, they in eflfect add hours to every man's days, and substan-
tially lengthen human life by doubling the product of men's hands.
But, out of these great and unmeasured blessings, there rises up
this danger of Corporate Power, — like a mountain out of fruitful
fields, about whose head storms tread. Such concentration of cajDi-
tal gives to a few men, acting in concert, a power of influence
which can crush down all ordinary opposition and make them mas-
ters of the legislation of the country.
Acting through the directories of two or three Kailroads, the
money power of America may set at defiance all control, and
dictate to legislatures the laws, and to the people their policies.
The more because our legislatures have become so corrupt. The
shame of America, to-day, is the corruption of legislative bodies. In
many States of the Union money has become a controlling influence
in the passage of laws ; politics is next in power, and simple justice
for its own sake, is something almost unknown. Even the men
elected for the purpose of reforming such abuse, no sooner breathe
the moral malaria of the legislative halls than virtue is in chills and
avarice in a fever. Why do we think so ill of Sing Sing and so well
of Albany ? In what are the thieves in the Penitentiary worse than
the thieves in the Legislature ? The rogues in prison, acting with
but little concert, robbed individuals, and firms ; the organized
rogues, in legislative clothing, dishonestly, in the habiliments of law,
rob the whole community.
Are these bodies, from whom come all our laws, likely to resist
the temptations of vast corporations who carry gold mines in their
cofiiers ? Will those who make their bed in the very dirt of the
streets, refuse the bed of kings ? Have our courts been able to with-
stand the assaults of money corporations ? Even when judges are
inaccessible to pecuniary bribes, they are unable to Avith stand the
wear and tear of political influence, the enthusiasms of public senti-
ment hotly kindled. Neither courts or legislatures can interpose
a barrier to the will of corporative wealth, when it assumes the vast
proportions it has now taken, and when it grasps such a variety of
interests and such a scope of territory ! There are three Eailroad
corporations that have the power, — should they combine, as easily
they might, as in time inevitably they must, — to control national
parties, to determine the commercial policy, to dictate legislation,
198 SIGNS OF THE TIMES.
to elect governors or depose them to place whom they will in the
Presidential chair, to fill the United States Senate with their friends,
and to pack the House of Eepresentatives. Let things go on for ten
years as they have for the past twenty, and the councils of this nation
will issue from the directors' rooms of our great Eailroad Corpora-
tions. It will make no difference who sits in the White House.
Some Vanderbilt or Scott will be our President.
Far be it from me to say that the remedy for these evils, already
so great, but whose future is yet more portentous, is to be found
in anything yet developed among working men. And yet to the
great laboring interests of the country must we look for an antago-
nism which will at length restrain the overreaching ambition of
cooperative capital. Mammon is our chief adversary to-day. Many
thought that when slavery was overthrown the devils had gone out
of the nation. Nay, they only changed quarters, and as yet no
steep place has been found down which the infernal brood has
rushed to destruction. Mammon, enthroned in privilege, is our
danger and our despot. Capital may, if wisely used, overhang the
land like beneficent clouds, dropping down bounty upon every leaf
and blade that grows; or, it may hang above us surcharged with
lightning, and move like a destroying storm.
If the poor see that riches set men free from the law, obedience
to the law will be regarded as one more evil inflicted by poverty.
Why should Work be under law, and Crime be above law ? Men
often complain of the lawless violence of ignorant men ; of the
turbulence and violence of the lower classes ; of the evils to be
feared in the " dangerous classes." But our "dangerous class" is
not at the bottom, it is near the top of society. Riches without
law is more dangerous than Poverty without law. While Labor
organizes to defend itself against the exactions of Capital, it may
raise up a power which shall defend the whole community, and,
while it ennobles industry, shall, at the same time, establish mo-
rality. The laboring men will always be the majority. If they are
educated, temperate, wise, they will control the destiny of the na-
tion. It is to them that we look in the future.
"~ My heart goes with the toiling million. The wise and strong
need no sympathy. Their strengtli is their defense. They are
grown up men. But the great mass of working men are relatively
weak. They need sympathy. Mine is not an undistinguishing sym-
pathy, however; I do not pretend that poverty is virtue, nor that
riches are criminal. I have no vulgar ends to gain by flattering the
working man. On the other hand, I shall show a better friendship,
a wiser sympathy, if I criticise the mistakes of their organizations.
SIGNS OF THE TIMES. 199
and point out some of those principles to which they must conform,
if permanent prosperity is to be had.
1. There is danger that laboring men, in combining for mutual
protection, will organize around the core of selfishness. This will
be to imitate the very evil which makes corporate wealth danger-
ous. It will have the inherent and essential mischief of the class-
spirit. Selfishness is the bane of life. It will be no less destructive
and dishonoring among laboring men, than among capitalists. If
the workingmen care nothing for the whole community, but only
or chiefly for themselves, they will deserve no sympathy. Each
trade may have a special benevolence for its own members, but the
whole is more important than any fraction, and the common-
wealth should be included in the intents and purposes of work-
men's plans. If labor is to fight capital by a rivalry in selfishness
then society will be but a carcass lying between the vultures. Labor
must be more manly, more robust in virtue, more patriotic, more
public spirited, and more intelligent than organized capital, or it
will go down 'in the conflict. It is this rising and extending sym-
pathy between men of different trades, and between the working-
men of different nations, that inspires our sympathy and our hope
that labor may bring classes and nations into sympathy and coop-
eration, which have hitherto been discordant or oppugnant.
2. Workingmen are in danger of spending their force in follow-
ing glittering social theories. Certainly, they have as much right
to speculate as any others. But no degree of intelligence will ever
enable any class or individual to forecast the shape of society in the
future. The world has its own law of development, and society
will make its own paths, refusing all speculative lines that may be
drawn to coax it. It is a thousand pities that clubs, unions, leagues,
and societies should waste their forces in propagating airy fancies ;
in building society-castles in the air. Society takes its shape from
what men are and not from what they think. Industry, ingenuity,
intelligence, frugality, genuine kindness between man and man,
self-restraint; in short, brain-power in the superior faculties, this
is the raw material out of which God will shape that better Future
for which we all long. We can provide the materials, but God is
the only Architect.
3. Men are in danger of regarding Work as an evil, and Leisure
as an end, in itself. Labor is a salable commodity. To raise the
price of it by legitimate means is fair and wise. But it will be a
supreme folly for poor men to decrease the quantity of labor in the
community. While here and there a few men are overworked, the
great mass of men do not work enough. What we want is freedom
200 S?IGN8 OF THE TIMES.
of men to work, to work as long as tliey will, and to sell tlieir labor
in the best market. Odious as is the despotism of Capital, it is not
a whit more odious than Labor-despotism. Freedom is the univer-
sal need of men ; — freedom of conscience, freedom in thought, civil
freedom ; liberty of speech, of vote, of work ; restraint upon the
animal, but liberty to the divine, that is in man !
For special reasons, and as a temporary expedient to gain some
eminent good, men may curtail labor and restrain their liberties.
But this must be the occasional, and not the permanent — medi-
cine, not food.
4. There is danger, too, that the working men will be godless and
irreligious, and therefore shallow and narrow. It is not necessary
that the cooperative labor of the world shall be Protestant, or Catho-
lic; it is not necessary that it shall join itself to this or that sect;
but Labor is absolutely incomplete without a deep moral sense. If
labor becomes atheistic, unchristian, antagonistic to the great truths
of the gospel, it will commit suicide.
Jesus Christ was a laborer's son, after the flesh, and was himself
a carpenter, and wrought with his hands, and lived all his life in
sympathy with the laboring classes of his people ; and all the truths
breathed from his lips were truths of sympathy and humanity which
it behooves every working man on earth to take heed to. The
gospel of Christ is the poor man's Magna Charta. If poor men
who are disfranchised, and who are seeking to reinstate themselves,
and gain room for aspiration and growth, reject the Bible, and the
Lord Jesus Christ, and the truths that came from him, they throw
away the charter of their liberty. There never was a stable liberty
born into this world until after Christ had shown the way. For
liberty must be based upon that benevolence which shall expunge
selfishness from supreme control. You never will have ripe justice
until you have that which springs out of filial love to God and
impartial love to man.
5. There is a danger, too, that these cooperative associations will
set aside the great law of subordination. You cannot by legislation
bring all men up to an equality. Thei-e are certain great laws
which are as inevitable as fate. You can make all men equal to
each other politically ; you can make all men equal before the law ;
you can make all men equal in riglits and duties ; but you cannot
make all men equal in their earuing-power. It is a species of rank
injustice to undertake to strike an equality between one class and
another. If you make the wages of a weak and ignorant man the
same as the wages of a strong and wise man, you do that which is
fundamentally unjust. It is not a kindness but an injury. It is
SIGNS OF THE TIMES. 201
demoralizing. It disregards a distinction which God made, and
which will always continue to exist. It takes away the stimulus to
development and industry. If men find that the indolent and
the industrious are treated alike, that the finest and the highest
workers and the slovenliest and lowest workers are rewarded alike —
are graded to the same price — there is taken away from them the
fundamental motive by which manhood is stirred up, and in-
genuity is quickened, and industry is developed. It destroys in-
dividualism. It leads toward that consolidation of society in whicu
the nation is everything and the individual citizen nothing.
6. Nothing can more directly benefit laboring men than that de-
velopment which education gives. For, besides the range of re-
sources, the new pleasures, the larger susceptibility to enjoyment
which education gives, it significantly influences the price which
labor brings. For, he who sells work sells brains. Price is largely,
and as a general rule, determined by the quality and quantity of
thought-power infused into work. " Skilled work" is nothing but
work vitalized by finer brain-power than belongs to routine work.
Every workman sells something of himself in what he creates.
Skill, fidelity, taste, imagination, bring high prices. What work-
men need most of all is education. They do not know how to use
the half of their powers. Their qualities lie in them undug, un-
smelted, uncast, unfinished. They bring to market the products
of their lower faculties, and murmur that the price is low. Let
them improve their loom and the fabrics will rise in value. The
workman's head is his shop. If there be fpw tools there and poor
ones, why should he expect profit?
A thing is worth what that part of the brain is worth
which entered into the creating of it. A thing which requires
the action of the lowest part of the brain is not worth much.
It does not take much brain-power to dig a ditch. Anybody
can throw out dirt ; and should a man who throws out dirt be
paid as much as a man who organizes dirt, and finds new uses for
it ? If you put into your Avork the lowest part of your brain, you
take the lowest price; if you put into it the middle part of your
brain you take the middle price ; and if you put in the highest
part you take the highest price. There is a gradation fixed in the
nature of things. It is a priiiciple which enters into the organiza-
tion of society, that the bottom of a man is not worth so much as
the top, and if a man puts his bottom forces into liis work his work
is not Avorth so much as if he put his top forces into it. To the
end of time the artist will be worth more than tlie artisan, the arti-
san will be worth more than the laborer, and the laborer will be
worth more than the drudge.
202 SIQJ^S OF TEE TIMES.
One remedy for the disadvantages from wliich labor is suffering,
is to educate men ; to teach them how to work ; to teach them how
to think, and how to think finely, and generously, and wisely, and
beneficently, and religiously, as creatures whose sphere is bounded,
not by this horizon, but by God's horizon. What men need is
more manhood, and a better understanding of that in them by
which they are to put into their work more substance, more quality,
more honesty, more fidelity, and more adaptation to a final happi-
ness, to a higher life, and to nobler tastes. Everything which tends
to bring the nobler parts of men, as embodiments, into their work;
everythiug^that tends to lift up men's work to a higher standard,
is an element in the solution of this great question of labor. And
no combination or invention can stop the operation of Nature's
decree in this matter. The stream may be checked in its course by
banks and dams, but these will be only temporary obstructions ;
for in the end the law is inevitable that it is the brain that gives
value, and that it is quality or kind of brain that determines prices.
He who takes the contrary view is in insurrection with the law of
Nature, and is in the same condition that a man would be in who
should enter into a conspiracy against gravity, or electricity, or
light, or any other great force in Nature.
We are in the midst of this experiment, and we ought to be pa-
tient with it. We ought not to think that it is going to corrupt
society, and destroy us. There is much in the movements of laboring
men to be criticised. They are men who are feeling their way toward a
larger life, toward a nobler manhood; and I say, " God speed them."
At the same time 1 make criticisms upon them ; but I make them for
their good and health, and not for their harm and hindrance. On
the other hand, it is our duty to look more to the welfare of others,
and not so exclusively to our own welfare. We who live in led
houses, not thinking so much how we shall have good as how we
shall have better ; not thinking so much how we shall have better
as how we shall have the best; and not thinking so much how we
shall have the best as how we shall have it more abundantly — we
are to ask ourselves, in spinning our silken web about us, " Are we
discharging those duties which unite us in sympathy with the great
mass of men that are about us ?"
We, by our extravagance, squeeze the merchant, and compel him
in turn to squeeze the manufacturer, who in turn squeezes the la-
borer. The impulse which our extravagance sets in motion acts
with terrible violence, and grinds our poor brother to powder; and
if, indignant, he turns, not knowing what to fight, and fights every-
thing that stands in his way between the top and the bottom of
SIGNS OF TEE TIMES. 203
society, it is not for us to throw stones at him, who have been the
cause and occasion of his offense. It is for us, rather, to come into
the large spirit of the Lord Jesus Christ who descended from the
height of heaven to live among men, made himself a servant, and,
even when he sat at the feasts of the great men who opened their
houses to him, so recognized his relations to the poorest in society,
that the publicans and sinners thronged in after him, and sat at
meat with him unrebuked. He is your Master. By his name you
are called. Have you his spirit ? And when men Avho are low
down, struggling, unfortunate, undeveloped, rude, ignorant, unre-
fined— when they see you, do they press after you, and take you by
the hand, and find in your heart a fraternizing response?
There are duties in many directions in society — a duty in eccle-
dasticism, a duty in sociology, a duty of philanthropy, and other
duties — which couple us Avith the working classes of our time and
nation ; and we shall not discharge these duties unless we discern
the signs of the times, and hold out efficient help and succor to those
who are our brothers and friends underneath our feet.
So, I say, May God keep you from the cultivation of selfish re-
finement. May God keep you from the exquisite cruelty of religious
selfishness. May God keep you from the infidelity and atheism of
indifference toward those around about you who are bone of your
bone and flesh of your flesh. May God breathe into you the sweet
spirit of his own dear Son, who gave his life a ransom for many, and
teach you to use your life so that it shall be a ransom, and emanci-
pate and bring up many who are cast down or oppressed in your
midst
204 SIGNS OF THE TIMES.
PKAYER BEFORE THE SERMON.
Our Father, we thank thee for the mercies of the day. That our prayers
have been heard; that the spirit of the Sabbath has been upon us; for quiet
in our homes, and in our several abiding places; for meditation; for all
social fellowship; for our joys to come in the Lord; for our forelooking ;
for our sight within the veil, — we thank thee. We rejoice that we fall under
the influence of thy Spirit; that we are not citizens of any mean country or
city; that we are more than we seem; that we are the sons of God, though it
dotli not appear; that we are journeying through the Tvilderaess — if it be a
wilderness; that we are aspiring to a nobler life, to a better home, to
imperishable riches, to honors that corrupt not society, and whose pleasures
do not effeminate; that we are drawing near to that liigher and better
sphere where we shall see thee as thou art, and know even as we are
known.
But grant, we pray thee, while we comfort ourselves by the way, looking
forward, and by imagination partaking of the heavenly estate, that we may
not retreat from the conflicts of this life, from its duties, from its necessary
burdens. Grant that we may have manhood; and that we may have
robust patience ; and that we may accept at the hand of the Lord that
which he shall send, grateful for mercies. May we not seek to avoid even
chastisements. May we rejoice in prosperity, and may we not refuse to
receive adversity. May we bear the yoke willingly. May we learn that
thy yoke is easy, and that thy bvirden is light, and accept them uncomplain-
ingly. Why should we complain, who are disciples, when our Lord and
Master suffered for us? Why should we complain who are but lor a day
here, and who are to advance to an eternal glory of blessedness hereafter?
Oh, grant that we may see ourselves, not as within the horizon of time, but
as creatures of immortality ; and that we may temper our joy and sorrow ;
that we may restrain ourselves, both in prosperity and adversity, by the
thought of our relations to thee and to the whole future life I
We pray that thou wilt forgive us the sins of impatience, and pride, and
anger, and selfishness, and envy, and jealousy, and all passions and appe-
tites. We pray that thou wilt forgive us all the tnings which it was our
duty to do, and which we have left undone.
We pray that thou wilt inspire us with a higher conception of manhood
and duty ; and day by day may we be diligent in business and fervent in
spirit, serving the Lord. And we pray that we may not be so wrapped up
with thinking of our own perfection and the advancement of our own
spiritual purity and joy that we shall forget our brotherhood with those
who are around about us — with the suffering, the ignorant, the poor, and
the needy. Grant that everywhere our he&rts may be open to the wants of
our fellow men; that wo may be in sympathy with those who are unlike us
in condition ; that we may be under obligation to all that are around about
us; that we may be like the Master who went about doing good to the
despised, to the outcast, to the neglected.
Graut that more and more the hearts of this great people may be united
together in the bonds of a more perfect charity. May all the causes of dis-
turbance and separation and animosity and opposition be taken out of
our midst. We pray for that indwelling Spirit which shall bring light, and
which shall kindle a fire by which the dross shall be consumed and the gold
purified. We pray for that which shall unite all hearts together in this
great land. Oh, forbid that wo shoul.l be divided and scattered! Forbid
that anything should dim the prosperity of this people. And may that
prosperity spring, not from lordliness, nor arrogant power, nor overswoilen
SIGNS OF THE TIMES. 205
riches: may it spring, rather, from temperateness, from self-restraint,
from the power of godliness, from liberty and intelligence, and good- will,
and the welfare of all.
And we pray that this nation may be nourished by a true Christianity,
so that all men shall look upon us and long ior the same power which we
possess, and serve the same Christ, and rejoice in the same prosperity. Work
in this great peoi^le, we beseech of thee, to will and to do of thy good pleasure.
And now, we pray that in times of excitement and division and con-
troversy, our hearts may be held temperately; that we may look upon all
things as iuthe hght of thy countenance; that we may not be carried away
violently by prejudice, uor be filled with anger. May we witti patience
possess our spirit in all godliness and gentleness one toward another.
We beseech of thee that thy cause may prosper in the midst of this
nation. And so let thy word be fulfilled. How long shall the nations sit in
darkness? How long shall the people be in ignorance ? How long shall the
poor abide in their poverty? How long shall the outcast and neglected
remain outcast and neglected ? Oh, that thou wouldst stir up the whole of
thy people. Descend to overturn and overturn till He whose right it is
shall come and reign !
We pray that no civilization that is conceited and arrogant may be
suffered to spread abroad without the leavening influence of a true Christian
love therein. We pray that thou wilt be with those who i:eed thee most —
not with those who are strongest and who dominate in the counsels of men.
We beseech of thee that tbou wilt have compassion upon all the world
according to thy promise, and that Jew and Gentile may be gathered in,
and that all the earth may see thy salvation.
These mercies we ask in the adorable name of Jesus, to whom, with the
Father, and the Holy Ghost, shall be praises evermore. Amen.
PRAYER AFTER THE SERMOX.
Our Father, we beseech of thee that thou wilt bless the word of truth
which has been spoken. Guide our thoughts aright. Awaken in us more
than curiosity, and far more than anger. Awakea in us a desire to know
what the meaning of thy ijrovideuce is, and what are the ways in which
thou art going. Thou coraest strangely to bless the world. Thou comest
with the plow, disturbing the earth. Thou dost turn up in revolution
the things that were, in order that better things may be j)lauted In their
stead. Grant that we may discern thy coming; that we may anticipate it;
that we may prepare the way for thee lest thou sh ilt come with fire, in our
neglect, to prepare it for thyself. Give intelligence to those who are
ignoratit, and wisdom to those who lack it. Grant that all the elemental
forces of society may be under the sanctifying influences of thy Spirit, and
may be guided aright.
We pray for the nations of the earth. We rejoice that they are finding
each other out. And il kings will noi have sympathy, and governments
will be selfish and arrogant and oppressive, and represent the animal and
belluine qualities of human nature, may they be overruled.
We thank thee tbat at last among laboring men there is coming to be
sympathy, aud that there is the drawing of nations together in good-will.
Grant that out of the movements that are inaugurated there may come a
better civilization. May wo accept these movements, and help carry them
forward, and so be, in thy band, an instrument for lifting up the nations of
the globe. Let thy kingdom come, and thy will be done on eaith as it is in
heaven.
And to thy name shall be the praise. Father, Son, and Spirit, evermore.
Amen.
XII.
The Battle of Benevolence.
INVOCATION.
Look upon us mercifully, thou that didst create us : thou that hast blessed
us by thy providence in our various phases of life. Have compassion upon
us, not according to our thought of ourselves, but according to the generosity
of thy nature. Look upon us, this morning, and desire us ; and may thy
desire draw us toward thee ; and may we know that thou art thinking of us
as a father thinks of his children, by the response which our hearts give forth
to thine. We turn our faces toward thee ; hide not thy face from us. We
lift our hearts up to thee. Thou that art filling every cup with light and with
moisture, giving even to the grass and the plants what they need for nourish-
ment. Wilt thou forget us, that need divine grace even as the rain, and divine
illumination even as the sunlight? Think of us! And may we be imited
with thee, this day, and walk in a blessed fellowship of love. We ask It for
Christ's sake. Amen.
12.
THE BATTLE OF BEIEVOLENCE,
•'Blessed are ye when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and
Kliall say all manner of evil against you falsely for my name's sake. Rejoice
and be exceediug glad." " Let your light so shine before men, that they may
i-ee your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven."— Matt.
v., 11, 13, 16.
The opening passage of this portion of the Gospel of Matthew
is substantially the bnilding np before the eyes of carnal and sen-
suous men the conception of Christian character, of a new char-
acter in which are made conspicuous those characteristics which
are least esteemed as virtues among men.
Blessed are tlie poor in spirit. Blessed are the mourners.
Blessed arc the meek. Blessed are men of aspiration, who hunger
and thirst after righteousness. Blessed are the merciful, the pure
in heart, the happiness-makers — or " peacemakers," as they are
called here. Blessed are the persecuted for righteousness' sake.
It is declared, substantially, that men who pursue high ideals ot
Christian life and character will meet opposition, persecution ; and
although the form here indicated is that of outward persecution, it
is just as true inwardly as it is outwardly. That is to say, perse-
cution for righteousness' sake is just as common to-day as it was
in the ages immediately following Christ. Outward persecution
against a corporate body, or against representative men who belong
to a school or a philosophy — that ceases, mostly. Instead of the
church being persecuted by tlie world, the church has adopted the
principle of persecution, and uses it all up, one sect quarreling with
another. But the opposition, the resistance, to goodness in men,
still continues ; and no man ever becomes a Christian after the pat-
tern of the Lord Jesus Christ without a good long battle for it. We
are built primarily on the pattern of animals ; and as we are born
into this life by struggles and by pains, so we go on from infancy
fighting for development by straggles and by pains; and unfolding
and unfolding, we rise from pure animalism to a form of social
excellence. The child becomes affectionate, and comes, little by
Suvn^T Morning, May 19, 1872. Lesson: John. Xin.,I-17. Hymns (Pljmoath Col-
lection): Kos. 1344, ceo, 1181.
210 THE BATTLE OF BENEVOLENCE.
little, to regard others' welfixre. And still developing, we begin to
take in a larger circle, and to refine our conceptions of fineness
among men, until at last we come to that full disclosure of disin-
terested benevolence which the Gospel itself has for its heart and
center. " Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart,
and thy neighbor as thyself." This it is to be a Christian. This
is the ideal of Christian life.
Now, no man was ever born into that. There is many a man
who has been born into an inheritance of money ; there is many a
man whose father has left him a picture-gallery, a library, and
estates, and warehouses, and ships, and stocks, and other annoy-
ances of that kind ; but there was never a man who was born into
the fully disclosed treasure of a Christian character. Nature has
to be grafted before it produces that, always. The natural stock
does not bear it. On the way to that every man has to fight his
battle. And this is the battle of benevolence, as I call it. That is
to say, every man is born a great way oflT from true benevolence,
and he has to fight his way up to that state against powers within
and circumstances without. So that if a man comes to that higher
ideal which is set forth in the Gospel — the ideal, namely, of one
who addresses the whole force of his being to the making of others
better and happier — he comes to it by a succession of victories. He
earns it by hard spiritual endeavor or conflict.
There is no happiness in this world like that which one mind
can produce upon another. Almost all our ideas of true happiness
— certainly all when we have risen to any considerable degree of
culture and refinement — are ideas of the happiness which one mind
produces upon another. Our social gatherings, if you look at their
last analysis, amount to that. When we are to receive company,
we prepare our rooms so that everything shall be the most cheerful,
We dress ourselves so that every man shall seem the most comely to
the others. We lay aside all controversy, and all topics that lead
to controversy — for no gentleman talks politics in general com-
pany. We lay aside everything that is disagreeable, and that will
tend to divide opinions. We go as far as we can in the direction
of good nature. We say to ourselves, " I am going to meet So-and-
So ; what will please him ?" AVe think that Ave Avill talk to this man
about his farm, to that woman about her children, and to tho other
person about his last great operation on the street. And everybody
goes to a room prepared for happiness, in a dress that tends to please
other people, and therefore to attract some good-will toward them-
selves. We settle the topics which we Avill talk about and the topics
which we Avill avoid. We do this for the sake of pleasing. And so
TEE BATTLE OF BENE VOLENCE. 2 1 1
thirty or forty people spend an hour, or two hours, each trying to be
agreeable. Seltishness is at the root to be sure ; but everybody says,
"It has been a charming night;" and philosophers say, " How much
better it would be if persons went to see each other oftener, and
learned more about each other ! The horns and hoofs would be
gone if people would get better acquainted with each other. The
corners would be taken off, and the rough points would be smoothed
down. It is ar great thing to have people come together in society.
When they are isolated they cannot be cultivated, of course." And
so they moralize upon it. But the root of the whole matter is this :
for an hour, or for two hours, men have employed the whole force
of their minds, they have exerted all the powers of their being, to
make others happy. There is no such power as a mind has to wake
up and thrill another mind with genuine happiness — and that, too,
when we are even in the lower modes of development.
Where the sphere is limited ; where, for instance, a true affec-
tion has sprung up between two natures ; and where both of them
are kindled to the height and exaltation of their noblest feeling,
how much more intense the happiness is which is produced by the
action of one mind upon another, I need not detail to you.
These illustrations show what is the power in every man to
make men about him happy if he will but use it for that pur-
jfose. And being made happy is not sijnply being tickled and made
superficially happ3% Every man is to " Please his neighbor for his
good to edification." That is, he is to please the best part of him.
He is to please his higher nature. He is not to flatter his vanity,
and feed his body, and gratify his sensuous appetites. He is to
cultivate and build up his own nature so that every part of him,
acting on his fellow men, shall make them happy while inspiring
them, and ennobling them, and lifting them higher and higher in
life. That is the divine ideal of character.
Now, if this soul of ours be inspired, not merely by this general
influence of well-wishing or love, but by a desire to please, to
difluse light, and cheer, and courage, and hope, and happiness
wherever we go, making men feel that we are a bounty of the Lord
to them ; if in addition to natural affection the inspiration of the
Holy Ghost is given, so that there is an ineffable influence, as well
as the more obvious and constitutional power; so that there is that
rare enthusiasm, that ethereal essence which goes with it — then you
have, as I understand it, the whole conception of the character of
man acting in the sphere of time ; namely, that he is a being so re-
created by the power of the transforming Spirit of God that ho
knows how to use his whole nature in such a way that it is a con-
/
212 THE BATTLE OF BENE VOLENCE.
tinual offering of bounty, of love, of hope, of cheer, of faith, and of
elevation to all those among whom he goes. Wherever he goes he
is like a band of music.
Go into the worst street in New York, where filth and vice and
corruption abound, and where there is the crying of children, and
the barking of dogs, and the quarreling of men and women, and let
a baud of music come in at one end and march through, playing as
they march, and the sound of the music will put ■ an end to the
crying and barking and quarreling, and all will stand for the mo-
ment intent ; and when the band has swept out, and the music has
died away on the air, they will take a new breath, and will have to
start new quarrels. They cannot weld the old ones on to the new
ones.
Now, a Christian man ought to go through the world like a band
of music. The great ecclesiastical body* who have recently come into
our midst to bless us, and to excite our admiration, ought to carry
themselves so that their presence shall be like that of a band of
music. They ought to be so full of Christian graces, so full of the
Holy Ghost, so full of all that makes manhood beautiful, and that
irradiates life with hope and cheer, so full of sweetness^ and pa-
tience, and temperance, and forbearance, so full of the spirit of
honoring each other, and preferring one another, and bearing each
the other's burdens, so full of godliness, that all the city shall stand
still and hear these musicians of God play. And when they go
away, the impression which they leave behind them should be such
that all who have seen them and heard them sing shall long to see
them and hear them sing again. Oh, if Christian men were only
keyed to the command, Thou shall love God loith all thy heart and
mind and soid, and thy fellow men as thyself/ if every man loved
every other man as a mother loves her babe to whom she gives days
and nights, her whole time, her strength, her very life; if every
man loved his neighbor as himself; if love abounded in every man,
according to the idea of the apostle, what a different conception
there would be of Christian life! If the work of God is going
on in you, its tendency will be to create in you love toward others.
Meetings and hymns and prayers are ladders by which to climb up
to this; but they are good for nothing unless they lead to it.
Why are the prayers Avhicli go out of your mouth any better than
the Chinaman's paper prayers Avhich he puts into a mill, and which,
when they come out, fly to the winds ? They are no better if they
leave you, as his prayers do him, the same stolid creature as before.
Prayer is good wliich makes you good. And are you good ? What
* The Methodist General Conference.
THE BATTLE OF BENEVOLENCE. 218
is the influence which you exert? Does God, looking upon you,
feel that you love him, as the sun looking upon the flowers, knows,
by the fragrance which they send up, that they love him ? Do your
neighbors lind that your religion makes you so full of sweetness
and beauty that they are always happier in your presence than out
of it?
The battle of life does not consist in the fact that you are per-
secuted for being a Protestant or for being a Catholic. It does not
consist in the fact that, being a Protestant or a Catholic, you are
di'iven out of this place or out of that place on account of your reli-
gious views. It does not consist in the fact that you belong to the
Universalists, or the Swedenborgians, or to any of the "sects," as
Orthodox denominations call them. It does not consist in the fact
that you have to submit to outward persecutions of any sort. The
real persecutions of men in these days are those which are going on
inside of them when they attempt to lift every part of their na-
ture up into the sphere and realm of bountiful benevolence. That
is what we have to fight for. Every step in that direction is a step
of battle.
The first battle which we have to wage is what I shall call the
battle of endowment. Men are born with very diS'erent propor-
tional endowments, with very diflerent temperaments, and into very
difierent circumstances. These three departments constitute the
natural divisions of the battle which every man fights. Some men
are endowed with very much benevolence. No man, however, has
benevolence so large but that there is very much training required
before it can have a victory over all the other correlated faculties.
The very best endowments demand education, drill, and the inspi-
ration of the divine Spirit, before they can be brought to that state
of ripeness in which their fruits shall be fit for all men's tastes.
But there are few men who naturally have benevolence in the
ascendency.
There are many men who are born with a disproportionate con-
science— wliose conscientiousness is excessively large. An eminent
poet, speaking of his life, told me that he supposed it had been
mucli less useful than otherwise it would have been, because he was
so conscientious. He said, " I am so afraid of doing wrong that I
do not do anything, half the time." I do not think it is the
peculiar difficulty of the greatest part of the people in New York
that they are so conscientious that they hold in all the time, and
that they do but little because they are afraid of not doing right;
but I believe it was true of this noble poet. I think that his life was
limited in its outplay on account of the excess of conscientiousness
214 TRE BATTLE OF BENEVOLENCE.
in him. There are many men who are very conscientious; bnt
conscience is not the crown of Christian character. Love is the
master, and conscience must be its servant. Conscience is a
hewer of wood and stone, and a bringer of water. Conscience is
necessary ; it is indispensable. But suppose a man were to build a
house. No doubt it would be indispensable that he should have
good square sills, and strong corner-posts. It would be essential
that all the timbers should be of ample strength, and well knitted
together and braced. But suppose, after all the timbers were iu
place and properly jointed, he should ask me to come to his house
and see him. A house with notliing but timbers would be like a
character which was made up of conscience and nothing else. Be-
fore a man asks you into his house, he covers the timbers up out-
side and inside so that the walls are smooth and pleasant to come in
contact with and to look upon ; and if a man's character is to be
complete, conscience in that character should be covered up by
other qualities and made sweet and smooth. Oftentimes, where a
man invites his friends to see him, the ceiling of his house is fres-
coed, and the floor is richly carpeted, and the rooms are light and
cheerful, and on every hand are tokens of hospitality. Hospitality
does not ask you to sit on a log because a log is necessary to the
building of a house. But many men are square-built, conscience-
framed men. I would as lief sit on the square end of a log all my
life as to live with men who, though they have consciences, are
harsh and unlovely and unfruitful because there is nothing iu
them to cover up that conscience Conscience is desirable and
necessary; but in order to make it \ ^lerable, love should be thrown
around it. Conscience is the frami of character, and love is the
covering for it.
Some men are born with a keen sense of truth and justice. I
admit that truth and justice must be fundamental parts of Chris-
tian character ; but I say that truth and justice are not the ideals
of Christian character. They are partly the materials out of Avhich
it is made ; but the essential element is always love.
Some men are born with large self-esteem. I like it, I like to
see a man have it, and I wish I had more of it. It breeds self-
respect. It breeds a sense of individuality — of separateness. It
breeds, also, that sense of dignity which makes it a matter of im-
portance to a man's own self what he is, and where he is, quite in-
dependent of other men's thoughts, and quite independent of all
surrounding circumstances. It is a grand element ; bnt it tends to
ambition ; it tends to coldness ; it tends to check sympathy with
other men. It is centripetal — not centrifugal. It inclines one to
THE BA TTLE OF BENE VOLENGE. 215
draw all things in toward himself, rather than to give of what
he has to others. It makes a man think that he is a god, and that
other people should bow down to him. It creates in him a dis]5o-
sition to punish men who do not respect and worsliip him. When
it is in excess it is one of the most dangerous and one of the most
tormenting of faculties. It must be subdued by the spirit of love.
One of the most illustrious instances of the subjugation of this
quality is seen in the case of the apostle Paul. He was a man of
great and cruel pride, as we know by his persecuting spirit ; but he
was changed by the transforming power of Christ's love. And
after his pride was changed, how he centered himself on love ! How
his life was wreathed about with the blossoming vines of love!
How he was like a mountain of Paradise wherever men found him !
But he was not changed in an «instant. Men think -that Paul
was converted all the way through when he Avas cast down on the
road to Damascus. No ; he was three years in Arabia ; and it was
twenty years before much more was heard of him. It was a long
time after this memorable event before he came out with his letters,
and presented to men the various developments of his experience.
He had many struggles, and endured mucli suffering, before his
victory over pride was achieved. Grace inspires a man to fight for
such a victory, but it never brings him to it instantaneously. It
■works in us to will and to do. It stirs us up to fight the battle. In
other words, it gives such an education that benevolence shall com-
pletely supersede and govern conscience, self-esteem, love of appro-
bation, and all that is below them of the lower passions.
When a man goes into the church how do we question him,
generally ? We say to him, " Are you convinced that you are a great
sinner ?" " I am." " Do you feel that you have sinned against the
law of God all your life long ?" The man thinks that the law
of God is something g^-eat ; that it is something afar off. He has
been taught that he has sinned against something or other — that
great law ; but he does not exactly know what it is ; and he says,
" Yes, I have sinned against the law of God." " Do you think that
you deserve God's wrath and curse?" "I hope I do." "Do you
feel that you have repented of sin ?" "•! think I have." " Do
you think that God has changed your heart, and has given you a
new one ?" " I hope he has." " And do you mean to lead a Chris-
tian life ?" " I do." « Go on to the next."
Now, all of that is, in one point of view, very well ; but, after
all, do you think that man understands that he is called to this
life, to this battle, or to this education, if you choose to call it so,
"by ivhich all the forces of his nature are to be transformed from
216 THE BA TTLE OF BENE VOLENCE.
an earthly level of self-seeking or of serving himself to this serving
of other men ?
When the man gets home, after having been examined, on going
into his house, he sees sitting in the large plush chair which he in-
tended for himself, the maiden aunt who never was very agreeable
to him, whom he had to take care of, who came on to him against
his wish. Seeing her in that chair, he is irritated. At night, the
child says, " Father, can't I sit up ?" " No, you can't," he says.
" Go to bed." The child does not know what the matter is, but
dares not ask, and gets a candle and goes to bed. Why is it that he
is in such a fit of irritation ? Simply because this aunt had his
chair. She knew that it was his chair, and knew that he liked to
sit in it; and yet she occupied it, and deprived him of the enjoy-
ment of it. He has just been«before the Examining Committee,
preparatory to joining the church, and the first instant that an op-
portunity is presented to him of giving up his pleasure to some-
body else, he flies like a struck tumbler all to splinters.
The next morning does he begin the battle at breakfast ? A
man who serves at the table has not a few chances to favor himself.
There are many ways in which a man can serve out a steak or a
chicken so as to save the best for himself. It is a straw that shows
which way the wind blows. And does he forego this advantage and
take the poorest himself?
In his house is a little orphan girl who is not very comely,
and who is shiftless and disagreeable. Does he show a shining
face to her ? Does he extend to her any sympathy or encourage-
ment? Does he excite in her a desire to please him because he
is kind to her ? Not at all.
Is there in him the spirit of the Lord Jesus Christ ? Is there in
him that spirit which leads him to say, " I am willing to wash other
people's feet,"? There was nothing mora, menial that a servant
could do, in the time of our Saviour, than to wash another's feet ; and
yet Christ did it, in order that he might say to his disciples, " I that
am your Lord and Master do it, and you must do it." You must bow
yourselves down to the lowest places where man suffers or sins,
and there you must become his servant in love, and must serve him.
There is not a child in the household that is not your master, and
that you ought not to be a servant to. There is not a rheumatic and
ugly creature in your neighborhood that you ought not to serve.
There is not a poor man that you meet in your routine of business
that you ought not to be Sir Bountiful to. Do you like these
things? When you Avere asked to enlist under the banner of Christ;
when you heard the silver trumpet blowing, and saw the white flag
TEE BATTLE OF BENEVOLENCE, 217
floating, what visipns you had ! You wanted to join that army and
go with those men. But when it comes to the feet-washing, how
do you like that ? Have you joined the Lord ? Are you willing to
put your hand underneath the men who need help ? Do you love
disagreeable, quarrelsome folks ? Do you know how to be patient ?
Do you know how to be patient not only with men that are good,
but with men that are bad, and wickedly bad ? Do you know how
to be as patient with others and their provocations as Christ has
been with you and your infinite provocations ? Do you know how
to be as patient with other people's children as with your own ?
What do people think a Christian is ? What is the popular ap-
prehension on this subject ? Is it that he is a person who is most
patient and forgiving ? What is the general definition of Chris-
tianity ? Do not some folks think that it means a kind of insurance
policy, and that it has little to do with this life, but that it is a very
good thing when a man dies? Are there not some people who think
that it is a sort of rude covenant by which a man will be saved ? 1
think that there is an element in conversion which insures salvation ;
but that sordid idea of being converted so as not to founder, and
for the sake of being brought safely into port, is the lowest and least,
part of Christianity. Before you are a full Christian, you are to be
like your Master. There is a cross for you somewhere. You are to
be like Him who, when he was reviled, reviled not again ; who
being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with
God, but (smptied himself of reputation, and took upon himself the
form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men ; and who,
being found in fashion as a man, humbled himself, and sufiered
death for you ; and who taught you what to do by the illustrious
act of washing his disciples' feet. Do men think that religion is to
keep Sunday ? Keeping Sunday is a good thing. Do men think
that religion is to have fast days ? Fast days may be proper to those
who can stand them. Do men think that religion is to perform
certain devotional acts ? Such acts may be right and proper. But
the vitality of religion is not in these things.
When Peter heard the cock crow, it was not the tail feath-
ers that crew; the crowing came out from the inside of the
cock. Eeligion is something more than the outward observances
of the church. It does not consist in forms and ceremonies and
symbols. It is the life that is inside of men that constitutes the
religious element. And in that inside life no man can do other
than contest.
Then go from faculty to temperament. Some men are sluggish
of temperament ; and they justify themselves on that ground. They
218 THE BATTLE OF BENEYOLBNGE.
Bay, "You know that I have to wake vip before I can do so and so.
Temperaments cannot change." They excuse themselves for a great
many delinquincies on account of the sluggishness of their temper-
ament. Other men are of a fiery temperament. They are nervous
to excess. Other men are thoracic in temperament. They generate
an enormous quantity of blood. They are red in the face — fiery red.
Others are of an abdominal temperament. They digest too much
food, and it assimilates too slowly, and they become gross and flabby,
and are inclined to sleep a great deal. And the somnolent man
justifies himself for this that and the other fault on account of his
temperament, just as the fiery man justifies himself on account of
his temperament. But is it not the duty of each man to subdue
his temperament to the power of Christian love ? Is there no work
required of you in transforming your nature into the likeness of the
divine Spirit ?
Then, men are surrounded by all the inequalities of life. We
find them subject to various circumstances. It is hard for a man
who knows more in his little finger than another man does in his
whole body to be subject to that man, whose body slopes in the
wrong way, — is biggest in his feet and runs to a point at his head.
It is hard for an intelligent man to be under an iguorant man. Espe-
cially is it hard, when he is a spiteful man, to answer not again, and
not only not to answer again, but not to want to answer. It is hard
for a man to be so subdued that he can obey the injunction of the
apostle when he says to servants, " Be obedient to your masters,
slaves." It is hard to be obedient to one's master even when he is
gentle ; but it is far more so when he is forward.
Can yon take the position in which providence places you, though
it be in the scullery, in the kitchen, or in the back shop ? Can you
bear, patiently, to be a pauper, a bankrupt, among men whom, in
many respects, you can look down upon, and have them point at
you, and speak slightingly of you, and avoid you, or, wlien they
meet you, not see you until you have passed, and then turn
around and say of you, " He has failed, and he is of no ac-
count "? Can you take all the contempts of life, all the flings at your
misfortune, all these inequalities, and feel that you have been put
upon ; can you feel that you are an object of envy and jealousy ; can
you feel that your character has been maligned ; can you feel that
you have been dealt with foully and have been wronged ; can you take
all that comes in your natural life ; can you see your name used for
slanderous purposes; and then can you say, " Dear Lord, thanks for
these rough schoolmasters to teach me in the book of life"? Can
you turn right around and pray for those who despitefully use you ?
. THE BA TTLE OF BENE VOLENOE. 219
Here is a man who has shot you through your children, and
wounded you to the very quick ; here is a man who has attacked
you in your honor ; and all that is evil in you says, " Damn him,
rise up and curse him ;" and can you stand and say, " Jesus, Master,
now let me be like thee "? Can you say, " I pray for him '? Can
you say, " Open love, open pity, in my heart "? Can you say, " 0
let me, by patient continuance in well-doing, put to shame these
men who ai-e persecuting me "? Can you do good to your enemies
and not let them know it ; can you not only not put obstacles in
their way, but take them out of their way ; can you open a heart
full of balm, that, like a garden, shall pour out upon them the
sweetness of perfume ; and can you do these things because you are
a Christian, because you love Jesus, and because you are trying to
live so that you shall be by his side in the eternal world ? Is that
your idea of being a Christian ? And do you suppose that you can
do such things without a fight ? Do they not require a battle, and
a royal battle ?
I have developed this view of what it is to be a Christian for
the sake of sliowing that the Scriptural idea of piety, though it ex-
horts to activity and the exertion of strength, enjoins the milder
qualities of the Spirit, such as love and meekness and humility.
When you go through the New Testament, and search out Christ's
teachings, and put them together, you will find that they point to
the royal manhood of a love which is supereminent over all that is
in you, and makes you, toward all men, gentle, happiness-giving,
courage-inspiring, cheering, shining, so that wherever you go you
carry joy. A man from whom children run away when he comes
where they ai*e, ought to examine his evidences quickly.
Though when you go among persons, they may not, acting
under prejudice, at first like you, you ought to see to it that
their dislike of you does not last long. You ought not to stay a
week in any man's house without his thinking better of manhood
for your staying there. You ought not to be a teacher in a school
without making sure that the scholars have a better feeling toward
you when you leave than when you come among them. It is your
business to " let your light so shine before men, that they may see
your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven."
How many clerks have sat in church and seen their employers
partake of the Lord's Suppei', and, knowing what they did in the
store, said to themselves, " AVell, if that man is a Christian, I thank
God that I am not one !" What a testimony that is !
On the other hand, a child brought up by infidel or unbelieving
parents, sometimes says, " I thought religion was all a pretense or
220 TEE BATTLE OF BENEVOLENCE.
delusion ; I was taught to think so ; but I have been with people
who I was satisfied, by the way they lived, had something that I
have not ; and I want that something, whatever it is." When they
see the exhibition of that grace of God which turns a man's whole
soul into an orchard of fruit, or a garden of flowers, and sweetens
his disposition, and makes his life beautiful, they want it.
Now I am prepared to give you my idea of a church. I believe
that a man has a right to be a gardener. Any man who loves flow-
ers, and can raise them, no matter whether he can trace his lineage
back to one of the apostles or not, has a right to raise them, and
call himself a gardener. If a man can trace his pedigree from
period to period, straight back to the apostles, he is no worse for
that, and he is no better. Who a man's ancestry were does not
make a particle of difference with what he is. A man who has the
power and skill to raise fine flowers is a gardener, and deserves to be
called one.
What is a garden ? It is a place set apart for raising flowers,
Wherever there is a place set apart for raising flowers it is a garden,
if flowers are raised there. What is a church ? It is simply a col-
lection of men who undertake to subdue all their forces to the law
of love; who undertake to use their thought-j^ower, their senti-
mental-power, their whole nature, their time, their business, every-
thing that is in them or around about them, to regulate their life
according to the Spirit of God ; who undertake, in all that they do>
to act under the influence of kindness and love. What do they
come together for ? To help each other do it. They come together
to intershine upon each other; to give each other the advantage
of counsel, of sympathy, of succor, and of insi)iration. Where two
or three are gathered together in the spirit of the Lord Jesus Christ,
there is the germ of a church.
" Well, what about government ?" Nothing about government.
"Well, what about ordinances?" Nothing about ordinances.
" Well, what about the ministry ?" Nothing about the ministry.
You may have as much government or as little, as you please ; you
may have as many ordinances or as few, as you please ; you may
regulate the affairs of the ministry as you please ; but the essential
elements of a churcli consist in the disposition of its individual
members who love God supremely and their fellow men as them-
selves. A man who does love God and his fellow men thus, is fit to
be a member, and is a member, of the invisible church. A church
is not a hereditary institution ; it is not an artificial thing ; it is the
gathering together of sanctified benevolences in individual men.
That constitutes a church.
TEE £A TTLE OF BENE VOLENCE. 221
Suppose I should go into a vast stone building that was filled
full of funereal-looking pews, and that was made to look like
a sepulcher, very little light being allowed to come in, and
should see rows of coffins standing in all the pews ; and suppose I
should go around and look at these coffins, and read the inscrip-
tions on them, among which was this eminent name, and that emi-
nent name ; and suppose that I should be told that this place, filled
with coffins, in whom were men as dead as door-nails, was the
church of the living God ? It would not be one particle more hor-
rible than to go into great assemblies of men, pompously sur-
rounded, who were dead to God, dead to love, dead to all spiritual
elements, and whose life was a life of envy, and selfishness, and
jealousy, and all uncharitableness, and call that God's church. Not
only are all such men dead, but they ought to have been buried
long ago ; for they stink ! Is that a church yonder ? What
makes it a church ? Stone on stone ? What makes it a church ?
Timber on timber ? Why is it a church ? Because it holds a con-
gregation vast as a caravan in a desert, and as desertly sur-
rounded ? What is it that makes a church ? It is the spirit
of the Lord Jesus Christ dwelling among men, and saying to
them, " No greater love hath any man than this, that he lay down
his life for another ; and ye should lay down your lives for others."
The towel ; the basin of water ; the washing of the feet ; the sym-
pathizing with all men and women, however good or however
bad they may be; the giving one's life-force for the sake of making
others happy and better — these things belong to the church of
God, and to the lives of the members of that church. They
are tKe lifters who take hold down low, and are raising society up.
They are the bountiful, the joy-producing men, who can stand
under their load, and carry it, and smile as they carry it, though it
be a cross, a yoke, a burden. They are Christians who, being
fought, can return good for evil ; who, being cursed, can send
showers of prayers down on the heads of those who curse them. Ifc
is such men that make a true church. You must begin on the in-
side to make a Christian church. You cannot begin on the out-
side. The church of the living God is one in which the divine
Spirit of love reigns.
How many churches have we according to this definition ?
There is one church that has never gone into captivity. There is one
church in which the law of love has always been supreme. It is the
church of the cradle. It is the church of the household. It has
its saints — its saint mother and its saint father. That is a church
where love is the prime element, the sustaining law, the educating
222 TEE BA TTLE OF BENE VOLENCE.
force, the life-principle. And if you could gather a hundred fami-
lies into a church who should carry with them this spirit of love,
and manifest it wherever they went, in all the spheres of life, do
you suppose that anything could withstand their influence ? If a
body of men and women, filled with the fire and zeal of the Holy
Ghost, should go forth, giving supremacy to love in all the offices
of the intellect, the imagination, the heart, appearing before men
as glowing witnesses of this fundamental quality of Christian life,
do you suppose that city could long go without its pentecost ?
Brethren, we have tried the cudgel, we have tried the sword,
"we have tried vehement declamation, we have tried eloquence, we
have tried controversy, we have tried conscience, we have tried
everything, in our efforts to subdue the world. There is only one
thing left, and that is love. If that fails, the world is damned.
We have not loved enough. We have not been patient and zealous
enough. We have not been glowing enough. AVe have not opened
th heaven so that where we stand there is seen the light of the
glory of God, as it shines in the face of Christ Jesus. We have not
brought prayer as a great battery to bear against the world. But
when we do get all these mighty forces to act cooperatively, in pla-
toons, I believe the latter-day glory will begin to come fast.
I do not believe we shall ever be able to resist and bear up
against the theories, speculations, skepticisms, that are in the world,
by any power of mere ratiocination or statement — though there is
a subordinate work in that direction. I believe that no matter who
goes right or wrong in regard to philosophies, these are not enough.
I am willing that Mr. Darwin, and Mr. Huxley, and Herbert Spen-
cer, should march on. They may analyze and synthesize as 'much
as they please, but one thing I am certain of: that when heaven
and earth shall pass away, there Avill be one thing that will not
pass away, and that is a symmetrical, powerful, manly character,
keyed to love, and conducted on the principle of love. And if
there are denominations or sects or men who are teaching any the-
ology so as to bring up ranks and multitudes whose characters are
formed upon this pattern, they will stand against any heresy or
false philosophy that shall be urged in any quarter. Facts will
overthrow theories ; and when facts cohere, and bear upon a single
point, they are irresistible.
The sublimity of life consists in sanctified human nature. And
in the power of loving men, who Mve to use all their forces per-
petually in sympathy and harmony, to produce glory to God in
the highest, and good-will among men on earth — in this su-
preme fact there is that which no man can gainsay, or wants to
gainsay.
TEE BA TTLE OF BENEVOLENCE. 223
Oh, tell me not that unbelief is to rule the coming times ! Tell
me not that the school of the atheist is to rob the heaven of all
hope. Tell me not that corruption is my God, and that the grave
is my judgment day, that remands me back to dust again. Tell
me not that all I have hoped and believed is but a fantasy — but the
lining of the sepulcher — but the frescoing of the grave. I do be-
lieve that out of this school of life there is coming up an army of
men who mean something more than annihilation. I believe that
the grave, dark as it looks, is but the door through which the
nobler part of men- — faith, hope, love — is ascending to the royalty
of an everlasting existence.
Away wnth immortality, if it be but the transferring of pride and
selfishness to another sphere; but if immortality is the love of God
bred in the souls of men, filling the heaven with sweetness, and
filling eternity with joy unspeakable and full of glory, then I hail
it ; and with heart, and soul, and endeavor, I lift my life toward
it, and pray that though I have not attained, I may by the grace
of God yet attain to the resurrection of the just, and that I may
know what it is to dwell among the spirits of just men made per-
fect, Jesus the Mediator of the new covenant, and the eternal Father
of love.
224 THE BATTLE OF BENEVOLENCE.
PRAYEE BEFORE THE SERMOK
We rejoice in thee at all times, our Father; or, when we do not rejoice,
at least we have peace. We have peace even though it be in small measure.
We hope when peace seems to fail. From hope we gather peace ; and from
peace joy ; and joy upon joy mounts up, at times, lull of glory. And yet,
these are intermittent. It is but at times that the light is clear. We walk
by faith when we cannot walk by sight. We live in the sight of the invisi-
ble, and in the hope of that which we cannot see. Thou thyself art the
invisible, and thy realm, our home, is invisible, and all that go out from us
are bidden ; and into that great world which to the flesh seems shadowy
and vague we go, quickened by the Spirit with apprehension to make it
clear and plain, and are architects of our own hope. We build, and fill with
a blessed population, the city of our God. And thou thyself, O God, art to
us that which we would make thee to be. So, then, that we may not build
after the pattern of baseness and selfishness and pride, grant that we may
have that holiness of heart without which no man shall see the Lord. May
we be better in order that we may see God, and know how to fashion him
to our thought and imagination gloriously — ^far above the inflrmHy of
man — ^far above the experience of the flesh. Of things borrowed from our
innermost life in our most exalted moments may we fashion the realm and
royalties of the heavenly land, and may our thoughts be made fruitful by
the inspiration of the Holy Ghost. May we have that spirit of revelation
and of light, that inspiration, which kindles from the hint the whole reality,
and from the germ teaches the full growth. Grant that we may know
how to behold thee, and to see that that which we behold is our Lord and
our God. Take away from us, we pray thee, all those things which sball
make our God an idol — which shall lift up into exaltation and make the
object of our praise that which is base and wicked among men. Deliver us,
we beseech of thee, from idolatry of thought and imagination. It is little
that we turn away from blocks of wood, from idols made of stone, and of
clay, and of gold, and of silver, as from temples consecrated by men's super-
stitious hands, if yet in our thoughts we raise up before us a view of God
which is idolatrous and wicked. Deliver us from this. Grant that we may
have that purity, that fullness of love, that sense of justice, which spriugs
from the bosom of love. Grant that we may have such conceptions of
holiness in men, and of greater holiness in God, as shall fill the realm with
One altogether lovely, the Chief among ten thousand— One in whom, when
the eye beholds him, it shall rejoice— One who, when revealed, shall call
forth from all that are in heaven above, and in the earth beneath, and
throughout all creation, rapturous songs of joy and acclamations of royalty.
Grant that we may have such conceptions of thee that we shall walk with
God— and the true God. And may we know that thou art the true (iod to
us in that we are becoming like thee, changed into that wisdom which love
pi'oduces; into that justice whic'a comes from love; into that purity which
is inspired by love; into that patience, that strength, that fruitfulness,
which springs from the divine root of love. Reveal to us this realm of
thine. Make known to us the secret of God in this.
We pray, O Lord, that we may hate all forms of selfishness, and love
that which is right. May we know how to do things that pertain to our-
selves without selfishness. May we know how to have power in ourselves,
and yet to have it as a royal scepter reached out perpetually to help those
who are most needy. Give us health-power but that we may minister to
the sick. Give us the power of refinement but that we may cheer and soften
TEE BA TTLE OF BENE VOLENCE. 225
the ways of the rude. Grant unto us the fruitfulness of thought, grant unto
us the power of the higher nature in things intellectual and moral, that we ,
may be a light to those who are ia darkness. May our life be as sweet
music, to call those who are in solitude and in sorrow forth from their
misery. And everywhere that we go may there be that courage, that good
cheer, that bountifulness, that patience, that gentleness, that fortitude in
sufferiog, that abundance iii good works. In every way, which shall make
meu behold our Lord and Master iu us. As even the smallest water can
shine out the stars from its surface, though they be riot there; so, though
we be small, and the circumference of our being is diminished, yet thou
hast granted us to reflect thee so that men seeing our good works glorify
our Father which is in heaven. Oh! let there be good in us inwardly, not for
our sakes alone. May the fragrance of the divine indwelling be such that
all men shall take something of the sweetness of our experience.
We pray that thou wilt grant thy blessing to rest upon all who are with
thee this morning in this place. Thou knowest who are loved of thee. All
are loved; but some more than others. Thou knowest who lay their head
iu thy bosom ; and thou knowest who stay further and further off from thee.
Thou knowest the very ones that shall betray thee. Yet look upon all thy
people with compassion according to their necessities. And we pray that
ttiou wilt grant, this morning, to every one who is present, that he may hear
in his own spirit his own name called. Even as Mary heard her name in
the garden, and knew her Lord, whom she could not behold by the seeing of
the eye, so may there be those unspeakable tokens of love between the©
aud every one that shall be manifest tokens that thou art theirs and that
they are thine.
We pray for those especially who are lost. Draw near to them as need-
ing thee most. Come unto those who are most faithless in duty, as needing
more inspiration. Arouse those who are slumbering. Quicken those who
are stupid. Give force to those who are feeble. Awaken the interest of
t/hose who are indifferent. Give connectedness to those who are but
occasionally Christian or Christ-like. Grant to every one as he severalty
n^eds.
We pray not for those who glow and abound in joy. We pray not for
those who have enough,— to whom comes the summer with all its blessings.
Look upon the winter-stricken, the barren, the tempest-tossed and not com-
forted, the unstable, the unhappy. We pray that thou wilt grant thy
mercies to rest upon all such, in the several relations in which thou hast
placed them in thy providence. May all those in the household have a
blessing of God,— to them the sweetest, and purest, and nearest to the
heavenly church of any 0:1 earth. Grant that they may stand in its midst,
not unmindful of all the goodness of God to them. And if sorrow shall
come to thy people, grant that they may be able to bear it. Even as a
soldier carries his shield into the very battle, and is protected by it, so gi-ant
that the love of God may be their shield against disappointments, and
trials, and burdens, ani all those irritations which require fortitude and
continuance in well-doing. Give them strength to overcome all opposition
and all obstacles. Grant that in every household there may be in large
measure a victory of Christian hfe over all temptations to envy, or maUce,
or quarrelsomeness, or honor each to himself. Grant, we pray thee, that
meekness, and sweetness, and disinterestedness, and the even and eontii>-
nous flow thereof, may abound iu every household. And may we have a
hepse of our imperfection, in that we are coming short every day, and
that we fail to perform our duty to each other. How few of us wash each
other's feet! How few of us prefer each other ! How do we, in our gifts,
only bid for larger gifts to be received again! How far are we from the
226 TEE BA TTLE OF BENE YOLENCE.
grace and bounty of the forgiving God, who never gives but to forget that
he has given ! O Lord our God, we pray that we may be so trained and
disciplined in the household in the royal lore of love that we may be able to
communicate the love of Christian men and women to the world around
about us. Oh, grant that we may be as salt ; that we may be as light ! May
we carry no more wounds to the world which is already overthrown and
oast down. May we not strike with the violent. May we not add envy, and
jealousy, and evil feelings to the turbulence of the tide that already sweeps
down toward the dead sea of human life. Oh, grant that we may briug
silence to clamor, and music to discord, an d better living to quarrelsome-
ness ! Grant that we may eo teaching men patience by the exhibition of it;
that we may be meek, aad humble, and sweet-minded, and strong to
endure, uuprovokable. bearing abundant fruit, so that, like our Master, we
may have not only peace for ourselves, but peace to give to others. And
so, as great music drowns all discord, may the greatness of Christian living
around about hide the wickedness and sadness of human life.
We pray that thou wilt enlarge our conceptions of Christian life. May
we seek thee in the heaven al>ove, and in our hearts, and in our duties ; and
may we learn to believe that thou art reigning in the heavens by the
power with which thou dost visit us in our limited experiences on earth.
O thou blessed God that hast promised so many things, fulfill them to
us. Thou hast fulfilled some of them. Thou hist strengthened us in hours
of great sorrow. Thou hast given us patience to go through great trials.
We have been taxed and tasked, and thou hast supported us. How many
hearts are able to bear witness th^t but for thy rod and thy staff tae valley
aaid the shadow of death would have been too much for them! Yfe have
stumbled in the way, but they have comforted us; and by their help we
have endured. By the grace of God we are what we are to-day.
And now, we pray that we may not forget all the lessons of the past ;
and when the same storm comes agiin, may we not have the same
cowardice because thou art asleep. Grant that we may look forward into
life, and strive hereafter to have more calm and steady faith in Him that
rules in heaven and upon earth. May we trust God in darkness and in light ;
when we are prosperous, and when we are in poverty ; when we are uuder
vehement assault, and when it is calm. Grant tha under all circumstances
we may find thee an all-sufflcient Saviour. Grant that in every time of
need, and every time of joy, we may find thee near to U'^. A?id may our life
be as the life of those who hear without ceasing the chime of heavenly bells ;
who are always in reach of the heavenly fragrauce; who are not far from
that heavenly land which easts its twilight and comfort into the stormy
experience of this lower life.
Our children call us. Our parents are among those whose voices cry
"Come," from the sacred battlements. How many companions who were
dear to us in life are there, and behold with sorrow and sadness our fading
faith and faint courage, and cry out, " How blessed are they who persevere
to the end, and are Anally saved!" May all the blessedness of that other
life, and our hope therein, come brightly to us this day, and day by day,
until, at last, having overcome every adversary, and having maintained
our place in the field, and standing after the battle has swept by, we shall
be counted as worthy to enter as victors, crowned, not by our own hand,
but by thine, that we may take our wreaths and laurels, and east them at
thy feet, O Captain of our salvation, Jesus, Lord, Master, saying. Not unto
us, not unto us, but unto thy name be the praise and the glory forever and
ever ! Amen.
TEi: BA TTLE OF BENE VOLENCE. 227
PRAYEK AFTER THE SERMON".
Grant, our Father, that we may not be discouraged by the greatness of
the way. We stand as those who have inherited much land, but know
little of husbandry ; and when we look out upon the toughness of the soil,
and upon the work that lies before us in subduing it all to fruit, and to
flowers, we are appalled. If we had not known that more were for us than
■were against us, we should have been discouraged long ago. If we believed
that thou didst shut out the beams of thy providence from us, and didst
leave us to wander without thy guidance or love, life would have no cheer
nor hope for us. We should be of all men most miserable. For what has
• made life dear but cheer and hope? We have been encouraged by thoughts
of noble characters and heroic lives. But if we believed that there was an
end of us at death, who could weep enough upon the grave, or could fiud
comfort, that had buried his de^d ? It is belief in resurrection and in a life
beyond that sustains us. We rejoice that it is not to be such a life as we
have had here. On earth, we have limped ; we have been in hospitals; we
have beeu woinided, and maimed; we have been attacked on the right and
on the left; we have been overthrown. And then, at the call of Gcd, we
have forsaken our sin, and risen up, and come out of our i^rison, convoyed
by the angels of heaven. Through thy help we have obtained victories.
Though we have had defeat, we have had triumph. And gradually our
passions have burned out. Nature has had less and less power upon us,
and grace has had more and more; and at last we have reached the land
of true benevolence. O Lord, we thank thee for these experiences of the
jjower and royalty of divine love in our souls.
And now ^e pray that we may renew our evidences, and ask ourselves if
we are like Christ. Why do we wear his name? Are our lives full of bright
suggestions of him that shine on every hand? Is his spirit in us to restrain,
inspire, imbue, and sweeten life? O bring us to thyself. Lord Jesus. We
do not wish !o go home with nothing. We desire to carry thither many
graces— til ueh fruil. We would not go home so as by fire; but even so
would we go ratlier than be banished forever. Oh, for a victory that shall
put some lauiel on our brow, so that thou shalt delight in us as thine own !
We know how it is with our children-. Lord Jesus. How we love them!
How we loug for them! How pleased our pride is with their good! How
great is our sh&me at that which is evil in them ! How we carry them in our
arms! And are we better than thou art? Dost thou not carry us? Art
thou not longing for us, and working in us to will and to do the things
which shaU make us meet for glory? We beseech thee to go on with thy
work. Be not impatient with us. Thou that didst suffer death itself, wilt
thou not with thy sufferings give us all needed things? Teach us to be like
thee. Bring us through life, bring us victoriously through the gate of death,
bring us within the sounds of aogel voices, and then, within the circle of
thy heart, caught by the inspiration of God, and flying swifter than angels
fly, our ransomed souls shall go home to thee to be forever with the Lord.
And to the Father, the Son, and the Spirit, shall be the praise forever
and ever. Amen.
XIII.
Bearing One Another's Burdens.
INVOCATION.
Look fH'acionsly over upon ns from tliG sphere of joy, thou that art the
Head and Hope of the world. Give us something of thy life — its light and
its joy. Breathe strength from the Source of all strength, and pvuity from
the Heart of holiness. Grant, we pray thee, that our faint thoughts and
feelings may he divinely quickened, and that our obscure understandings
may be enlightened. May we rise up at thy touch; may we hear thy call;
may we feel after thee, and find thee; and may this be the joy of the Lord
to-day, that we have walked with God. Assist us in the services of instruc-
tion. Give forth thine influence, that we may enter into communion with
thee, and speak to thee in prayer face to face. Bless our fellowship in sacred
song, our i-ejoicing together, and our praise of thee. Help us in ovu' medita-
tion together. Go home with us, that all our social joys to-day may be blessed
of God. And grant that thus, from Sabbath to Sa])))ath, we may be prospered,
and prepared for that rest which remaiueth for the children of G od. "We ask
it for Christ's sake. Amen.
13.
%
BEAEII& OIE AIOTHER'S EURDENS.
"We then that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the ■weak,
and not to please ourselves."— Rom. XV., 1.
*' Bear ye one another's burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ. For if
a man think himself to be something when he is nothing, he deeeiveth him-
selt."— GAi. VI.. 2, 3.
A very obvious remark; yet one that needs to be made as often
as any other, because men think that they are Christians, often,
"when they have not the first sign of inward Christian feeling, A
man " thinks himself to be something" of a saint when he lacks every
trait of saintship. And it is very significant that this remark should
follow the command to hear one another's burdens^ which is evi-
dently the same in sentiment with the command of the apostle in
Eomans, to hear one another^ s infirmities.
What is it to hear ? If we were reasoning after the old and ig-
norant philosophy, we might be tempted to say that it is to take the
thing away — to have it transferred to us ; in other words, to have
it " imputed " to us — as if that could be done. Bearing another's
burden must mean such a carriage as shall either take it away
from his consciousness, or shall strengthen him to carry it. If
you interpret such figures literally, it is possible for you to carry
another's burden. If you see a little child overburdened, and ex-
erting its immature strength, it is quite possible for you to relieve
that child of its load, and so to bear its burden. But if you give,
as both of these passages do, a metaphorical sense to this thought, and
transfer it from the real to the spiritual realm, you cannot literally
take another's burden from him. You can, however, do that which
is equivalent to it: you can carry yourself so as to comfort those
who are in sorrow ; so as to give courage to those who are in de-
spondency ; so as to give light and hope to those who are in dark-
ness and despair. You can bear a man's burdens by carrying him.
When we carry a man, it^s not necessarily the whole outward man,
but the real man, the man of thought and sympathy and feeling,
that we carry. We are to so conduct ourselves that we shall carry
StTNDAY Morning, June 2, 1871. Lesson : Rom. XIV. Hymns (Plymouth CollecUon) :
N08. 40, 658, 716.
232 BEAMING ONE ANOTEEWS BUEDBNS.
people who are in distress and trouble along on their way. That is
what our strength was given for. Ye that are strong ; ye that have
made attainments ; ye that are wise and circumspect ; ye that are
sinlessly prudent ; ye that in benevolence are round and red like
the setting sun, full-orbed, its work accomplished ; ye that are strong
in virtue, in taste, in refinement, in orthodoxy ; ye that are good,
and know it, and are proud of it — your special business is to bear
the weaknesses of the weak, and to carry the burdens of those who
> are overburdened. It is the type of attainment, it is the true nature
of Christian experience, to inspire such a tendency, to foster it, to
nourish and to perfect it.
A burden, as I have said, is a physical weight, according to the
original signification of the word. A burden may also be physical
in another sense. Anything which annoys, or which inspires paiLi
of any kind, may be regarded as a burden. Men or women
may therefore be born into life with physical burdens which they
cannot shake off nor rid themselves of, while' yet, your sympathy
and kindness may help them to bear those burdens. There are
many things which we look upon almost unthinkingly. If one is
born into life inheriting the sins of his ancestors, in a coiidition of
permanent unhealth; if he is feeble of digestion, of lung, or of
brain, that is indeed a burden. It may be that one is born into life
a dwarf, or humpbacked, or with a certain awkward hugeness of
size. It may be that he is born with deformities of face. His fea-
tures may be marked distressingly. He may have Byron's plague-^- J ^^XL/u
club-foot. He may have that which is as hard to bear as any ^
of these things — excessive homeliness. One may be born with an
intrinsic clumsiness of gait. There is what may be called con-
genital awkwardness, such as old Doctor Sam Johnson had, and
never got over.
If you take pains to observe, you will see that the number of
persons suffering in this world is very small until you yourself begin
to suffer; and then it is astamshing how many you will find that
are suffering in the same way that you are. If a man has autumnal
catarrh, he will think that about every other man has it, before he
gets through many years ; although, before, it scarcely occurred to
him that there was such a thing in the world. When once you
suffer an infirmity yourself, your sympathy leads you to detect a
■great many others that suffer.
Now, there is a great deal of suffering in this world that we are
apt to pass over. We that are strong, we that are handsome, we
that are healthy, we that have no deformity to conceal or that ia
unconcealable — we slight those who have to bear inconveniences
BEAMING ONE ANOTHEB'S BURDENS. 233
through life ; who are perpetually chafed through pride, or vanity,
or disease of one kind or another. But it is for us to look upon
those who are less fortunate or less comely than we are, with such
Christian sympathy and compassion that we shall bear their
burdens.
All right-minded parents early instruct their children neyer to
ridicule persons who are unfortunate without any fault of their
own — those who have any deformed or disfigured part. Where
a man has any such misfortune for which he is not respon-
sible, it is worse than brutal for children to make it a matter of
ridicule. Kindness, delicacy, and helpfulness are due from us to
such persons. And yet, how many young Christians, in a pro-
miscuous gathering of persons upon a picnic or on a holiday, feel
that because they are Christians it is their business to pay
especial attention to those who are the least favored ! How rarely
do you see such a fulfillment of Christian duty! How much
more often do you see the love of art manifested by young men in
the picking out of the handsome face, the fair complexion, the
comely form, the bewitching eye, and the penciled eyebrow, while
the poor, half-crippled girl, pale of cheek, from whom all traces of
beauty have passed away, sits in the corner with no one to do her
reverence !
Ye that are strong, bear with the weak ! Ye that are strong,
bear Avith other's infirmities ! Ye that are strong, bear the burdens
of men ! Honor, by your sympathy and kindness, those who have
such an unequal lot in life, and make piety something else besides
a mere sentimental experience !
Men's outward conditions, also, constitute burdens and infirmi-
ties which come within the scope of the Christian spirit. Men, of
whom life is full, who do not know how to take care of themselves,
and whom we consequently blame, belong to this category. "We
that are thrifty ; we that know how to tie the bag so tight that the
hand of charity cannot pick the knot — how we look with contempt
on men who are so shiftless that they cannot tie the bag so but that
everything which is in it leaks out, and leaves the bag empty ! We
have no patience with shiftless folks who do not know how to get
along, who cannot take care of themselves, and who are always a
burden to somebody.
But do you suppose that you are half as much annoyed by their
shiftlessncss as they are themselves ? They have to take care of it
all their lives long, and you have to take care of it only once in a
while. Do you suppose a man who fails to look through the com-
plicated affairs of life does it on account of any vicious spite ? Do
234 BEABING ONE ANOTHER S BUBBEN8.
you suppose a man tliat does not know how to calculate to-day so
as to go successfully through to-morrow is guilty of a special sin
that he meant to commit ? Nobody is so hard toward shiftless
people as those tight, prudent people who are never shiftless. It
would do you good if God would make you shiftless for about a
month, and put you where you would receive the kicks and cuffs
of men's lips. Then when you got back to yourself again, you
would have some compassion on men who are weak, and do not
know how to get along.
It is a burden to be out of work, and not knew where to find
anything to do. It is an easy way of getting rid of men that are
out of work to say, " Go West — go West," as if a man could fly ; but
it is not the Christian way of treating them. We are commanded
to bear one another's burdens. It is a burden to be obliged to fol-
low an uncongenial occupation. There are men who ar6 not
adapted to the pursuits which they are following. There are men
who have never found out their true vocation. There are men who
are ignorant of what they were sent into the world for. Where
men who are endowed with sensibility, and taste, and a power to
work in ideas, are obliged to drudge and perform menial services for
which they are not fitted, they are subjected to a heavy burden.
And under circumstances where divine providence shuts men up to
things that are distasteful to them ; where they are under-ranked ;
where they are by nature qualified for higher spheres, but are com-
pelled to serve in lower ones, they are entitled to our sympathy and
encouragement. But we say to such people, "You ought not
to feel above your work ; you ought to know your place." This is
very insulting; it is adding injury to misfortune; it is most
unchristian.
I never see an ill-harnessed horse, in a hot summer day, whose
collar grinds and grinds till the skin is gone and the blood comes,
but that must toil on, his ignominious driver helping him now and
then with an extra whack, as he stops to cool his fevered shoulder — I
never see this without indignation. Nor, when I am in my better
moods, do I ever hear without indignation the insults which are
heaped upon those men who are wrongly placed in life, and who,
goaded on in their avocations, without cheer or sympathy, are dis-
contented, and fret and chafe, and fain would be released from the
tasks which are imposed upon them.
We all think, " Blessed are the poor" ; and yet, if there be one
blessing which we would prefer not to have more than another, it is
that of poverty. How much we exhort our children from it ! How
seldom do we feel it to be our duty to bear the burdens of men who
BJSA RIXG ONE ANOTHER'S B URDENS. 235
are poor ! " The destruction of the poor is their poverty." In the
end all the losses of society come down on the poor. In the end
the taxes are gathered off from the poor. In the end the vices and
crimes in society avenge themselves on the poor. As we look upon
it, sometimes we mark it as the result of crime, and sometimes as
the result of weakness. Here and there, in single instances, we
pity it. We throw a shilling into a man's hand, not so much be-
cause we desire to serve him, as because it is the cheapest way of
getting rid of the trouble of serving him. How seldom do we bear
men's burdens. How seldom do we find a Christian man who takes
up a poor man into his heart, and understands him, and really lives
by him in such a way that in the judgment-day that poor man can
turn to Christ, and say, "I never should have been here if that man
had not carried me by his love. He bore my burden that was too
heavy for me. He bore me under that burden."
How often do we look upon men who are in the stress of life^^
and overworked, without any regard to their constitution ! How
often do we bitterly come down upon men, striking them with the
fang of rebuke, when, if we could see their inward liTe, and could
see what a taxation they bear, and how ill adapted they are to en-
dure the burdens that are put upon them, we should be far more
likely to pity them ! With what relentlessness and heedlessness do
we make men's burdens heavier, that are already as much as they
can endure !
Where men are assailed, justly or unjustly as the case may be
(seldom is it that judgment is meted out with anything like fairness
in this world) ; where men are reviled ; where they are set at
naught ; especially where they who have been prospered have come
down ; where nien of good reputation are found out in some wrong,
and are exposed to the full battery of rebuke — under such circum-
stances, how seldom is there a pity which, looking upon their
suffering, comes to them in the hour of their distress, of their
disgrace, and it may be of their merited punishment, simply be-
cause they are men, suffering !
We see a man stripped, taken out of the things that are con-
genial to his life, thrown into a van, whirled away to the
Island, or to some penitentiary, provided with an ignominious
dress, and herded with criminals. He has walked in the places of
prosperity, he has done wrong, and he has gone to hell on earth.
People say, "Served him right; and if a dozen that were
around him had been sent too, it would have served them right."
Looking at him, we thank God that we are not as that "jail-bird"
is. How ruthlessly we take our dagger-tongues and smite those who.
236 BEAMING ONE ANOTEEE>S BUEBENS.
by their own willful misconduct, or through their infirmities, have
fallen into crime ! How seldom do we think of men, in looking
upon them, " They are God's children, and my brethren still" !
Still more emphatically are men's malformed faculties or dispo-
sitions burdens to them, and to others also ! A timid spirit that is
forever coming short through want of courage ; an irresolute mind
that never completes anything on account of incessant changeable-
ness ; a violent temper that seems set on fire of hell, and scatters
infernal sparks on every side ; a selfish pride against which, as
against the side of a rugged mountain, many fall and are dashed to
pieces ; equivocation, innate or educated ; inherent cunning ; lying
dispositions ; cruelty, inbred, radicated ; coldness ; hardness ; av-
arice ; stinginess ; violent appetites, running to strong drink ; out-
rageous hunger, running to gluttony — these things are burdens to
men.
" Well" you say, " do you mean that we are to take the whole
Newgate calendar of vices, and say that a bad man is merely an un-
fortunate creature, and that we are to sit down and shed tears over
him ?" No ;• but I do say that there is no limitation in the nature
of the Lord Jesus Christ, or in any nature of true Christian sym-
pathy. Whatever is a burden, whether it be natural or acquired,
whether it be within or without, to any man, you are to attempt to
bear in the spirit of the Lord Jesus Christ. You are to bear his
infirmity, and help him, in such a way that he shall not be de-
stroyed. There is nothing so criminal and vicious, nothing so
wicked, nothing so mean, but that it is the province of love to
cure it. Ye are God's medicines sent forth into a world that is
filled with all manner of burdens by reason of sin, or misfortune,
or some providential cause ; and whether the burden be traceable
to providence, or to circumstances, or to the man's own fault, there
is not a man who lives on the globe who is not a fit object of
your compassion and sympathy and helpfulness. Whether you live
in the house with those who are carrying burdens or not, whether
they are in your neighborhood or not, whether they are by the way-
side, or wherever they are, it is not for y6u to set your face against
them. There is an atoning duty which devolves upon every man.
Love is atonement. Love is burden- bearing. Love is sanity. The
love of God is our life, and our soul ; and that which he has done
and is doing for us we are to do for each other. We are to make
whatever we have of heart, of intelligence, and of strength, avail
not for ourselves alone, but for those who are around about us; for
those that need it, and especially for those that need it most.
Consider how you would act if these vices and monstrous pas-
BEARING ONE ANOTHEWS BURDENS. 237
sions, instead of being a part of the machinery of rational, intelli-
gent and responsible agents, wei-e transformed into the actual
forms of wild beasts. Is it intemperance? Suppose you figure
to yourself a lion in ambush springing out upon a man ; suppose
you saw the man trembling under the lion's paw, how would
you feel ? But suppose, instead of being a lion, it was Satan in the
form of an intemperate appetite, worse a thousand times to the man
than any real lion of the desert ? You would run to rescue a
man from an outside lion : will you not do anything for a man
who has one inside ?
What if it were sickness ? What if it were a man swollen with
dropsy ? What if it were a man crying out for water with lips
parched by a merciless fever ? "Would you not moisten his tongue
and his brow, and fan the fever away ? But is any fever of the
body so pitiable as the fevers which come upon the soul ? Would
4'ou have compassion upon a man who was attacked by an outward
disease, and none for a man whose soul was diseased ? Are there no
bearers of men's inward burdens ? Are not these burdens to be
borne, even though men may have brought them upon them-
selves ? Are not bad men punished by what they suffer from
their transgressions ? Is it not enough that such men have to live
with themselves, and take the consequences of their own actions ?
And is not a man the consequences of whose conduct are going
on, working, and laying up wrath against the day of wrath, to
be pitied ? Is not he to be pitied who for his transgression has to
bear the infliction of law, of public sentiment, and of his own na-
ture ? In all w^ays of looking at it, he is most to be pitied who is
most variously and most hopelessly wicked.
There is an unchristian way and a Christian way of treating all
wicked people. The unchristian way is to experience great disgust,
and even hatred, for them, and to visit upon them what may be
called a virtuous rebuke. Now, a virtuous rebuke of evil is not only
right but is commanded; and yet a virtuous rebuke of evil men or
evil women is nowhere commanded. We often permit ourselves to
drift into slighting remarks, into the dissection of men, into the
registration of their faults and failings.
. There is an innocent banter, there is a kind using of ourselves,
as when a mother pats her child, and the child knows that it is
not chastised; or as when the mother pinches her child, or in any
way disports with it, and throws it hither and thither, and seems to
neglect it, and makes believe that she is displeased with it. All
these ways love knows. There is a large and manly way of indulg-
ing in this sort of thing which hurts no one, and leaves no sting
'Z'6S BEARING ONE ANOTHER'S BURDENS.
behind. I do not think that you need to treat your friends as though
they were crystal glass ware, and fear to put them in hot water or
steam lest they fly to pieces. There is a robust and manly carriage
in this direction which a true and generous nature seldom errs in.
But that other thing ; that calm and conscientious dissection of
people ; that gluttony of carrion ; that most righteous putting
of people into hell ; that utter indifference to people ; that
analyzing of them ; that exposing of them ; the narration
of their faults ; the repetition of them ; the arguing of them ;
the gathering force in the statemeint and restatement of them ;
the discussion of men's characters till you have made mis-
creant sinners of them, and set them down there, and lifted
yourself up here, so that there, is a gulf between you and them
which is wider than that which was between Abraham and the man
in hell — how shall I describe that ?
How many persons there are that consider themselves Chris-^
tians, who, because it is true, say, of a man, " He lied ; he stole ; he
was drunk," just as if the fact itself were not the worst thing, and
did not make compassion more obligatory ! Just as though a man
were not a sacred thing in the eye of God, even when he is in trans-
gression ! Just as if a man were not the more to be pitied, the
worse he is ! And where can you find instruction for any such feel-
ing, or thinking, or doing, as characterizes your conduct toward
others ?
Still less have we a right to separate ourselves from bad men, and
refuse to have anything to do with them, keeping ourselves rigor-
ously away from them. You know that that man forged. You
know that he was convicted of counterfeiting. You know that he
was once a penetentiary man. You know that he has been a smug-
gler. And if, in the street, you see him coming doAvn on this side,
you quietly go over to your grocer's on the other side. You will
not come near him. You keep away from him. You do not pity
him. You simply have contempt for him. Is that right ? Is that
following Christ? No man follows Christ who separates himself
from sinners. It is the distinctive peculiarity of our Lord's example
that when he went, even on festive occasions, to dine, as for in-
stance, with Matthew, his chief disciple at that time in the matter
of property, he was followed thither by a throng of publicans and
sinners. "Publicans" were tax-gatherers, and extortioners; "sin-
ners " were courtesans of the street. Christ's conduct was such that
these people everywhere followed him, to hear what he had to say.
His kindness to them begat in them a yearning sympathy toward
him ; and when he Avent in the most public manner into a house
BEAMING ONE ANOTHER'' S BUEDENS. 239
they went in too ; and they were not — on account of his autliority,
apparently — cast out. The Pharisees said, " Why doth your Master
eat with publicans and sinners ?" His answer was, " I came not to
call the righteous, but sinners to repentance. They that are whole
need not a physician, but they that are sick." A virtuous heart is
the doctor of a vicious heart. A godly man is the physician of an un-
godly man. You are sent, not to efFulge in the light of your own
self-enjoyment. The first duty of being good is reflex : help those
who ai'e not good. This was the teaching of the Master. And you
cannot do it if you make separations so that the good always
live with the good, and the bad always live with the bad. How,
under such circumstances, shall the heart of goodness heal the
heart of badness ? Bear one another's burdens. "If ye love those
that love you," saith the Master, " what thank have ye ? Do not even
the publicans so ?" That is not being Christian men which leads
you simply to love goodness : but that which leads you to find in
goodness more mercy and more sympathy than you had before. By
the love of goodness you should become the creator of it in those
tliat are deficient in it. The completion, the rounding up, of the
love of virtue in you consists in its making you more tender to
those who are unvirtuous ; more patient to those who are faulty ;
more burden-bearing to those who cannot carry their own burdens.
Not he is the best man who merely cleanses himself, but he who
by cleansing himself teaches others how to be cle*»^-' '— • ^"^^ '
But it will be objected, "Are we not com*''-*»^^ed to abhor that
which is evil, and to cleave to that which > -^^^^^'^^ Certainly ; but
are we anywhere commanded to abh(V" ^i^^^rs because we abhor
sin ? What is it to abhor eviL? -=5 it the sudden disgust which
arises, which ought to be moT^' '^-^rj* and which is designed to put
us upon our guard, and ir- aspire us with self-defensory power, till
we have time to Is^'^'iH" course more deliberately? Every man
ouo-ht at the first '"'^'ipulse of evil to feel repugnance at it; but that
is -aot the higher kind of abhorrence of evil It is an inspiration of
a lower kind. He hates evil most who hates it so that he Avill anni-
hilate it. There is animal hatred, and there is divine hatred.
Two men hate malaria. One says, "I will not settle here; I
will pack up my things, and clear out." The other says, "I
hate it; but I am going to work to-morrow morning, with my
whole force, to drain that marsh." He goes to work and digs a
ditch through it, risking his health, and removes the stagnant
water. Who hated the malaria most, the one who ran away from
it, or the one who cured it? Is not cure a witness of dislike more
than neglect?
240 BEABING ONE ANOTHER'S BURDENS.
A mother hates the disease that is in her child ; but does she
abandon the child, saying, "I hate morbid conditions of every
kind," and let the child die, as a testimony to her dislike of viola-
tions of natural law ? Is it not a better testimony to her hatred of
disease, that night and day she lingers over the little sufferer till
she brings it back to good health ? Is not that a better way of
hating disease than the other would be? That is the true hatred
of sin which kills it by kindness.
Two men meet an ugly, uncombed, venomous little specimen of
boyhood. Did you ever see a boyhood that was not a mystery of
providence ? Are not boys always in men's way ? Evidently boys
have no part, no place, and no function in society. If they could
be shot, at birth, like an arrow, straight up to manhood, that would
be another matter ; but they are not. And did you ever know a
neighborhood that had not the worst boys in the world ? Did you
ever know a neighbor whose boys were not the worst that ever
lived ? Well, here is a lying, fighting, thieving urchin ; and these
two men meet him; one hates him so that he kicks him, and
says, " Get out of the way !" He hates him so that he cannot re-
strain his foot nor his lips. And the other hates his ways so that
he says, " Come here, my boy. Is there nobody that cares for you ?"
He pities him. Finding that he has no father nor mother, he says,
"Go wit! me fnd see if I cannot make a man of you." He takes
iiini ^oi^. ...^ • votes his time to that boy, and sticks by him until
iv has cujeu .!-,.. o»On6 lying and fighting and thieving propensi-
ti- ^, and made a man ».^ ^1^. Now I want to know which hated
wickedness the most— the-- r^e that kicked it, or the one that cured
it?.
• "Abhor that which is evil. - .^t is the sign of abhorring
evil ? That you take measures to remu>. - it. If there is evil in a
man, do by that man as God does by yoLt \aar his infirmities;
bear his burdens; bear his sins. By the powei of Uie -roodness
which is in your heart, as far as in you lies lift L, . ,,^r:' ^ his
degradation, and cleanse him.
Two women hate, above all things, the loathsome sores, the'
ichor, the smells, the weaknesses of human nature, as they mauifeSi
themselves in hospitals; and one of them goes home, saying, "I
will have nothing to do with them." She is influenced by senti-
ment, and she says, " There is in my mind a poetic sense of beauty
which God has infixed there; and I abhor such dirty, nasty places."
Does she abhor them as much as the other woman, who, gathering
her white robes of innocence about her, goes among men wlio are
rude and coarse, and patiently dresses their sores, which turn the
BEARING ONE ANOTBEB'8 BURDENS. 241
very flesh, almost, with disgust, and by the sweet spirit of all-
tempering love maintains her place ? One comes in and is healed,
and goes out again, and another comes in; and through the months
of the long weary war she gives her life to relieve the suffering.
And does not she resemble the Master, who bore our sins and
carried our sorrows ? Who are you that dare put yourselves over
against the vices and crimes of an evil man, and say, " I am
judgment-day to you! I condemn you for your wickedness"?
" Vengeance is mine, saith the Lord." We have never had it lent
to us in the slightest degree. Yet, if one could have the chamber
of judgment uncovered in him, and see all those thoughts, all
those vivid and lurid emotions of hatred, which men's wrong-doing
has excited ; if one could see how he has gone on from day to day,
and from week to week, and from month to month, and from year
to year, till his heart is merciless and vengeful, what a revelation it
would be to him ! What a literature will yet. one day be deciphered
from the stony hearts of unmerciful men who have lived to con-
demn, without pity or remorse or any salvable influence, their
fellow men ! And all this time God has been patient with them.
He has forgiven their debts while, they were taking their brother
by the throat, and saying, inexorably, '*' Pay me what thou owest."
They have demanded purity and uprightness and justice; and yet
they have been pensioners on God's patience and gentleness on
account of their own misdeeds and faults.
It is a terrible thing for one man to speak evil of another ; and
I think it is worse to think it. If you speak it, the man has time
and opportunity to defend himself; but he cannot trace the
thought. It is neither heroic nor manly to permit in yourselves
judgments which nobody can reverse. It is a sign of Christian
manhood where one, though all the selfish instincts of his nature im-
pel him to do otherwise, thinks mercifully, and waits to be gracious,
and, if he cannot form an opinion without severity, withholds his
judgment till he can form one that shall have more mercy in it.
Take care of the secret thoughts, of the inward judgments, which
you form of men.
But is there no danger that we shall be corrupted ourselves ? Is
there not often in evil a seductive quality ? Are there not many
sins of passion which are inflammatory and infectious ? Are the
young to rush headlong under influences which may sweep them
away before they are aware of their danger ? Oh, no. I do not
mean that this duty is to be administered heedlessly. I do not
mean that there is to be no caution, no forethought, no calculation.
I remember that He who told us to be harmless as doves, also told us
242 BEAEING ONE ANOTHEE>S BUBDEN8.
to be cunnmg as serpents. We are to discriminate. That wliicli a man
can do a child cannot do. That which is safe for a young man is not
safe for an innocent virgin child. I know that there are evils done
in places where men should not venture themselves. I know that
those who have fiillen by intemperance ouglit not to seek their com-
panions in drinking saloons where they may fall again. There
should be discretion used in regard to measures of active relief which
are to be taken. I do not undertake to say that we are to turn our
houses, regardless of our households, into hospitals, or correctional
tribunals. I merely say that our actuating spirit, our inner heart
and life, must not be disgust and hatred and revulsion. However
prudent may be the mode in which we carry it into effect, the root-
feeling of our nature must be in harmony with the • divine in-
junctions, "Bear ye one another's burdens;" " Bear the infirmities
of the weak, and not please yourselves."
I remark, in view of these practical suggestions, that the condi-
tion of the whole world, and the method by which it is being devel-
oped in the providence of God, imperatively demand that evil shall
be cured by pitifulness, and by the medicinal power of goodness. I
admit that there is a place for force ; and yet in the order of de-
velopment, latest and highest (for the latest is always the highest),
is the power of sympathetic love. It is that Avhich has been devel-
oped more and more as time has rolled on. We have come to that
point where, it seems to me, we may Avell dispense Avith many phys-
ical elements — many curative elements which are wrapped up in
fear. Virtue has grown strong enough in this world to introduce
elements that are higher and diviner.
I notice particularly fiicts like this : that we think of New Or-
leans as a very bad city, and of Boston as a very good city. But I
would rather undertake to cure the wickedness that exists at the
bottom of society in New Orleans than what exists at the bottom of
society in Boston. The wickedest men are usually found at the
bottom of the best communities. Why is this ? Because good
men, growing stronger, and sympathizing with each other, con-
federate, and form a crust of virtue and piety and intd^igcnce ; and
they stand absolutely separated from those who are below them.
There is a great space between the top and bottom of society under
such circumstances. There is no fellowship between them. TJie
consequence is that the bad are set free from the restraints which
sympatliy, if it existed, would place upon them. Therefore, in
cities that are preeminently good, the bad are worse than they arp
anywhere else.
On the other hand, where there is not so much classified good-
BEAMING ONE ANOTHER'S BVBDEN8. 243
ness, where the good do not separate themselves from the bad,
where there is more fellowship and more sympathy between the
top and the bottom of society, the bottom is more accessible, and
not so much neglected. I do not think that there is anything in
jails that can cui'e men. I do not think that men can be cured by
stripes. I do not think that hanging cures men of anything; or
long imprisonments; or scorn; or the indignation of public sen-
timent. None of these things are curative. I do not think that
anything has the power to cure except a loving heart.
When the child was dead, and the Prophet came to heal it, he
stretc]:ed himself out on the child, and put his lips to the child's
lips, and his hand on the child's hand, and his heart to the child's
heart. Then it was that the breath came back, and the child, sneez-
ing, showed that life was returning to it. And I do not believe
that there is anything which cures hearts in this world ^ besides
other liearts laid upon them, brooding them, and imparting to them
something of their own sympathy and goodness. If a heart cannot
be cured by a loving heart, it is incurable.
I hold that there is such a thing as the right of men to associate
with each other on tlie ground of elective atBiiity; but care should
be taken in determining where the line runs. I say that men have
no right to stratify society so that there shall be no sympathy be-
tween the different classes. It is not right that there should be no
intercourse between the top and the bottom of society except that
which consists in sending missionaries by the former to the
latter to tell them Avliat to do. If all the men who are lifted up
by virtue, if all the prosperous men who are kept clear of vice, if all
the men who are strong in various excellences, only made themselves
brothers to those who are less fortunate than' they, so that there
was no doubt of their sympathy and help, do you not think there
would be a clasping of hands between the top and the bottom ? I
do not say how it can be done ; I do not think the way is found out
yet ; but I say that so long as goodness makes cream of one side of
society and skim-milk of the other, we shall not see that millennium
of which we are dreaming, and for which we are hoping. Your
goodness is not to manifest itself in rhetorical display or in the im-
. pulse to preach to men. Your living self is wanted. Your heart is
tlie missionary. Your life is the sermon. Your love, your confi-
dence, your trust, your helpfulness, your geniality, your sympathy
in every form, is to lift up l)at] men, to encourage tliem, and to help
them.
Jlake such discriminations and exceptions as you please; but
you Avill not be in the right path if your discriminations and excep-
244 BEARING ONE ANOTHEWS BUBDENS.
tions give you leave to do nothing. If your goodness does not
rouse up goodness in some one else^ if your courage is not a help to
some discouraged man, if your taste does not refine some coarse
nature, if your life is not a blessing to those who are less favored
than you are, then you are not a child of the Lord Jesus Christ.
I remark, once more, that this central idea is to interpret the
character of God, and is to be the foundation of the theology of the
future. We have had a theology which taught us of a God that
was of severer and sterner stuff than to allow of sin. We have been
trained from our childhood to believe that God hates sin, and that
the prayers of the wicked are an abomination to him — misinterpret-
ing the whole passage. But more and more the mediatorial and
medicinal element of the divine character has come out ; and at
length we have a full disclosure of it written in that life which is
familiar to us all. We are no longer obliged to see God'ri character
through metaphysical thoughts. We now see it in Christ. And
what is the character of God as manifested in Jesus Christ, but
this : the character of One who so loved the world that he gave his
Son to die for it, not wishing that any should perish, but wishing
that all should live ? Longing for it with all the power of his
being, he laid down his life for those that were sinful and were his
enemies. The characteristic feature of the divine character is a love
which bears the sins and infirmities of the universe for the sake of
healing them. The medicinal and mediatorial character of Jesus
Christ is the representation of the central element of the divine
character ; and all ideas of the divine character must be
formed after the pattern of that character, wherever it may
carry you. I do not say where logic will lead you (logic is
a false guide nine times out of ten); but I say that what there
is of goodness on the earth is the result of the long-suffering
patience of a God who bears with the sins and transgressions of
men ; and that it is the mercy, and the love, and the gentleness,
and the pity, and the saving kindness of God working in men,
that draws them up toward him.
What makes things grow ? The peach-stone, after being
planted, has first to be dealt with by the frost, so that the meat
shall have a chance to sprout. But when the stone is cracked, what
makes it grow ? The wind from the north does not help it; the
freezing does not coax it: the burying bank of snow does not solicit
it. Not until sweet and pitying rains find it; not until it is whis-
pered to it that summer is coming ; not until the birds begin to
sing in the trees ; not until the sun, returning from the equator,
sheds blessing over it, does it think of growing. Then, out of
BEARING ONE AN0TEEW8 BUBDEN8. 245
sweetness and softness it plunges its roots down, and lifts its stem
up, and is nourished by the warmth and patience of the summer,
day and night. All terror, and all thvinder, and all severity, pro-
duce no growth. And it is not till God pities, it is not till Jesus
Christ loves, it is not till God's whole providence showers its bounty
on those who are heirs of salvation, that we feel that inward and
upward shooting which betokens growth.
We are children of God in proportion as we are in sympathy
with those who are around about us, and in proportion as we bear
with each other. How sacred is man, for whom Christ died ! And
how ruthlessly do we treat him ! Oh, my brother, oh, my sister,
oh, father and mother, you are of me, and I am of yon ! We have
• the same temptations. We are walking to the same sounds. We
are upon the same journey, out of darkness toward light ; out of
bondage toward liberty ; out of sin toward holiness ; out of earth
toward heaven ; out of self toward God. Let us clasp hands. Let
lis cover each other's faults. Let us pray more and criticise less.
Let us love more and hate less. Let us bear more and smite less.
And by and by, when we stand in the unthralled land, in pure
light, made as the angels of God, we will pity ourselves for every
stone that we threw, but we shall not be sorry for any tear that we
shed, or any hour of patient endurance that Ave experienced for
another. Not the songs that you sang, not the verses that you
wrote, not the monuments that you built, not the money that you
amassed, but what you did for one of Christ's little ones, in that
hour will be your joy and your glory above everything else.
Brethren, this is a sermon that ought to have an application
to-day, on your way home, in your houses, and in your business
to-morrow. From this time forth, see that you are better men
yourselves, and see that your betterment is turned to the account
of somebody else. And consider yourselves as growing in grace in
proportion as you grow in patience and helpfulness. Consider
yourselves as growing in piety and as growing toward God in pro-
portion as you grow in sympathy for men.
246 BEAliING OlfE ANOTHER'S BURDENS,
PRAYER BEFORE THE SERMON.
We rejoice, oiir Father, that our wanes never cease. "We are returning
to thee every day and every hour, drawn by our necessities. And yet, such
are thy thoughts of mercy, so great is thy bounty, tbat all the way by which
we go is a way strewn with blessings. Thy thoughts of relief are before our
thoughts of want. Thou art standing over against every door of necessity.
Thy hands art; full. Thy heart is warm with desire to confer blessing. It is
more blessed to give than to receive. This we have learned. It is more
blessed for thee to give than to receive. Therefore, thou art God over all,
blessed forever. And we desire to cast out every shadow of doubt, every
film of fear, and to come with faith and hope, and make known all our
wants, which need no exposition before thine eye of love, and to ask that we
may receive blessings perfumed in the asking, and made sweet in the recog-
nition that they are given of God. ^
So, may we be tied to thee by our necessities. So, may our life seek
thine. May our joys point toward thee. May we seek thee not only in
times of sorrow and burden and distress, but in times of hope and cheer and
courage. And be thou ever present with us, that our lives may be hid in
thine. And we pray that there may be such inward commuDication
between thee and us, that there maybe such vibrations of thy thought in
ours, that we shall think as thou dost. We pray that our hearts may be so
sensitive to the tides of thy feeling that all emotions shall flow in concur-
rence with thine. So dwell in us. so abide with us, and so may we be one
with thee, even as thou art one with. the Father.
We pray that thy blessing may rest, this morning, upon all that are
gathered together in thy presence, as they severally need. We need not
pbint thee to them, nor open to thee the speciality ol their necessity; for
thine eye beholds all. And there is no one who needs to cover his heart
from God by reason of his guiltiness. There is no one who needs to hide his
heart from God as though thou di^dst not discern all the secrets and intents
thereof. We pray that every one of us may come boldly to the throne of
grace to obtain help in time of need.
We pray for all those who ai'c in discouragement; for all those who are
heavy-laden; for all those who are in the dark, or whose minds are filled
with doubt, and distress and vacillation.
We pray that thou wilt grant to all those who are in bereavements, or
who stand dreading the descent of thy stroke, the consolation of thy Spirit.
Give them such cheer and such courage that they shall be steadfast,
unmovable. We pray that thou wilt grant that, if there be houses of dark-
ness, that if there be hearts burdened by reason of troubles, there may be
light from thee, and comfort by reason of thy presence.
We pray that ttiose who are standing in the midst of life's duties may be
good soldiers, and carry forward their work courageously to the end. Wilt
thou help all those who are in the riaidst of the battle to discern evermore the
right side; and may they carry out the spirit of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Though they be tossed about and tried and tempted in the battle of life, may
they be found still constant to the right.
We pray that thou wilt grant thy blessing to rest upon all those in our
midst who give their time and strength to the labor of instruction. Bless
our Sabbath-schools, and the dear children that multiply in them. Grant
that their numbers may still increase. Gather together, out from every
region around about, the poor, the dark, the benighted. And may there
still be raised up those who shall be pastors to lead them in and out by the
Bide of still waters and in green pastures.
BEARING ONE AN OTUEB'S BUBBEN8. 247
We pray that thou wilt bless the superintendents and oflflcersof our
schools. May they ^e men of God, and filled with the very Spirit of the
Lord Jesus Christ. Bless those that labor in every field from out of our
midst — those who seek out the neglected; those who visit the sick in
hospitals, and the prisoners in jails. And we pray that there may be more
and more benignly spread abroad in their hearts that generous sympathy
for those who are in trouble which shall, by the blessing of God, lead them
out of their troubles and into a new and oetter life.
We pray that thou wilt grant thy blessings to rest upon all who are
to-day preaching the truth as it is in Jesus. May they themselves have a
richer experience of the love of God in Christ. May they see more and
more plainly the need among men of the regenerating power of God's love.
May they be able more and more wisely to preach the Gospel of Christ,
both as it is presented in thy Word and as it is derived from thy providence,
that men shall be instructed in the right way. We pray that the number
of those who seek to obey thy laws may be muitiplied, and that those who
disobey thy laws may be instructed in a better way, and won fi'om a life of
disobedience to a life of holiness.
We pray that thou wilt spread the influence of the truth throughout
this whole land. Be pleased to remember all those who are in authority.
Bless the President of these United States, and those who are joine d with
him in the administration oi the laws of the nation. We pray that thou wilt
grant thy blessing to rest upon the Legislatures and upon the Governors
of all the States, and upon the judges in our courts, throughout all our
land.
We pray for those who are employed in the offices of instruction in
universities, and colleges, and schools. We pray that thou wilt grant that
tiiose, everywhere, who occupy places of trust may be God-fearing men.
And we pray that this whole covmtry may be prospered, not so much
by avarice and greed as by justice and truth. And may the example of
this people nourish goodness in all the nations of the earth. May pride,
and violence, and superstition, and ignorance, and all forms of corruption,
cease. We pray that manhood may augment everywhere, and that the
nations of the earth which so long have sat in darkness may, at length see
that light which shall guide them to the bright and blessed and final day of
prediction.
Even so. Lord Jesus, come quickly, for the earth doth wait for thee. The
sighing of the prisoner, and the crying of the oppressed — have they not
entered into tliiue ears ? Lord God of Sabaoth, come now forth, we beseech
of thee; and by the power of thine hand, manifested in thy providence, by
that power which from age to age thou art revealing, release men from
their thrall, and usher iu those bright and glorious days when the earth
shall see thy salvation.
And to the f dttier, the Son, and the Spirit, shall be praises everlasting.
Amen.
248 BEARING ONE ANOTHER'S BURDENS.
PEAYEE AFTEE THE SEEMOK
Our Father, we pray that thou wilt admit us to the secret of thy life.
How little we have known of thee! We trace thee on the beams of the
morning ; but how little have we known of thy great curative heart I Thy
thoughts of mercy, thy wonderful pity, thy great patieuce,— how ignorant
are we of these! Thou that mightest have swept the race from the earth
hast been a Nurse, and hast succored men in their weakness and in their
abasement. Thou hast borne us upon the bosom of thy love. The burden
of our sin, the chastisement of our peace, has been upon thee, and with thy
stripes we have been healed. And now thou art suffering for us. Thou
art waiting pat.ontly for our coming. Thou art bringing sons and daughters
home to glory. Thou art more painstaldng with us tban any earthly parents
are with their children. Glory be to thy name for what thou art ! Glory be
to thy name that thou art more and more filling the earth with thy Spirit !
Make men to be more and more like thee, and lead them to treat their
fellow men as they themselves are treated of God. Forgive us all our hard-
heartednecs, and unmercifulness, and cruelty, and iujustice, and unsym-
pathy toward one anotlier. May we be more patient, more forbearing.
May wc be brought into a truer manhood, and so more into the likeness of
Christ until, at last, we shall stand redeemed from every stain of sin, and
from the hatefulness thereof, in thy presence, where we will give the praise
of our regeneration to the Father, the Son, and the Spirit, forever and
ever. Am>en.
TIE INDWELLING OE CHRIST.
"To whom God would make known what is the riches of the glory of this
mysteiy among the Gentiles; which is Christ in you, the hope of glory." —
Col. I,, 27.
This is one of the letters of the Apostle Paul in which he is
kindled to a very lofty inspiration in view of the divinity of his
Master, Jesus Christ. In the preceding verses of this chapter,
which I read in your hearing as a part of the opening services, he
looks upon him in his exhortation as Creator and as Chief in pre-
eminent excellence and glory. He speaks of himself as having
been made a servant of this Lord and Master that he might pro-
claim the knowledge of him to the Gentiles. That is to say, strip-
ping off the covering which belongs to tliis, as a part of the Jewish
history, speaking of it in more modern phrase, Paul beheld the
Lord Jesus Christ as the true revelation and interf)retation of the
Godhead. He perceived, also, that this God was God over all ; not
that he was the national God of the Jews, but that he belonged to the
whole human family. There Avas at that time to him a wonderful
inspiration in the liberty and universality of the Gospel, because he
had been brought up to suppose that the true God favored chiefl.y
the Jews, and that all the rest of the human race were only as their
servants. He declares the riches of the glory of the Master to be
the truth that this God was the God of the Gentiles. And then
follows the language of our text :
" Which is Christ in you [or Christ as revealed in you] the hope of glory."
There arc a great many ways in which we may look upon
Christ. We may look upon him — not disdaining outward things —
in his relations to the inward, invisible experience of men, and
in liis relations to the hidden spiritual Avorld, beheld in the
present and in the future. It is this last revelation which seems to
have kindled the apostle's mind, not here alone, but in many other
instances. It was the thought of Christ's iuAvard, invisible, personal
relations to the heart of man, to the race, a,nd of his relations to
SrxDAY MOBXiNG, Jane 9, 1872. Lesson : Col. I. Hymns (Plymouth Collectloa)
Nos. 2(i0, 147, 163.
252 THE INDWELLING OF CHRIST.
time and eternit}^, that kindled in the Apostle the most enthnsiastic
utterances of his life. And it is impossible that we should come to
a knowledge of the true Christ unless we employ the historical
method, and become familiar with the portraiture of Christ as con-
tained in history. It is not enough to say that this alone will not save
or comfort. It is true that it will not, alone. It is true that one
may study the Gospels intellectually, reproducing from them imag-
inatively in himself a portraiture of Christ that will be transcend-
ently noble, and that yet it shall be a mere imagination, as it were,
of history, not vital, not powerfiiL This is simply an abuse of a
right thing. For, if we be uninstructed in regard to the reality, if
we cannot go back to tJie data which history furnishes, how can we
form any conception of Christ that shall be vital ? The study of
the work and of the character of the Lord Jesus Christ is anteced-
ent and auxiliary to a true experience of Christ.
So, too, there is a study of the character of Christ which may
be called the theologic. Carried to excess it often is ; it is much
abused ; but none the less is there a place fcr it, and a reason for
it. It is a matter of transcendent interest to know whether Christ
himself believed that he was divine as one of three, cohering in an
invisible and mysterious unity with the Father and with the Spirit.
It is important to know what the relations of the revealed God in
Christ Jesus were to law and moral administration, and what was
the nature of his suffering, and what was the relation of that suf-
fering to the great matter of human salvation — whether it was an
influence reflexly upon the mind of God, whether it had some
influence upon the mind of the intelligent universe, or whether it
had some direct relation to a kind of physical structure of govern-
ment. These are questions not without interest. Nay, in some
sense it may be said that though an individual or a series of indi-
viduals may live and thrive in a true piety and in an eminent
Christian experience, outside of theology, yet, taking men collect-
ively, the theological views of Christ will largely determine the pro-
ductiveness of the piety of the church.
Views of the divinity of the Saviour which run !ow will, aver-
aging them through the ages, be productive of a low tone of spiritu-
ality ; and t lie theological views of Christ which range high, and
exalt him, will tend, through the ages, to produce the highest types
of spirituality. Nevertheless, a man may have the theology of
Christ as nearly right as any will have it in this mortal state, and
yet not be possessed of Christ. It is antecedent; it is auxiliary;
it is collateral. Before Christ can be to us what he was meant to
be, there must be something other than either the historical picture,
TEE INDWELLING OF CEEI8T. 253
or the tlieologically conceived character of Christ. It is quite pos-
sible that we should advance beyond the historical method, or the
metaphysical and philosophical method, and that we should have
what may be called a romantic Christ — a Christ of the imagina-
tion.
Men may advance one step b ^yond. Taking the materials which
are afforded by historical invent gation, or theological research, they
may construct a poetical representation of Christ. They may frame
a conception of a being that rules, and may add every element to
it which the best part of their nature can contribute. So, in the
studio • of their own mind, they may be forever painting the
beauty and the glory which inheres in the character of such a
one as Jesus Christ. This character may be one which shall, at
times, excite poetic prayer. It may help devotion. It may have
no inconsiderable influence upon the life of men. But it is not yet
Christ as he is to be conceived of before he is in us " the hope of
glory." The apostle taught, beyond any peradventure, that there
is something more than this — namely, that there is a living Christ
who may come into living sympathy with us, and who may be so
received as to be a part of our own lives, and a part of our inner-
most experience.
It was this conception of Christ, as a living being, exerting a
living force upon living men, and, as it were, mixing with thought,
and feeling, and volition, and action, and disposition, and charac-
ter, and so set home to us that he becomes our Christ — not
the Christ of Jerusalem, not the Christ of the heavenly host, not
the Christ of universal theology, but a Christ formed out of those
materials by which we help to produce in ourselves the sentiment
and the experience of Christ in us — it was this conception of Christ
that it was meant we should have. It was Christ "in you."
It was your Christ, and mine. It was each man's own Christ. It
was a Christ personal to each one. It was a Christ, the thought of
whom, being framed, built, lived with, becomes colored with our
own experience, and is a register of our own life, we writing our-
selves in him as he transforms us by his thought and indwelling
influence.
This personal Christ, or the Christ of actual personal experi-
ence, distinguished from the Christ of history, of theology, or of
romanticism, is that of which I shall speak to you this morning.
I. In order that he may be my Christ, in order that I may find all
my wants met in him, he must be One in whose hands is the whole
sphere in which 1 live and act. He must be Lord of all the causes
which are influencing me ; h b must be superemiu£nt over all the
254 .TEE INBWELLTNG OF CEBIST.
influences which surround me ; he must know me, and control me ;
he must know my conditions, and control them ; he must know the
great sphere in which I am, and control it, or else he is not the
Christ that is adequate to me. It is not needful, perhaps, in the
lower planes of a dull or semi-enlightened experience, that we
should have the sense of a supreme deliverer; hut no man ever
lifts himself up, no man is ever inspired in the higher moods of his
nature, no man ever feels the throbs and throes of a coming
deliverance, no man ever aspires to nobility, or contests in
himself, and strives to release himself from that which is
low and base, and reaches toward the higher and the nobler,
if he does not feel the need of God. When we are look-
ing down we are our own gods, and we feel the might of our
own nature, the potency of our own will ; but from the moment
that a man enlarges immensely the conception of manhood, and
then strives for it in earnest, and means to be something higher
and nobler — from that moment dates the growth of the necessity of
supernal influences. If I had no revelation in that matter, if I had
no concurrent testimony concerning it, my OAvn experience would
tell me that my nature could not go out after that help unless there
was something in me that needed it, and something that answered
to that need. As when I hunger, my hunger says that there is
food ; as when my eye was made, that eye said that there was light
to match it and to meet it ; so in the higher realm of experience, I
do know that certain struggles and yearnings, certain mute wants,
certain indefinite and indescribable experiences, all point to some-
thing higher than I am.
What is it that the vine seeks, day by day, struggling through
the leaves, and twining itself upon whatever comes in its way ? Is
it support ? It would be just as well supported if it lay on the
ground. Why does the vine go still twining up ? It is because it
is in love with the light.
Why is it that men's souls twine, and rise, and aspire ? Is it
instinct ? What is instinct, but this : that there is something in
the nature of the soul which reaches out after a stimulus which it
feels, as the plant grows toward the light which looks upon it and
stimulates it ? As everything in the vegetable kingdom reaches
toward the sun, so the soul reaches toward God. He 3'earns for us,
and we reach out toward him.
Now, if Christ be one that meets my wants and my necessities •
if he be the Christ of history which declares that he is Bread, that
he is a Staff, that he is a Friend, that he is a Deliverer, that he is a
Saviour; if he be all that historically he is declared to be, he must
TEE INDWELLING OF OHEIST.. 255
be supreme over the world, and supreme over its conditious. I ac-
cept, therefore, the rapturous declaration of the apostle when he
says,
"By him were all things created, that are in heaven, anl that are in
earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or
principalities, or powers : all things were created by him, and for him : and
he is before all things, and by him all things consist."
Take the divinity of Christ. My thought of Jesus is, that he
made the whole earth from which I am struggling to get free. And
whatever may be the method of human ascent in this world, it is a
system which has been organized and instituted and conducted,
thus far, by Jesus — by the Saviour of the world ; and all the laws
that relate to it, all the laws that reflexly have to do with it, are in
his hand. He has the control of them. His is the providence which
is woven in them and through them. Christ is one who has con-
trol of the ages, of the nations, of the terraqueous globe on which
the nations tread, of all physical laws, and of all economic laws;
and it is he that has created the invisible realm which wraps this
world as with a swaddling band, where are other spirits, thrones,
powers and dominions. In the hands of this Saviour are both
realms. Therefore when I crave deliverance it is not such a craving
as I feel when I go to the chemist and ask what is the analysis of my
food, and what are the best things for me to eat. It is not such a
craving of deliverance as I feel when I go to the optician and ask
his advice in regard to my eye which is in trouble. It is not such a
craving for relief as I feel when I go to my physician and get
him to prescribe for my bodily aliments. No man Avho is limited
by specialties can give me the help that I need. Nothing short of
one who is Lord over all, visible and iri>visible, is adequate to my
want.
My conception of Christ is, that he is mine : not mine in any
sense which appropriates him to me alone ; but mine as really and
truly as though I were the only human being in the universe. My
father was absolutely mine, although my next younger brother could
say the same thing, and though every brother and sister could say
the same thing. I had the whole of him, and each of my brothers
and sisters had the whole of him. And I have the whole of my
God. The God of all the heaven, and the God of the whole earth,
and of time, and of physical law, and its sequence, and of all invisi-
ble laws, and their sequences — he is my God.
K, II. Next, in order to meet the exigency of my nature and of my ex-
perience, not only have I a Christ in whose hand is the whole
Bphere of earthly administration, but one who loves me. I cannot
256 . THE INDWELLING OF CERIST.
approach any other God. I cannot be conditioned. The dull and
clumsy-minded may possibly approach with conditions, but I am
neither dull nor clumsy-minded. My ideal goes faster than any
possible realization. Do you tell me that God will accept me upon
conditions ? Instantly the attempt at realization comes short.
There is an infinite disparity between the condition and my po-
tency. There might as well have been no condition at all. Do you
say that he will accept me when I am good ? I never shall be good.
Do you tell me that he will accept me when I fulfill his law ? I
never shall fulfill his law. Do you say that he will accept me when
I disinterestedly love him ? I never shall. The more I look into
myself, the more I seem to be a mere fragment of a thing, inchoate,
rude, unperfected, unsymmetrical, with enough spots to begin at,
but few accomplishments ; with rude germs, some sown in good
soil, and some in poor. Here I am full of aspiration, and yearning,
and all manner of mingling influences, which sometimes whirl as
clouds, and at other times lie calm and serene as in tranquil sum-
mer days. There is a consciousness of immense potency to
come ; but there is no sense of perfection, or attainment,
or symmetry, or loveableness. When I look in at myself,
and ask, " What is there that God can love ?" I do not
know. There is little that I myself can love. There is
very little in me that I could love if I saw it in anybody
else. And yet, it is indispensable to me that somebody should love
me. I cannot live without love. It is the heat of the universe.
Philosophers tell us that without heat the universe would die. And
love in the moral universe is what heat is in the natural world. It
is the great germinating power. It is the ripening influence. It is
the power by which all things are brought steadily up from lower
to higher forms. And it is necessary for me to believe that Jesus
Christ loves me. But if you tell me that he loves me because I am
so good, it is a lie. I am not good. Yet he loves me. If you tell
me it is because I am going to be so good, it is false. That cannot
be it. Why does he love me ?
Oh, tell me, if you can, why it is that the mother loves such a
little thing as she does ? Look at it. It does not know how to
look at anything. It sprawls its little mouth. It straggles its little
hands here and there. It is a hardly shapen little piece of flesh.
But oh, how the mother loves it ! It is covered with kisses, that
cannot kiss again. It is pressed to her bosom, that does not know
even how to touch her bosom voluntarily. It is the mere possibility
of something in the future ; but at present, what is it ? It is ap-
parently one of the most insignificant of creatures ; and yet what a
TEE m DWELLING OF CUBIST. 257
tide of love goes out toward it ! Oh, what brightness is in the
mother's eye ! Oh, what gentleness ! Is there anything in this
world that brings out the beauty of womanhood so much as the
spectacle of a great heart pouring itself out on that little something ?
It is the richness of her own soul that is loving it. It is her nature.
Love is there by constitution. It pours itself out on the helpless
child. And is that all ? Not only does it love, but it teaches the
child to be lovely. The child's nursery is the mother's heart. The
cradle in which every virtue and grace is rocked early is a mother's
love. She makes the child lovely by loving, by waiting, and by
training.
I am as a lump of clay. What can the clay do of itself? Put
it upon the potters wheel, and set it in swift revolution, and lay
upon it a skillful hand, and see how the rude clay begins to take on
form. See how it begins to show the most exquisite lines of the old
vases. See how, by the touch of the molding hand, it is brought
to something that it is not of itself.
My God is a God who loves out of his own nature, and not on
conditions. It is not needful that I should be beautiful in order
that he shall love me. It is not needful that I should be patient in
order that he shall love me. Ho loves me because of himself. We
are saved by grace. We are redeemed by goodness. Our salvation
does not depend upon what we are, but upon what God is. He
saves us by the long sufiFering patience of his love. And it is this
sense of the God regent in heaven, who rules throughout nature,
who takes care of providence itself, who is providence, and who has
a nature so royal that it pours love abroad incessantly, as the sun
does light, and of whom it is said,
" He maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain
on the just and on the unjust — "
it is this sense of One who is a God of universal beneficence on
account of the nature which he has in himself, and the nature that
draws men toward him — this it is that I need. Give me this con-
ception of God, and I have something that I can lean on ; some-
thing that I covet; something that is worth believing. The better
you make him, the better it is for me. Who cares how large the
surplus is, when dividends are going to be declared? If you are one
of the- stockholders, the bigger the pile, the better you like it. Make
God as good, as powerful, as glorious as you please ; lift him up and
up, till your very reason faints and can follow no longer; for he
is mine. All the bounty that you put on him, all the crowns that
you place upon his head, all the power that you give to his scepter,
adds to the worth of that which belongs to me. Every conception
258 TEE INDWELLING OF CEEIST.
•which magnifies the grandeur and dignity of God augments the
glory of my inheritance. He is my God ; and what child was ever
unwilling that his father should be honorable or powerful or rich ?
It is necessary, further, not only that there should be to me the
thought of this Christ as the reigning God of actual affairs, of
providence, and so of history, and that he should be a Being whose
nature is transcendent in love, but that there should be more than
that; He should be Christ in me. He should be a Being whose
direct and personal sympathy I recognize, and who is developing in
me the superior qualities of spiritual elements. It is quite in vain
for the apple that is hanging on the bough to-day to rejoice in all
the glory of summer, unless the summer is working something of
itself in the fruit. It is. There is the balm of the summer day ,
but that balm is not alone what you recognize. It comforts a
million roots in the lawn before your house. The summer is not
merely the warm air which you are cognizant of. The cricket
knows it. The grasshopper knows it. The moss knows it. The
very stones, that grow warm and stimulate the moss which covers
them, know it. Ten thousand little delicate insects knov/ it. All
blossoms know it. The leaves know it. The fruits know it. The
summer is working silently but universally. It is in everything.
It fills everything with its own qualities. It develops all things.
And so, not only must my God be the Lord of heaven and the
I* Governor of the earth, but his personal relations to me must be
such that he shall be in me all the time, and must be working
specially within me.
This matter is likened, in the Bible, to hospitality.
" I stand at the door and knock; if any man hear my voice, and open
the door, I will come in to him, and will sup witti him, and he with me."
God comes to men's souls ; he comes to the soul-house of men;
he enters there ;• lie holds communion with them. It is as if a
benefactor entered into a dwelling to bring joy, treasure, relief —
whatever gift he might please to bestow. Christ comes to
me, transforming all that is visible and all that is invisible in me.
I do not believe that God is a person who sits in one place as a
man's body does. I stand here in my body ; but that is not me.
My thoughts are running quickly to and fro. They stretch from
the rising of the sun to the going down of the same. I am where
my thoughts are, and where my affections are. I am conscious
that my inner manhood spreads abroad, and is already superior to
time and space. And my God is not a peraon in such a sense
that he is fixed. Everywhere the affluent mind of God pervades
the universe. He enters into my mind. He touches the springs
THE INDWELLING OF CHRIST. 259
of life and being in me. And it is the quality of the divine in-
dwellijig to develop in men their superior nature — not their animal ;
to give authority and power to their faculties — love, and hope, and
faith, and conscience, and the moral sense ; to set them free from
the dominion of the appetites and passions. I believe there is
such a thing as an indwelling God. In other words, I believe
there is such a thing as the direct sympathetic action of the divine
mind on certain parts of our mind.
Let a little child be in the room with its slate, making figures,
and let that child, if it be musically inclined, hear the mother sing
in a lo'w tone, and its thoughts begin to sing the tune that the
mother is singing, — involuntarily. Let the child sit musing,
and let the mother begin to tell some interesting story, and she
does not need to say to the child, '"'Now, listen!'' It will listen in
spite of itself. If you sigh in the presence of another man, he will
be likely to sigh too. If you sing, he will feel sing. If you reason,
he will think reason. If you laugh, he will smile. If you cry, the
shadow falls on him. You reflect yonr mood on those who are
around about you. And God's mind has power upon the minds of
those who are in communion with him. If the heart be open, and
the moral nature be sensitive, God acts upon the thought and
feeling, so that you are guided by him. And I fain would believe
that there is a loving Christ who dwells in me, and takes care of all
the conditions that afiect me, and fills me Avith a divine stimulus
and influence.
It is not the irresistible grace of God, it is the nursing care, it is
the steady, constant influence of the divine mind, borne in on my
mind, that fills up somewhat the measure of the apostolic thought,
and the conception of Christ in you. This indwelling of Christ,
this spiritual contact of his nature with the super-sensuous nature
of man — this it is that transforms the visible sphere. It gives life
a perspective, it adds to the sense of being, to have a vision of
coming immortality — to have a consciousness of " Christ in you the
hope of glory." That which every man needs more than anything
else is to see that the experiences which are going on in the world
around him, and which are reflected in him, are a part of that great
life which, beginning here, runs on and completes itself only in the
life that is to come. If in this life only we had hope, we should be
of all men most miserable.
I know it has been said that morality has such fruit that it would V^
be worth while to be moral if we lived but a hundred or fifty
years; and that is true in some sense. But, considering all the con-
ditions of strife, all the exigencies of conflict, all the rivalries of men
260 THE INDWELLING OF CHRIST.
in the imiYersal mixture of human affairs, no man can well bring
to bear such things as a potential niotiye, and say that they are suf-
ficient. If", howeycr, a man feels that though his life begins here,
it runs beyond the present ; if he feels that there is an unharnessed,
emancipated life in the future ; if he trains himself to feel that his
experience is to be measured, not by its relations to this hour, and
this day, and this year, but by its relations to his whole sphere of
existence, it will make all the difference in the world.
If I were to find a man fastening up the windows of my house,
where I am to live year after year, so that I could get neither air
nor liofht, it Would be an inconvenience to me; but if I were not
expecting to stay there, I should not care so very much.
When I was on my way from Liverpool to Halifax, and ihe
steward came and said that he must fasten up the bull's-light to koep
the water out, and screwed up the window so that where there was no
air before, there was still less afterward, I did not care. I was like
a water-logged stick in my berth, anyhow ; and I looked up, and
said, " Well, it will make no difference. Ten days of annihila-
tion. On shore pretty soon. Don't care what air I have, or what
anything else."
If my present life is all that I have ; if the horizon is to me the
utmost lin6 of travel; if the days that I am wearing out now
are all the days that are to be mine, it makes a great deal of differ-
ence what my conditions are. I insist on good things here, if there
is nothing but this world. If there is no existence beyond the pres-
ent life, I will seek the utmost enjoyment here. If I am to die when
I am through with the material globe, I will exert all my strength
to secure the best fruits which physical life affords. If I am to cease
to exist with the going down of my mortal sun, then this world must
yield something or other to me, and something or other I will have
out of it. And if a stronger man than I am throws me down, it is
a woe. If other men know how to suck out joy and I do not, or if
when I go to the flowers the honey is gone, that is a misery and a mis-
chief.
But oh ! tell me that I am beloved ; that on the bosom of
love I shall dwell above the reach of time and chance; that I am to
live as long as God lives ; that, dropping these conditions, I am to
rise to a higher spiritual form ; that I am to have better companion-
ship ; that I am to have a clearer knowledge of my God ; that I am
to be among the first-born of the saints in heaven — tell me these
things, and every part of my life is transformed. Now, what if I
am poor ? I can afford to be poor. What if I am sick ? I can
afford to be sick, and wait for my eternal health. What if I am uu-
THE INDWELLING OF CHRIST. 261
known here ? My name is written in the Book of Life. What if I
am disconsolate ? There is music sounding in which I shall take
part. What if I am obscured, persecuted, cast out, hated here ?
Sovereign is the eternal God, and he shall lift up the humble, and
exalt them by his right hand of power. And I turn to death itself
and say, " Where is thy sting ?" What if death takes away our
loved ones ? They are to live again out of the turmoil and trouble
of this life, in a sphere where neither darkness, nor sickness, nor
poverty can come, but where there shall be riches, and health, and
light forever more.
"I know," said the apostle, "how to abound and how to
suffer lack ;" and so it is with every man who has a real vivid belief
in God, and whose Christ is in him day by day, interpreting to him
the eternal glory. Christ hi you the hope of glory — that is the
Christ which you want. That is the Christ which every struggling
soul needs. That is the Christ that I preach to you.
Men and brethren, I am not indifferent to your views in respect
to technical theology. I do not undertake to say that your religious
opinions have no validity. I do not say that all knowledge of Christ
must consist in this personal experience. But I do say that if you
are without this experience you discrown yourself, and disinherit
yourself of those blessings by which you were to have been made
rich kings and priests unto God.
You have your own sorrows ; but Christ has been for you " a
man of sorrows and acquainted with grief." You have your own
conflict with pride ; but you are led by One who has been tempted
in all points as you arc, yet without sin. You have your own mor-
tifications and limitations and hindrances. You are brave and
proud ; courage and pride lift themselves up in you in vain ; they
are chained down ; nevertheless you have One who has come to open
the prison door, and to break the chain, and to give life and liberty
to the imprisoned spirit. You have in Jesus Christ that patience
without which no one could get along with you. He has patience
with you, if no one else has. He has forgiving love. He has cleans-
ing power. His life, his nature, his influence, touch humanity in
every part. He comforts those who would despair without divine
comfort. He enlightens those who sit in darkness.
I preach that Christ to you who is the very God that rules the
heaven and the earth; who loves you, and loves you for your good,
and not because you are so good ; who nourishes you ; who would
fain lift you in his arms above the trouble of life ; who would shape
you by Avhat you enjoy and suffer, so that one day you shall walk m
his presence, with all the port and dignity of the sous of God. I
262 TEE INDWELLING OF CHRIST.
preach to yon immortality. I preach to yoii a renewed and enno-
bled manhood. I preach to you the love of God in Christ Jesus as
the all-fashioning influence by which you are to be brought to that
manhood and that immortality.
Do riches suffice ? Is pleasure enough ? Does your cup run
over ? Can you look around and say, " I have no need of God : I
am strong enough in virtue and in good ; I have more than heart
could wish " ? Have you love enough ? Are you not met day by day
with care and with sorrows ? Day by day does your soul not feel the
guilt of sin ? Do j'ou feel no burden of evil ? Do you long to be
better, and never strive with bitter disappointment ? Is there that
in you Avhich claims and hungers for immortality ? Do you long
to be stronger and nobler in all that is transcendent ? For you
there is a Saviour — Jesus Christ. He is for all, without exception.
It needs only that you should take him.
If for every man in Brooklyn there was sent to the Post Office
here a veritable document announcing that there had been left a
hundred thousand dollars for him, every one of you would receive
that hundred thousand dollars who should go and draw the docu-
ment and use it. But though there were a hundred thousand dol-
lars waiting for each one of you, not one of you would have it if
you did not take the trouble to go and get it and appropriate it.
Now, there is stored up in the universe, in nature and in the
heart of God, infinite help, infinite bounty; and all that is asked is
that you shall take it, accept it, realize it, bring it home, and let it
comfort you, and inspire you, and cleanse you, and lift you up. If
you do not accept it, if you have not fiiith to believe that it exists
for you, it profits you nothing. It is there ; it waits ; it longs to be
gracious to you; but it requires that you should accept it, that you
should take the comfort of it, that you should have a realization of it,
that it should be to you the love of God in Christ Jesus, and that
it should be in y.ou Christ " the hope of glory."
May God bring you to the preciousness of this hope on earth —
to the love of this Jesus ; may your faith in him be strengthened
day by day; and may he bring you, at last, to that land of glorj,
•where you shall have no need of sign or of teaching — where you
shall behold him as he is, and abide with him forever.
TEE INDWELLING OF GEBI8T. 263
PKAYEK BEFOEE THE SEEMON.
Thou beholdest, our Father, the way in which we are walliing. Our
path is known to thee, and our experience therein. Before thee are the
children of joy, and the children of sorrow; the burdened, and those that
are light ol foot; those that are rich inwardly, and those that are poor;
the struggling, and those that are at rest; those that are comforted and
satisfied with love, and those who hunger and thirst after it, and are not
satisfied. Thou dost behold all the inward struggles, and all the outward
embarrassments of this mortallife; and not one is pressing through calm
or through storm, through brightness or through darkness, unheeded and
unguided. And though to us, by reason of our weakness and our littleness,
life seems a whirl in which things dash upon each other wildly, and without
guide, and where chance is but little overborue by human intelligence; yet,
to thine eye, all things are under law, and all things are bidden, and thy
counsels are supreme, and thy sovereign will everywhere still holds every-
thing in subordination ; and in the end we shall behold it. We, who are now
pilgrims, shall yet one day be content in our Father's realm. We, who are
dark-minded, shall yet one day see as we are seen, and know as we are
known. Out of our experience we look away by faith to thee. We desire
to live, not by sight, but by faith. What time we look upon things as they
are, our hearts grow heavy and our eyes grow dark. Only when we can
lift ourselves up above things that we behold into the eternal realm of
truths which thou hast made known, and which thou art making known
through us, can we find a settled peace. There is a realm in our thought
where no wants do follow. There are experiences which are full of blessed-
ness witliout change. And although we do not rise easily, sometimes we
rise to the plentitude of trust, and then get strength enough to last us
through the dreary days that follow. Not often dost thou take thy disciples
to the mountain-top to be transfigured before them; yet sometimes thou
' dost ; and afterward, when weary months have rolled away, still thou dost
stand before them brighter than the sun lifted above the earth, hoveriug
with its power bright in the air, more blessed than in any earthly contact.
And we rejoice that thou dost manifest thyself to thy people. We do not
hear thee speaking as we hear one another speak, though we long for it
ever so much. We do not feel our hand touched by thine, though we desire
to clasp thy hand in inseparable friendship and guidance. We do not live
with thee as we live one with another; for thou art a Spirit, and we are
mortal bodies, and are living in a different sphere from thine. We cannot
know these higher things as we know the lower. If we know them at
all, we know them by the way and by reason of the highest things ; and yet
we do know them. Thou dost interpret thyself to our love, to our
faith, to our hope, to our sense of that which is right and beautiful.
Thou art not far from us. Even when wo seem furthest from thee, thou
art nearest to us. The Fun hath not gone because the room is dars. It
shineth still all around about, though it may be shut out. And thou art not
far from us because we shut thee out. We rejoice that there is a hfe hiddeo
in thine. We rejoice to believe that thy life abides in ours. Thou dost
come to thy people. Thou dost dwell with them. Thou do.-t, in the
sweetest familiarity, dwell with them, sup with them, converse with I hem,
sympathize with them, joy and rejoice with them, lift them up when they
fall down, pity them when they are in troul)le, forgive them when they
trespass, and inspire them when they are by despondency rendered dull.
Thou art all in all: not in those alone who are high— the children of genius.
264 THE 12^ DWELLING OF CEBIST.
Thou art all in the poor, and in the needy; in cbildren, and in men grctwn.
Thou art all in aU. Thou completest the circle of being in thyself. And we
rejoice in this fullness and blessedness of thy being, in all our relations to
thee, and in all thy sympathetic relations to us; and we desire more and
more to learn, in a practical life, in a daily experience, to live by trust, by
hope, by communion, by joy In the Holy Ghost.
Grant to all those who desire this life the quickening and the love of thy
Spirit. We are weak. It is not by the ordinary exertion of our own will, it
it not by our own skill nor our own ledrning, that we reach unto these
things. Thou must take us up still. Who of us can make the day fair?
Who of us can bid the morning shine and drive away the storms? These
come from out of the heaveus. And thou from out of the higher heaven
must let down for us those blessed visions, and that strength, and that com-
fort, and all that food of the soul which we need.
We beseech of thee that we may have, to-dgy, the consciousness that
we are beloved of thee. May we put far from U5 those evil thoughts which
spring from human experiences. Thou art a Father, but how infinitely,
and in a sense how much fuller than any earthly parent ! How minute,
how watchful, bow tender, bow patient, how long-suffering is thy care of
us ! Thy thoughts have to do with everything that belongs to us. Thou art
moving around about us with more influence than the light is around about
everything on which it shines. May we lift ourselves into a comprehension
of this. May we trust in thy love. Though we understand thee not ; though
thy ways are strange to us; though thy dealings seem adverse; though thou
hidest thyself, and dost seem to frown upon us through darkness, and
chastise us with many stripes and strokes — though thou slay us, we will
trust thee. There is supreme goodness over all evil. There is absolute
wisdom over all the folly which mixes in human life. There is glory over
all human failure and disgrace. There is a rest which remaineth for the
people of God, And thrcugh storms, through troubles, through temptations,
through darkness, through doul)ts, through all evil suggestiois, we lift our-
selves up to thee, the obscured and the necessary God. Thou art needful to
our life. Thou art, because we need thee. And we believe that all those
aspirations and yearnings which we have toward thee, spring not from the
ground. What clod hath taught us to desire God? Prom what side of
human life have we learned the glory of the disinterested love which is super-
eminent in thee? It is fhy drawing that halh taught us these better things.
And we cling to the inspiration and the- aspiration, md desire to be lifted
upward and onward to the end, that we may inherit the promises, and at
last behold thee as thou art. No more dreams ; no more thoughts of dismay
and despair; no more images nor analogies; no more wild reasonings : we
shall behold thee as thovi arr, in thy gloiy, in thy symmetry, in thine ineffa-
ble beauty, in thine all-powerlul drawings of love, — as t)t,yiiart, never to
doubt again, nor to wander; not to drop a tear, but to be forever with the
Lord.
Grant, out of the great abundance of the counsels of these truths, that
those may be comforted to-day who need thy special presence, — all that are
bereaved; all that have walked the ways of sadness and sorrow under the
chastisements of thy gracious hand; all that are under bitter disappoint-
ments; all that find themselves cast down by any refisou. Give strength to
the weak. Give comfort to the afflicted. Give hope to the doubting and
discouraged. Give thine own presence to those who are in darkness. May
every one of us feel, to-day, that we have fed upon the Lord. May we feel
that he has been to us the bread of life. May thy communion be as the
water of life to every thirsty soul.
We pray for those, to-day, who shall be gathered together in our
THE INDWELLING OF CHBIST. 265
churches. May they meet their Lord. And may thy dear servants that
shall attempt to expound the truth to them be able to do it by the help of
the Holy Ghost, sent down from on high. We pray that they may spread
the Gospo), and make its work more perfect in our land. May its tidings be
carried to every laud, aud may the earth speedily see thy salvation.
We ask these things in the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the
Holy Ghost, Amen.
PEAYEK AFTER THE SERMON.
Grant, our Father, thy blessing to rest abundantly in the word spoken —
especially in the preciousness of the truth as it is in Jesus Christ. Grant
that every one of us may lay claim to that which is ours. Not only may we
all be able to say, Our Father, but may each of us be able to say My Father.
With him of old, may we say, My Lord and my God. God help us to appro-
priate that which belongs to us and waits for our taking. Grant, we
beseech of thee, that the goodness of God may lead us to repentance, and
that the mercy, and gentleness, and sweetness of the love of God in Christ
Jesus may stir up in us all that is good, all that aspires, and that we may by
this divine food in the soul grow to a fuller manhood, to a nobler concep-
tion, to a better and purer life, and finally to immortality. We ask it fc*
Christ's sake. Amen,
XV.
Thoughts of Death.
THOUGHTS OF DEATH.
" I must work the works of him that sent me while it is day ; the night
eometh, when no man can work."— John IX., 4.
The particular connection of these words of our Saviour with
the history in which they stand, gives rise to some difficulty ; but
there is no difficulty in understanding their intrinsic meaning. It
is only the reason why he should have uttered such words on this
occasion that it is difficult to understand.
" As Jesus passed by, he saw a man which was blind from his birth. And
his disciples asked him, saying. Master, who did sin, this man, or his parents,
that he was bom blind? Jesus answered, Neither hath this man sinned, nor
his parents : but that the works of God should be made manifest in him. I
must work the works of him that sent me, while it is day ; the night eometh,
when no man can work."
It is difficult to perceive how the presentation of the case on
which lie was to exercise his mercy should have excited the train
of thought which is contained in this passage ; and I do not doubt
that there was an intermediate scene. We know, in regard to the
narratives of the gospel, by comparing them together, that many
of the utterances of Christ, as they stand in particular gospels, had
between one and another lengthened utterances, conversations,
questions and answers ; and the results are often taken by the dif-
ferent evangelists and put close together, while those conversations
which led to such utterances are left out. Sometimes they are left
out by one evangelist and put in by another, showing us the
method which was pursued. So that what is recorded in Mark,
for example, as isolated events, we shall find in Luke to have
been connected by an important passage of history. Therefore,
not only are Ave at liberty, but we are often compelled to under-
stand that the connection between one scene and another, or
between one utterance and another, may have been left out.
Why the siglit of a man who was blind, and upon whom the
Saviour Avas about to perform a miracle, should have excited a
Sunday Evening, June 16, 1872. Lesson : psalm XCI. Hymns (Plymouth Collection),
Nob. 1321, U21, U57.
270 THO UGHTS OF DEA TH.
thought of death in him, we do not at present see. Something un-
doubtedly occurred wliich gave that inflection to his thoughts.
" I must work the works of him that sent me, while it is day [that is to
say, while I am in life, and in the full possession of power]; the night
Cometh [that is, death], when no man can work."
It is from tliis passage that I wish, this evening, with suitable
brevity, to discourse to you on the subject of a proper thoughtful-
ness in respect to death.
I meet, at the beginning, I know, with a natural repugnance
which we all have at thinking of anything so disagreeable. I
suppose that men almost universally turn from the thought of
death as uncongenial to the free play of their faculties ; as not con-
sorted with their ordinary duties; as shadowing the joy of life;
as bringing with it a check, a hindrance, almost suffocation at
times. Perhaps it may be thought strange, therefore, when I say
that death, when rightly thought of, so far from being an oppres-
sion, a veil, a sorrow, is that which will give edge to joy. So far
from suppressing life, it will give intensity to activity. So far from
being a kind of excluding influence, withdrawing men from the en-
terprise and the business of life, the inspiration of death will have
a tendency to enrich industry, and make life more full in its hopes
and more abundant in its results.
I protest, with you, against those thoughts of death which are
distinctively gloomy ; and therefore I protest against the baseness
and the unworthiness of thinking of death purely in its physical
asjaects. I know how the apostle felt when he spoke, in Corin-
thians, of sowing the body in dishonor.
" It is sown in dishonor, it is raised in glory ; it is sown in weakness, it is
raised in power."
The degradation of the body which takes place in the processes
of slow failing and dying; the transmutation of the features; the
abasement of all that which Ave are accustomed to see — these things
are horrible to be contemplated. I do not hesitate, therefore, to
say that, ordinarily, it is anything but agreeable for me to look
upon the face of the dead. I sympathize very strongly with the
feeliug of the apostle.
This is not my friend. This is the place where he was, but this
is not he. This face is not the illumined face which he bore. It is
not vital. It is only dust, returning to the dust.
In the olden time it was by some (not by all, I presume) sup-
posed to be a wise thing for a man to overhang the future, to
imagine how he would feel when he was dying, and to picture to
himself the various steps of decline. In the olden time it was
THO UGHTS OF DBA TH. 271
thought wise for a man to have a hideous skull, a skeleton, symbols
of death, before him, in order that as nearly as possible he might
have brought to his mind the ghastly reality.
At the cathedral in Winchester, I think it was, (one of the most
beautiful in Europe), I remember seeing the tomb of one of the
prelates who had been eminent in power and reputation. The
tomb itself was a most admirable work of art; but he was carved
in marble, within, as a skeleton from which the flesh had well-
nigh fallen. T looked through the reticulations of the marble,
and saw the ghastly old fellow lying there. It was supposed that
the spectacle would rebuke the pride of men, and turn their faces
away from worldliness. It produced utter loathing and revulsion
in me, as I think it must in every healthy and right-minded man.
I do not think it strange that the young turn away from those
tilings. It is a sign of life and of a good sound mind. That is not
dying. That is not death.
Is that the death of the egg out of which comes the young bird
and the new life ? Would it be wise to look upon the shell that has
been left in the nest after the bird has been hatched out of it, as the
important thing? Dying is not what this body is when we have
got through with it. And to hang upon its dread look is not wise.
It is morbid and unwholesome. It is not good for the imagination,
nor for the heart, nor for the life. It disturbs the fancy. It pollutes
the sweet breath of hope. It takes away from men the sense of
dignity. It is not this point of physical degeneration that it is
wholesome for men to consider.
Dying is simple transmutation. Dying is changing form and
changing condition. It is passing out from a crude into a i*fpe
state ; from a lower into a higher realm. It is the emergence from
darkness into light. It is the glorification of those elements in man
Avhich ally him to God. It is the spreading of the wings that have
been undeveloped before, or that have been circumscribed. It is
looked upon in the Word of God as release from bondage — as deliv-
erance from prison. It is bringing men back from captivity. It is
setting them in a larger sphere. It is crowning them, and giving
them a scepter, and making more of them. He who thinks
wisely of death, gives a wide berth to dust and decay. There
have l)een men who thouglit to make themselves more devout by
cpending days in sepulchcrs. If worms are men's best priests, then
that is the best place for a man to go to church ; but if a man be-
lieves in the redemption of Jesus Christ, in the resurrection of the
soul, and tliat dying is going home, what business has he to pre-
pare himself for all the glory of that exalted state by contemplating
272 THOUGHTS OF DEATE.
the corrupted body which has been given back, or which is going
back to its dust again ?
When I think of death, I think of immortality. I think of the
termination of this period of activity and of conscious exertion with-
out regret. I think that I am here simply for growth. I think that
when it shall please God to call me away from this world, I shall
enter upon another state of being.
Let me think that I have but so many years here, so many du-
ties, so much work to perform ; let me keep in mind continually
that all I do must be compressed within certain bounds ; let me
keep account with myself from day to day, and from year to year,
with such frequency as experience may show to be wise ; let me be
mindful of how my work goes on, of v/hat is doing, of what has been
done, and of what has been neglected ; let me so remember my days
that I may apply my heart to wisdom. That is the wise and proper
method of tliinking of death.
What would be the effect of such a contemplation ? Would it
throw shadows upon the mind? Would it turn a man away from
the duties of life ? A wise contemplation of the shortness of our
tarrying here, and of the reality and the glory of our inheritance
hereafter, will tend to make a man more faithful in his secular du-
ties. We are not chance atoms floating in this atmosphere. We
are born into life, under God's ordinance, to pass through its stages,
finding profit in its duties, in its labors, in its joys, in its sufferings,
and having, either consciously or unconsciously, a work wrought
upon us by which we are being prepared for that rest which remains
for the people of God. Though we may not be able to trace the
connection between any particular thing and the result in our na-
ture, it dignifies toil, and care, and labor, and burdens, to know that
we are under an economy in which we are being schooled and de-
veloped by those experiences in life which take us away from ita
physical aspects, and from their vulgarity; and to know that we are un-
der an economy which is supervised by the providence of our Father,
and out of which is to come a more glorified and perfected state.
We must prize life, not because inherently we love it, or perceive
that there is anything desirable in it, but because we know that
in a large way through it God developes manliness in us.
Is the traveler less interested in the scenes of to-day, because he
knows that to-morrow he will change his point of view and go on
to some other place? When men go abroad — as now they
are pouring in a ceaseless tide across the sea, to visit France,
and Switzerland, and Italy, and Germany, and England — do
you suppose that the fact that they abide so short a time in any one
f
THOUGHTS OF DEATH. 273
city takes away from the interest which they have in that city ? If
they know tliat they have but so many days, do they not give them-
selves with more alacrity to the seeing of those things which one
who is wise would wish to see ? Because we are passing out of life,
and because we abide here but for a day, is that an argument why
we should not be interested in the economy and duties of the day ?
Docs a true Avay of looking at death dispossess us of fidelity, and dis-
incline us to a faithful performance of the duties of the hour ? No.
On tlie contrary, it intensifies our fidelity, and makes us more active.
Yea, a wise thought of death will, I think, make men better busi-
ness men.
If you are living at home, and are not trained as wisely as you
ought to be, one going untimely into your room will find your
raiment scattered, and your books and papers lying loose everywhere ;
and if suddenly you were called aAvay it would be impossible for you
to gather up your effects and be prepared to leave at a moment's
notice. But if a man is traveling in Europe, and he stops, for in-
stance, at Eheims, over night, and is to depart at four o'clock
the next morning, his courier says to him, when he retires, " Have
everything ready, so that we will not need to be detained a moment;"
and he does. The traveler; or one who is perpetually changing
places, keeps everything that he has Avilh him packed snug. If he
expects to stay days, aud weeks, and months, and time is of no ac-
count to him, he is apt to leave his aflfairs in a careless state, and his
efiects distributed. And so, men who have no thought of dying
let their affairs go on loosely.
Men and brethren, there is a great deal of foolish living in the
physical aspect, because men have the impression that they are going
to live forever. They know that they shall not; but they live as if
they expected to. And this delusion is not confined to youth and
middle life, but goes down into old age. Even in their declining
years men have the feeling that everybody else will die, but that
they shall not die.
There were three of the class to which my father belonged in
Yale who lived to be old men, and a few years ago, when my father
was alive, an old man, eighty years of age, infirm and quivering,
came up to me, and said, " Your father and Staples and I were in
the same class. Staples is dying in J^^ew York ; and when your fa-
ther dies, I wish you would tell mo. I shall then be the remnant of
the class." Everybody but him, he thought, was going to die!
There was no consciousness in his mind that he was to go. And
60 we train ourselves, by habitual inconsideration, to the vague feel-
ing that there is an endless period of time sLill lying before us. But
274 THOUGHTS OF DEATH.
where men have the feeling that their time is limited, and that it
may be cut short at any moment, they keep their affairs closely
jointed, well budded, safely harnessed.
It is very seldom, when a man comes to die, that he is prepared,
even in his outward life, to leave. His household economy is not
as it would have been if he had expected the summons. His busi-
ness affairs are not as they would have been if he had anticipated
being called away. But it seems to me that a Christian fidelity
should lead every man, as far as possible, each year, to adjust his
affairs so that if he should die his household would not be subjected
to any loss, and no trouble would be entailed on his executors. The
duty of leaving his affairs in such a shape that they can be easily
taken care of after his death, is incumbent upon every man.
Are you living so ? Think of what would happen if you should
die to-morrow. It would not hurt anybody to think of the condi-
tion of his property in the light of his probable or possible death.
What are your plans ? Are you not like a vessel with its sails spread
from the deck to the topmost spar, while a storm is breeding which
you know nothing about ?
Oaptain Knight said that once he looked up in his berth and
saw the barometer plunging down in a manner which indicated a
marked change in the atmosphere ; and that he rushed on deck and
called all the hands up, and had them take in sail, though there
was a brilliant sky overhead. The men thought that he was crazy
to begin to trim the ship then ; and yet, before they could get in
all their sail there arose a storm which struck them, and came near
foundering them, as it was. They struggled many hours, and just
managed to save themselves. It was by the prophecy of this dumb
instrument that they were saved.
Many men glide along on the tranquil sea of life all unconscious
that eternity is coming, and that it will sweep everything before it,
and perhaps send them to the bottom. How many men I have seen
who have been carried down by bankruptcy time and again ! How
many times have I seen men heart-broken by reason of their failure
in business ! How many men have I attempted to comfort in the
pressure of their affairs! And when they were drawing near to
death, what a mercy it was that they did not know what a storm
was brewing, because the indications of it ^XQre■ hidden from their
Bight ! Wliat a blessing it was that they did not foresee the shatter-
ing of their enterprises, the dispersion of their households, the care
and sorrow of their loved ones, the disappointment of those that
were near and dear to them, and the revolution that would take
place, because they had been living without any wise consideration
^
THO UGETS OF BE A TH. 275
of the imminence of death, and of the condition of things which
would exist should they suddenly die! I hold that every man, as a
part of his business and economy, should measure the probable
duration of his life, not by the tables of life insurance companies,
but on the principle which our Saviour laid down when he said,
" In such an hour as ye think not, the Son of man cometh."
Yes, go to the physician ; let him, with auscultation, prophesy a
long life for you ; let him sound your lungs, and pronounce them
all right ; let him examine your digestion, and testify that it is
good ; and on the strength of his judgment let the company take
the risk, and you go smiling away ; and the next week we hear of a
funeral, and you are gone. You have the promise and prophecy
that you shall live on and on ; and yet, in such an hour as you think
not the Son of man comes, and all the threads in the loom snap.
Worse than that, death oftentimes is as the explosion of a bomb
in a man's house, which, as it explodes, tears everything asunder.
It is a wise thing if a man is brought up, in regard to his business,
so as to keep a thought ahead of his possible departure, and to have
his affairs in a condition in which he shall not leave a long train of
ruin behind him. In the cases of many men it does not make any
difference how and when they die. It will not be possible for them
to leave things in any worse condition than they are in at present;
but there are many men who, if they are not wise while they are
living, will, when they die, strew misery with a broad trail behind
them.
So, then, a wise consideration of the shortness of life, and of im-
pending death, instead of discouraging effort, will quicken it ; in-
stead of tending to make men less careful about worldly affairs, will
tend to make them more considerate in regard to them.
Due thought of the termination of this life, and of the beginning
of the life that is beyond it, will make life itself sweeter, and the enjoy-
ment of life better. No matter how richly endowed men may be, no
man really gets his true colors, no man ever has a full sense of depth
and breadth and strength, whose thoughts are not accustomed to
take flight into the infinite, the invisible and the eternal. Creatures
of time, bearing upon themselves the impress of the secular periods,
and of these only, however richly endowed, want a certain compre-
heniion. There is a certain shallowness about them. We can al-
most feel the atmosphere of men who are accustomed to ponder the
themes of the eternal world. It gives volume and vastness to the
ways and the courses of tliis life.
I like to see the loves of birds and of butterflies ; and yet what
are these wavering loves, which come and expire in the atmosphere ?
276 TEO UGHT^ OF DBA IE.
What is it that makes human love nobler than the chirping love
of birds, but this — duration, and its promise ? Take away the
reality of men's faith in the world to come, and how shallow the
affections of this world are ! They have all the feebleness and all
the flaAvs of time upon them. The comforting view is that, love as
poorly as I may here, I am but learning to love. My life on earth
is not what I seek to make it ; it is like uncombed flax, full of the
sticks of that on which it grows. Peace, and gentleness, and self-denial,
and heroism in loving, and the outpouring upon others of that love
which never grows old, in the thought of God or of those that are
with him — these are the things which result from a wise ponder-
ing of death and the future. And if we have no such experience,
what are our affections in life ? How poor they are ! How unrich
they are ! Of how little worth they are ! It is the want of a back-
ground to men's hearts that makes those hearts so flat and so
poor. The heroism of love, its grandeur, the glory of its fidelity,
the beauty of its life, its atmosphere, its horizon, and the vast and
crystal dome of expectation that rise above it — it is these things
Avhich exalt men, which develop them, which make heroism deep,
and which make sacrifices of virtue and of affection preeminently
noble, enriching and satisfying. It is in the highest degree essential
that men should have a sense of the other life.
Ah, how a sense of our departing from those whom we h)ve
quickens our fidelity while we are among them ! How many
mothers have looked in the face of the child as it lay in marble be-
fore them, and said, " Oh, if I had only knoAvn, with what zeal would
I have taught! With what devotion would I have dealt with this
dear one ! But it is too late !"
When our companions, that have borne with us the heat and
burden of the day, are gone, how many ten thousand things we
think of that we have done, but that we never would have done if
we haf^ only known that death would take tliem ! We reproach
ourselves. The heart Incomes a judgment-seat, and we stand before
it culprits. We remember our temper, and our pride, and our selfish-
ness, and our ambition. We remember how little we availed our-
selves of the golden hours of a noble confidence. We remember
how little we strove for things divine. And we say, " Oh, that I
nad that life to live over again ! But it is too late !"
If by forethought, then, men would but carefully take into
account the shortness of their life, how it Avould tend to
intensify virtue in the household! How it would tend to deepen
the fountains of affection ! How it would tend to quicken those
ten thousand fidelities which redeem time from vulgarity, and make
THO UGIITS OF DBA TE. 211
the > 'd't of mortals the life of angelic creatures ! We are sons
of God; but we forget it, because we do not wear our crown. We
forget th»,t we have one. We are dwelling with peasants, with vul-
gar assocwtes, and we take on, their ways, as it were ; and yet, we
are sons of God. And he that thinks wisely of dying and of living
again has brought to his memory what he is. He lias borne back
upon him a consciousness of his birthright which makes him a
sweeter and purer and wiser and nobler man.
Have you ever stood by the bedside of those that you loved
when they were dying ? Do you remember your experience then ?
Do you remember what thoughts plowed your soul ? Perhaps
God gave back your friends. Perhaps he took them to himself.
Have you been made as much wiser by that experience as then you
thought that you should be ? Has the remembrance of the near-
ness of death, of its certainty, and of the effect that it would have
upon you and your affections, borne the fruit which you thought it
would ? Have these things been in you as a revelation and as a
divine inspiration ?
So, too, a wise consideration of dying inspires moderation in
men. The immoderation of this life consists in using one part of
ourselves at the expense of another. It consists in giving the
whole of our fidelity to a limited sphere, to a few things, instead of
rounding up the Avhole circle of our endowment. Thus men are
living so that they are not a tenth part men. They live using their
little finger, as it were — not their whole hand; and still less both
hands. But though tfulness of the nearness of death, and of our
liability to die at any time, tends to produce moderation in desire. It
tends to restrain over-eager appetites. Especially it tends to check
those wild outbursts to which we are subject. It compels us to
measure again that which we have measured hastily.
Where a man has builded his house, and sheltered his household,
and accumulated enough for food and raiment, for intelligence, for
knowledge, for the satisfaction of every rational appetite ; where a
man is living so as to be able to secure food for every part of him-
self, it would seem as though he might give his mind to something
higher and nobler than the mere accumulation of wealth ; but he
goes on building more, and earning more. How many of you
would be Avilling to make a league and covenant with God
to discharge your mind of covetousness when you had acquired
enough to secure for yourself and family all the rational enjoy-
ments of life ! And yet, when you have secured these things, you
will go on still in the insane ambition for wealth. There are men
in New York who have money enough for a million men. There
278 TEO UGMTS OF DBA IE.
are single men there who have enough money for a small nation.
What good does it do them ? What use is it to them ? They are
nothing but their own uuhired clerks. The greater part of their
possessions can never minister directly to them, except in the mis-
erably poor way of ambition. And what is the ambition of figures ?
If a man has ten millions of dollars in America, he would not be
worth any more if he had twenty millions. He has outrun his
own power of computation and realization and use ; and all that
wealth which lies outside of a man's use is so much surplusage.
What would it avail me if I owned a section of land ten miles wide
through to the Pacific Ocean ? How much of it could I cultivate, or
even look at ? What could I do with it, if I had it ? There is such
a, thing as being made poor by abundance. And yet, men go on
seeking wealth with an insane ambition. They do it after God has
given them token after tok6n of their quick-coming end. He has
marked them with one sign after another. He has Avarned them by
the eye, and by the ear. He has stamped his signet on their hair,
and in their wrinkles. They ache with signals of mortality. But
still they will not let go. They die with their hand clenched, and
with their money in their hand ; their hand perishes, and their
money with it ; and they go to give up their empty account before
God.
Now, if a man had a thought of himself as a responsible crea-
ture, going from this lower sphere to a higher one, and marked the
changes which occur in his advance toward death, do you not sup-
pose that it would tend to correct this immoderation — this fantasy
of desiring more than he can manage or use or enjoy ?
How many men there are who, for want of some wise prevision,
some prudent consideration of death, leave pretty much all their
plans to ravel out after they are gone ! When the careful house-
wife has knit through the day, and brought her stocking or glove,
to its termination, she will not let it go till she has fastened the
thread so that the child's hand shall not ravel out her work : but
how many men leave their work in such a condition that all that
they have been doing ravels out !
Here are men who intended, when they should have advanced
to a certain state and condition, to have done great things. They
were just on the point of doing them when they were thirty-five years
old. There were great generosities Avhich they did not mean to
omit. They were bound not to live for nothing. They were al-
ways going to leave their mark on the world. They were going to
leave their mark on the world at forty. They were going to leave
their mark on the world at forty-five. And, finally, at forty-six,
THOUGHTS OF DEATH. 279
they left it, in the shape of a grave. They died with all their
plans unaccomplished.
There are men who mean to build and leave hospitals. There
are men who mean to build and leave schools. There are men who
mean to found charities here, aud endow beneficent institutions
yonder. There are men who have been working and working,
and saying, " "When I get enough for my household, then I am
going to work for God and mankind." Time runs on, and still they
are telling what they mean to do. They continue to amass
wealth, and so to prepare themselves for the benevolent enterprises
which they have in view. At last they will die, having done none of
these things.
It is not wise for a man to let death distribute his charities. It
is not best to leave your wealth to be scattered by death. Death is
a poor distributor. If God gives you skill for amassing the power
of wealth, see that you build while you are living. Begin to build
early, according to your means, and keep on building, and saying,
" I must work the works of him that sent me, while it is day ; the
night cometh, when no man can work."
Do you mean to write hymns that shall be like God's angels
singing hope in the hearts of desponding men ? Write them now.
Do you mean to sound out influences that shall make the neighbor-
hood purer and sweeter, that shall straighten the things which are
crooked, and that shall leave the Avays of life clearer? Begin the
work of reformation now. Do you mean to set on foot beneficent
institutions of art and culture which shall work for humanity when
yon are gone ? Do it now. For the most part, men work their
threescore years and ten, and then disappear, and are forgotten ;
but it pleases God to give to some men the power of an earthly
immortality. He who frames into noble English discourse the
truths which every human soul needs, and gives it to the wind, lives
on when he is dead. He who breathes truth in a poem, and gives
it wings, so that it goes through the air cheering men, lives after
death. And if men organize their wealth into institutions for good,
they live in these institutions for thousands of years. What men
do in life cannot be compared with what they might do by organ-
ized influences that sound down into the life which is to come.
When a man thinks how little he can do in his lifetime, what a
comfort it must be to know how much he can do after his life has
ceased here by endowments and investments which shall go on per-
forming Avoiks of beneficence and liumanity for centuries to come.
And if men only thought, " To do anything I must do it speedily,"
how many of them could duplicate, quadruple, quintuple, sextuple
280 THOUGHTS OF DEATH.
their life and their deeds long after they had gone back to dust !
But no man will live thus wisely unless he lives with the thought,
" "What I do I must do speedily."
There be some that hear me to-night whose attention is arrested,
and whose thoughts are stirred up. You will go away, saying
" That is a considerate view. It conforms to my best judgment. I
mean to live in accordance with it."' But alas! these resolutions
will go with tlie morning cloud. There will be a transient ripple
across your thought, but you will plunge again into your incon-
siderate Avays. You will forget to do what you ought to do. Some
of you have restitutions that you ought to make before yon
sleep. There are reparations that you owe to one and another
which ought to be made before you die. You are in danger of
going out of life before you have attended to these things. You
have not done all that you ought to do for your children. If it
were made known to you that this night you would die, you would
feel that you had not done all in your family that you fain would
do. Your friendships are not in such a condition that you can
afford to leave them just now. They have not been rich enough.
In the corn-field I plant a morning-glory. The corn itself is
beautiful — the noblest grass that grows out of the ground. And
yet, when I see the convolvulus twine around about it, and at every
axil send out those graceful salvers, those excpiisite cups, how much
more beautiful are they than that on which they liang!
Friendships in life are very noble — substantial, hearty, genuine
friendships; but oh, what exquisite tastes, what spiritual refine-
ments, Wluit touches of grace and beauty, coming from faith in
God, sliould there be around about your friendships!
How vulgar is much in your family ! How unsatisfactory is
your intercourse Avith men! How scrawny your virtues are! How
poor a life you have been living! You Avould blush to meet Christ.
You are not fit to meet him. I do not charge you with vices and
crimes, but I do charge you with being pigmies. You are dwarfs.
You are not educated. Your powers of soul are not brought out.
You are comparatively in a low state, degraded, undeveloped,
stunted. You are not stimulating yourselves. You do not live as
seeing Him wlio is invisible.
The thought that is laid out in the New Testament is exquis-
itely beautiful as well as pertinent. We are to live as those who are
expecting to go to a wedding. We do not know at what hour of
the night the voice of tlie bridegroom shall be heard.
The virgin, all tremulous with love, has spent the day in decora-
tion ; and the hair, the complexion, the eye, the hand, every part
THOUGHTS OF DEATH. 281
of the body, are, by garments, by adornments, by flowers, and by
purifications, brought to tlie highest condition of attractiveness,
because the hour is drawing nearer and nearer when the one most
fond will call to lead her to her espousal.
Oh, soul of man, that is to be wedded to God, the hour of thine
espousal is drawing near ; and where is thy beautiful apparel ?
Where are the sweet odors ? Where is that Avhich shall make thee
comely in the sight of Him who calls for thee ?
Men and brethren, we are not ready to go to heaven yet. We
are not ready to meet the love of Him who is most glorious in the
fullness of a divine life. We are not prepared to go into the pres-
ence of Him that suffered for us. Look up, look away, a little
while. Forget the things which sound in your ears from day to
day, long enough to take the meaning of this life, and to measure
it upon the scale of the life which is to come. Wake up the things
that are asleep in you, and put to sleep the things that rage there,
and bring yourself into that glorious atmosphere in which you shall
see that which is not to be seen by the natural eye, that which is
beyond your reach, that you may have a foretaste of that rest which
remaineth for the people of God.
PEAYER BEFOEE THE SEEMON.
Thou stretchest the heaven above our head, and thence distill innumer-
able merciea. By thy hand, O God, the earth is turned, and the appointed
seasons come, bringins? their blessings. Night and day are we recipients of
thy mercies. We have no need to pray for the light of the sun, nor for
enriching showers, nor for summer, nor for winter, since all these things
come with continual procession from thy provident care. We rejoice in
tliese bounties, and desire to sanctify them by our own using, with a sense
of thy power and of thy gooduess manifested in them. We desire to stamp
upon them the thought of God, to bear about with us evermore the
sense of thy presence, aod to augment the sense of our own joy, and of the
dignity of our life, and of our hope in thee. We have need, day by day, to
pray for the mercies of thy presence— for the realization of ihylove. We
need that touch of inspirdtion by which we can rise higher than the
sense's contact; by which we shall discern iuvisiole things; by which we
shall pierce the veil, aud see realities that lie befiiud and beyond the reach
of the eye. Grant uuto us this eompaiiiodsliip, this blessed realization of thy
presence and of thy love toward us, an-l to each one of us individually.
Have sympathy with us in all those troubles by which we emerge from our
birth-3! ate into the glorious libi^rty of the sous of God. Have compassion
upou us in all our inllrmilies. Have mercy upon us in all our transgressions.
Inspire in us a hatred of those things which bear us down and deflle us, and
a love for tho- e things which lift us up and purify us and bring us into
282 THO UGETS OF DBA TH.
thine own presence. We pray <hat thou wilt guard u% in the hours oi
strength, lest through presumption we stumble and fall ; and we pray that
thou wilt guard us in the hours of weakness, lest from faintness of heart and
coTvardice we give up. Keep us, we beseech of thee, iu all prosperity, that
we may not be unduly elated by it, and grow proud, and think it is the
strength of our own hand alone, and behold the help of God by which we
have maintained our places. Grant that in the day of adversity we may not
laint, knowing that there is growth iu darkness as well as in light; that
night has its mercies as well as day. May we be strong in the Lord, and be
able, througli all the changes of time and season, steadfastly to maintain
our faith and our hope. Oh, that Miou wouldst grant us such a release
from the bondage and ihrall of time that we might know our destiny, and
feel that we are God's sous, and tliat our inheritance transcends the
measure of r.ny earthly possession ! May we not fear the strength of man's
liand. May we not fear what men can do unto us. May our thoughts so
move toward thee, and in the royalties of the realms above, that we shall be
able, while surrounded hy len Ihoutand mischie.s and evils, still to rejoice
in the Lord, though we may not rejoice in men. May we be able to rejoice
in our eternal inheritance, though we seem to ourselves broken down and
impoverished.
We pray that thy blessing may rest, this evening, upon those who have
enteied into thiue hou^e. Thou hast made this a very gate of heaven to
many souls. Thou hast here met the mourner, and wiped away Irs tears.
Thou hast here met those who were weighed down with care, and lightened
their burdens. Thou hast taught the ignorant. Taou hast restrained those
that were goiag astray. TIiou hast rec.illeJ the wanderer. Taou hast
baptized with joy those that were filied with mourning. Toou hast made
this place sacred by the works of mercy which thou hist wrouj;ht in it.
And we come again expectant. We always corns knowmg that we shall
meet thee here. And grant, we beseech of thee, this evening, taat those
who are in thy presence may feel that God thinks of them by name; that
he knows all their sorrow, and all their care, and all their fear, an 1 all their
trouble of every kind, even to the uttermost recesses of their hearts. We
pray ihao ail may open wide the door for tDee to come in, and that they
may be cleansed Ijy ttie indwelling spirit of God, and receive true wisdom
r,nd comfort, and be i^reparcd for all the duties of the day, and all the events
of life.
We beseech of thee that thou wilt remember those who are sepai^ated
from us — our dear friends, our brethren in Christ Jesus, all that are
sea tered wide abroad, up and down in the earth. They are all in one
place to thine eye Grant tbat in tbee we may desire them d£y by day, and
that we may iu ihe hour of prayer meet them aj.'aiu, and lind them aa
under the shadow of thy wing.
Grant, O Lord, that our varied experiences from day to day may pre-
pare us for that higher life which impends over us. May we not shrink
from it. May we laljor so tbat we shall be accepted of God at whatever
hour tbis life may end. May we not count it dear, nor seek to prolong if.,
iior dread its lerminatlou. Whatever mercies thou dost minister to us
through the hour.i and the days of our pilgrimage here, may we be willing
to lay down the burden at any time whea thou shalt summon us. May we
listen for thy call. As men wait and watch for the morning through the
weariness of the hours of the night, so may it be given us to long for our
XQs,t — to be homesick for lieaven. Thus we beseech of thee that we may be
drawn toward thee iu spirit as well as in expectation, so that, at last, when
the permission-shall come, and the welcome angel shall appear to call us
THOUGHTS OF DEATH. 283
home, we may rise vrith great joy and seek our'Father's house. And there,
blessed forever in thy presence, and exalted by thy love to the full stature
of men in Christ Jesus, we will give the whole praise of our salvation to
the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen.
PRAYER AFTER THE SERMOI^.
Our Father, we pray that thou wilt bring near to us the thought of our
better life. Transform us to ourselves. In the glass of faith may we behold
wbat we are to be, and by that may we rebuke that which we are. Give us
some sense of the dignity of our final manhood, that we may turn back and
look at the things of which we are vain and proud, and see how poor they
are. How puffed up we are in life! How we measure and overmeasure
ourselves ! How we leave out of our estimate the tbings that most concern
us ! Dear Lord, dost thou love such as we are? And if thou lovest us, why
art thou so long in shaping us to wisdom ? Why art thou so long in rousing
up in us salutary and remedial hope ? Grant that we may be, more and
more, children of God, not by name, but by inspiration. May we feel our
dignity. May all our desires take on the pattern of the future life. And
chastened, moderated, made more earnest, industrious, and faithful, may
we so build that when we leave tnis world something shall remain here for
others as a foundation on which to build. And grant, we pray thee, that at
last, when our work is accomplished, we may be more than Avilling to go.
Why should wc live ? What has life more than disappointment ? What
fountain is there that does not fail— wiiose waters do not turn to bitterness?
What joys are there that the warmth of our hands in plucking do not wilt?
Grant, wi- b-isi^ecii of tiiee, that we may have such a measure of the joy of
the heavenly life taa. we shall be glad to leave this world. May we desire
to depart and be with Christ, which is better than life. And when we see
thee, O thou crowned Saviour, on whose brow love sits— when we see thee
as thou art, and not as with the imagination — then we will give the praise of
our salvation to thee, with the Father, and the Holy Spirit, forever and
ever. Amen.
XVI.
The Religious* Uses of Music.
INVOCATION.
We never ask thee in vain, our Father ; for thou dost move within us
those thoughts and desires which thou art pleased to gratify, making often
intercession with groanings that cannot be uttered, for us. We rejoice in the
greatness of thy power, and the greatness of the power of thy love and thy
sympathy. We draw near, this morning, praying that we may be lifted up
into communion with thee, and that thy shadow may fall down upon us as
the shadow of a rock in a weary land. We rejoice that this day we may
trust in thee, and rest in thee, and be satisfied. Wilt thou inspire our minds
in all the service of the sanctuary, to instruct, to rejoice in fellowship, to
commuTie, to draw near to thee, by faith and love. Help us in every service
of the day, here and at home, and may this be one of the Lord's days,
indeed, in our souls. We ask it for Christ's sake. Amen.
16.
THE RELIGIOUS USES OF MUSIC,
"Speaking to yourselves in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, sing-
and making melody in your heart to the Lord."— Eph. v. 19.
Among the themes of gratulation in our times, is the great
development of music. Every kind — secular and religious, vocal
and instrumental — has had a vast progress within the memory of
this generation. In our childhood there was very little music except
singing — and that was not ecstatic. The reaction of the Puritans
against music had well-nigh extinguished it, until the present gener-
ation. The first efforts to introduce music into New England by
the pitch-pipe were regarded by the more anxious and cautious, who
are ever alert to watcli the devil, as the very finger of Satan him-
self; and soon after, when bass viols and flutes began to be employed
as auxiliaries to the choir they were resisted in regular battle ; and
when the organ advanced, there were not a few who felt that the
church had backslidden, and might about as well go straight over
to Popery.
We have lived to see, in almost all the religious assemblies, these
unwise solicitudes alleviated ; and there is a growing intelligence in
respect to the use of music. There is also a growing disposition to
allow religion to employ any instruments by which it can accom-
plish its divine purpose. Eeligion is not a poor, scrawny prisoner,
tied up in a church and forbidden to go out into the broad sunlight,
obliged to sing watery liynins and psalms, and not allowed to
touch noble instruments. Ileligion is God's own child, and walks a
queen in the earth, and has a right to everything by which men can
be made happier while they are being made better.
The singing in our churches fifty years ago was simply doleful ;
and instruction in music was then a rare accomplishment, and
was for the children of the rich, if for any. Musical instru-
ments were few. It is rare, now, to find a household in com-
fortable circumstances without a musical instrument. It was rare
»T Sr-NDAT MORMNG, Jtrne 23, 1S72. LE3S0X : Psalm cm aviixs (Plymouth Collection)
Nos. 104, »0i, Ui2.
288 lEE BELIGIOUS USES OF MUSIC.
then to find one even in the house of the rich man. I suspect that
my father's house saw tlie first piano wliicli was introduced into the
goodly old town of Litchfield. It was a wonder and a marvel. But
our children are bred to music now as a part of the public instruc-
tion. A great impulse has been given to church music. A native
musical literature has been created. It is not very elevated, it must
be confessed ; but it is good enough for seed. It is the beginning
of a glorious future. Schools are full of music, and streets and
houses resonant with it. Choirs and choral societies in the country
and in the city are increasing in number and in efficiency.
We owe something, I think, of this reviving of music to the
humble Methodists — to what were called " wild revivalists." Those
who conducted revivals followed the impulses of men closely, they
studied human nature ; and these revivals were the truest schools
of preaching, and also of singing. Although we Avere accustomed,
formerly, to speak slightingly of Methodist hymns and tunes, and
to ridicule revival melodies, yet the poorest tune or hymn that ever
was sting is better than no tune and no hymn. It is better to sing
than to be dumb, however poor the singing may be. Any tune
or hymn which excites or gives expression to true devout feeling is
worthy of use ; and no music which comes to us from any quarter
can afford to scorn those simple melodies which taught our fathers
to weep and give thanks in prayer-meetings and revival meetings.
We owe much to the habit of the Methodist Church, which intro-
duced popular singing throughout our land, and first and chiefly
through the West, and little by little everywhere.
We ought to remember, also, such venerable names as Mason and
Hastings, who were early the missionaries of this good cause. They
introduced, and they carefully nourished, the early developments
of music. We owe most, however, for the condition which we are
in with regard to music, at the present day, to foreign immigrants —
above all, to the Germans, who, if they have brought here some
rationalism, and much more lager beer, have also brought a great
musical enthusiasm with them — and I regard that as more than an
offset for both of the others. To them Ave owe a debt which we
sliall not soon pay. Nor have Ave yet received at their hands half of
that Avhich they are prepared to give to our people in these later
stages and in this fuller dcA^elopment of scientific music. We must,
I think, admit that Ave are pupils of our ancestral blood. The old
Saxon blood is teaching us to sing as it has taught us many other
things Avhich are Avell Avorth knowing.
I do not propose to consider music at large : I propose simply to
consider some of its religious uses.
TUE RELIGIOUS USES OF MUSIC. 28'9
The Jews, more than any people, employed music for sacred pur-
poses. It was not unknown to tlie collateral people of the oriental
nations which were cotemporaneous with the Jews ; but it was not
emi)loyed among them to any such degree as it Avas among the Jews.
The Jews were preeminently a choral people ; and as the early
church was almost wholly Jewish — that is, as the dominating char-
acteristic was Jewish — the habit of song, as well as many other
habits, passed over into the early church, and it was a singing
church. By song it consoled itself in sorrows; it instructed
itself; it ministered to its own patience ; it created joy where other-
wise there could have been none. All the way down through the
early centuries there were exhortations to song like that of the
apostle in our text, where he is teaching men how to maintain their
faith under adverse circumstances.
" Speaking to yourselves in psalms and hjrmns and spiritual songs, singing
and makiug melody in your heart to the Lord."
In the early church the hymn was the creed. It was at a
later day, when music began to wane, that creeds took on philo-
sophical forms, and men exchanged psalmody for the cate-
chism. In the Catholic Church music was made to occupy an
eminent position ; but like everything else in that church it was
made hierarchic. In the Eoman Chiirch there was almost no dem-
ocratic element of administration. The Methodist Church is a re-
markable combination of hierarchic government united to democratic
worship. In the government of the church among our Methodist
brethren, for the most part, the clergy act ; but in the conduct of
public worship the whole people have liberty of tongue — and they
use it. But in the old Roman Church the whole worship, as well as
the whole government, Avas in the hands of the hierarchy. The music
was therefore official, and was the music of the church, and not the
music of the community, nor of the common people. One of the most
important elements of the Reformation in Germany Avas not merely
the liberty of thinking, but the liberty of singing. As the Roman
Church had sung for the people, just as it had prayed for them and
preached to them, they being recipients, and the hierarchic body
being the only responsible men Avho Avere at liberty to confer gifts
upon the people, so reaction against this hierarchic administrative
body took on the form, earlier than almost any other, of singing.
The right of the people to sing may not have been techni-
cally disputed; but the feeling of right and the impulse to sing
arose, I think, almost Avholly, from the reactionary spirit. It Avas
so in Germany. It Avas so in France. Indeed at one period it
would seem as though the French Avere likely to outstrip the Ger-
290 TEE BELIGIOUS USES OF MUSIC.
mans in the reformation. At Court, during certain periods, the
psalms of David might be lieard sung by the courtiers ; and peni-
tential psalms were sung to waltzes and other secular music. For a
long time this continued; and if there had arisen a genius who
could have been to that nation what Watts and Wesley and Dodd-
ridge have been as hymn-Avriters to the English people; it is probable
that the Eeformation would have gone on in France as it went on in
England. Not insignificant authorities have declared that the suc-
cess of the German Eeformation depended more upon the fact that
the great mass of the common people were taught to sing, and that
there was furnished them an immense natural literature of hymns,
than upon any other thing. This, perhaps, is an over-estimation of
the matter; but without a doubt that element had a large influ-
ence in bringing the common people up and giving them a power
by which they were sustained and defended against hierarchic op-
pression.
The meaning of religious music ought to be considered. It is
that which is designed to produce, not pleasure, nor admiration, nor
even education in the matter of refinement. Eeligious music, as
distinguished from other music, is that which shall excite or express
some inflection of the highest feelings. Music may be employed to
express thoughts. It may even be employed to recite history. Creeds
themselves may be chanted — the most abstract of all teaching. His-
torical nai'ratives may be chanted. But in our use ordinary music
is designed either to promote or to express what may be called the
moral and spiritual feeVmgs.
There is a great difierence in music itself; and yet almost any
music can be so used as to express religious feeling. There are many
tunes that we sing, which to the ear of a German carry associations
most irreligious, but which to us are religious enough, because
we have not heard them sung in drinking saloons or other low
places. We use for sacred purposes alone tunes that in other
lands are not used exclusively for purposes tliat seem reverent. And
we ought not needlessly to introduce into our religious music tuues
which are worldly. Though one may properly take portions of or-
atorios and symphonies and make of them tunes for hymns and sa-
cred songs, yet there is mucli in all secular music Avliicli had better
be left out from religious music. There is much music which is not
redeemed from associations of gayety, not to say vanity, and which
does not seem likely to be redeemed, and which is not needful, be-
cause there is already in existence, and there is multiplying in every
decade of years, music which is full of the expression of a true re-
ligious feeling.
TEE BELIGI01J8 USES OF 31 U SIC. 291
When, therefore, Ave hear introduced needlessly into religious
service the music of the world, we have a right to be offended. Wo
have a right to say, "We did not come to church for the sake of
having our memories of the theater or of the opera revived. We
did not come to have the imagination of the dance awakened in our
minds." When such music is needed, we should go where it may
properly be found, in the household. We have a right in the
church to ask for such music as shall promote though tfulness, ten-
derness, devoutness, cheerfulness, aspiration, joy in praise, and
hope.
Not only the cliaracter of the music, but also the method of ren-
dering it, is concerned in making it devout or religious. Organ-
music is the noblest music, I think, on earth. The organ is the
noblest instrument that has been created; and like all things
which were meant for time, it has required centuries to con-
struct it. It has grown (nor is it yet fully grown) in majesty,
in scope, in power, in eminent sobriety, and yet, in accompany-
ing vivacity and brilliance. It is, above all other instruments,
adapted to the uses of religion. The church is fortunate in having,
peculiar to itself, the noblest of instruments, which may be said to
be the combination of all other insti'uments that have ever been
created. Still, the organ itself may become an idol, or it may lead
to idolatry. It may stand in the house of God a mere echo of the
Avorld outside. Instead of leading us through dreamy meditations,
or through the more profound emotions, toward veneration; in-
stead of lifting us up from the earth, and bearing us though mys-
terious distances into the very presence of God, how often is it
made the basest slave to titillate the ear, and carry us back again
out of the clouds, or down from the top of the mountain to the
bottom, where the people are, and where demons abuse the people !
In the house of God we have a right to demand that the organ
shall serve — not taste, but religion.
Nor shall I be withheld from saying that for the twenty-five
years during which I have been the pastor, and the only pastor that
this church has ever had, I have counted it to be one of the most
fortunate things in attempting to indoctrinate this people, and to
bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord mu-
sically, that we have had the service of the organ administered by
one* who, to my knowledge, has never once, in any single instance,
deviated, for the sake of pleasing the taste of men, from the strictest
expression of sobriety, of depth, of power, of joy, of liope, of reli-
* Mr. John Zundel.
292 THE BELIGIOUS USES OF MUSIC.
gious feeling. And tliongh this organ lias sometimes gone
after worldly joys, it has never done so nnder the hands of him who
sits at it now. It has been consecrated to the service of religious
sentiment.
It is not the character of the music presented which always de-
termines its religiousness. The nature and object of instrumental
performance and singing in the house of God is the excitement or
expression of religious feeling. That alone should limit and deter-
mine the character of the music which is employed. There is
much music which is good and proper, but not expedient to
introduce into the liousa of God. There is much good music which
can only be rendered to the taste. Much music is so mingled with
what may be called musical gymnastics, that it inevitably will
excite curiosity and admiration, rather than thoughtfulness and
emotion.
I should shock even the least venerating in my presence if,
standing here, I should employ my prayers, the devotions of the
church, as an elocutionary exhibition. I should do violence to your
feelings if, addressing God, I were to begin with the scale of vowel
sounds and explode them all the way from the lowest to the highest,
in the midst of my prayer. You would be shocked if in the most
devout passages of my prayer I should go through these sounds on
the rising scale and on the descending scale, observing the various
inflections and reflections, giving all the tones — the sweetest ones
and the harshest ones. You could not help being shocked if I
should make an elocutionary drill of prayer, using the name of God
as a pivot on which to trill or explode the sounds. Nobody could
tolerate such an outrage of propriety as this would be.
But why is that any worse than to do the same thing in
singing, with our hymns, most of which are prayers ? Why is
that any worse than in singing, to see hov/ rapidly one can run up
or down, or to see hoAv high or low in the scale one can go ?
Why is it any worse than for one to show how exquisitely and
artistically he can utter the highest notes. There is a great
deal of the gymnastics of music that is proper in some places,
which would not be proper in a church; as there is a great deal
in calisthenics that would be proper in a hall devoted to physical
training, which would not be proper here on this platform.
That place has one object, while this place has another. And I
affirm that any use of music, in regard to sacred things, which
makes it merely a physical accomj)lishraent, and which addresses it
to wonder and curiosity and admiration, is a desecration of the
Sabbath, of the sanctuary, and of sacred music itself. As an in-
THE BELIGIOUS USES'OF MUSIO. 293
variable rule, on all occasions of purely religious service, music is
to accomplish some religious end. And no matter how consum-
mate it is, no matter how exquisite it is in taste, if it fails to
promote religious feeling, it fails to meet the end for which it was
instituted.
No matter how finely sermons may be written, no matter
how exquisite they may be as regards choice of language, no
matter how beautiful and apt "may be their illustrations, if they
be sermons that buzz in the ear, and tickle the fancy, and go no
further, they are wasted, and they are out of place in the house of
God. Preaching in the house of God is to seek some religious end.
That religious end may be large ; it may take in the whole range of
faculties ; but it must be an end that leads to devotion.
Any choir that ceases to excite devotion has overstepped the
limits of propriety. The distinction between worldly and sacred
music is marked and clear. One is designed to excite pleasure through
a ministration of taste : the other is designed to incite or express de-
votion through a ministration of religious feeling. Church music be-
longs to the sphere of religion. The highest music for religious
purposes is not vocal and instrumental music pure and simple, but
music which is wedded to jisalms or hymns. When a religious
thought or sentiment is rendered by music, you then have that
which in a religious point of view is ftir higher than either the
music alone or the thought or sentiment alone. To read a hymn,
or to sing a tune, is not so effective as to unite the two and sing
the hymn.
Let us consider some of the advantages in a religions education
which grow out of the use of music in connection with hymns and
psalms.
In the first place, I hold that there is more sound instruc-
tion to be given to a congregation by this method than by
almost any other. Indeed, I doubt, if you were to analyze your
religious emotions, whether you would not trace them back to
hymns more than to the Bible itself. If any one will con-
sider the source of his thoughts of heaven, I think he will land in
Dr. Watts, rather than in the Eevelator, Saint John. I think
that the hymns of Dr. Watts, and Charles Wesley's hymns, in
which they describe heaven, its occupations, its glowing joys, and
its zeal and rapture, have more to do Avith forming men's ideas of
the promised land than any other literature, not excepting the
Bible ; just as John Milton has given us more theology of one
sort than can be found in the Bible.
The hymn-book is the system of theology which has been most
294 TEE EELIGI0U8 USES OF MUSIC.
in vogue among the common people. If you compare, point by
point, the teaching of hymns or creeds or catechisms, I think yon
will join with me in saying that it is a pity that there has not been
more singing. I do not say but that the catechisms may have a
place ; but the instruction which is given by hymns is more like
the instruction which is given by the Word of God than is the
catechism. The Word of God seldom analyzes; it seldom runs
into abstractions ; it seldom presents truth in a philosophic view ;
it almost invariably appeals through the imagination to the feelings,
and through the feelings to the reason. The form of presenting
truth by hymns is the highest form of presenting it — truth as it is
in the heart, and not truth as it is in the head.
In this way the truth is made easy to all comprehensions. We
follow nature. We find that children learn more readily by fables
and stories rather than by reasoning. We find that children are
seldom metaphysicians. More often they are poets. Children
learn more by pictures which are presented to their minds than by
exact statements of ideas. And the Word of God is seldom an un-
interesting book to children if it is properly laid before them.
;N"o preaching was ever so profitable to me, over whose head
went thundering sermon SjW^'' ''": were magnificent, no doubt, which
were impetuous, but lift*v3 .igb above my capacity to understand,
as were portions of the Bibb vvhicli were read to me in a manner
which rendered them attractive to me. At church I looked up and
saw that there were great goings on in my fixther's pulpit, when I
was six ar J seven and eight years old ; but what it Avas all about I
did not auow. When, hovv-ever, my dear old aunt read to me the
ten plagues, the history of Joseph, and Ruth's inimitable history,
or when she read to me from the Gospel scenes in the life of
Christ, nothing could have been plainer to me than these scenes and
these histories. The Bible, thus adminstered to me, was my sanc-
tuary.
So, that instruction which is derived from psalms and hymns ig
according to the Bible method, because it addresses itself through
the imagination to the emotions, and through the emotions to the
understanding. And it is better fitted for the inculcation of popu-
lar theology than sermons themselves.
It is on this account that I think hymns and psalms will be
among the great influences which will bring together the church
of the future, and make substantial harmony between those who
never could be reconciled by their confessions and by their cate-
chism. It is remarkable to see how men Avill quarrel over a dogma,
and then sit down and rejoice over a hymn which expresses
TEB EELIGI0UI6 USES OF MUSIC, 295
precisely the same sentiments about which they have differed. A
man Avill dispute with you in regard to the absohite divinity of
Jesus Christ, but he will sing " Corouation" with you because he
carries out his own idea as he goes along. In general feeliug you
are united, though in special dogmatic statement you disagree.
There have been many vehement controversies between the Cal-
yinists and the Arminians. There have been a great many dis-
putes as to whether men can fall from grace or not after they have
once been effectually called and converted. They all do sin, we
know. The Arminians say that they fall, and the Calvinists
say that they do not. It is a difference of statement in regard to a
fact which seems to me to be without any doubt. But whatever
may be the disputes concerning this recondite matter, on the one
hand the Methodists will sing Calvinistic songs with us, and on the
other hand we will sing Arminian hymns with them. Without
hesitation we sing with each other hymns, guite unaware of what
the doctrines are which are laid up in them. We sing from the
same hymn-book things about which we should widely differ if we
were discussing systems of theology. '•' The theology of the '
feelings,"' as it has been aptly termed, the theology of the heart,
brings men together. You can blend men by common experiences
which touch common feelings; but you cannot unite men by philo-
sophical statements or historical facts. One of the bonds of union
to-day is the hymn-book and tune-.book of the congregation, which
contains dogmas representing every conceivable variation of belief,
which brings men together, harmonizing them and cementing them,
and inspiring in them the feeling that they are brethren, and that
alike they are children of the Father God.
So too, it seems to me, that hymns and psalms render a valuable
service, in that they remove those special hindrances and difficulties
which obstruct the entrance of the truth into men's hearts. There
is much truth which is clearly presented, but which, being pre-
sented in a doctrinal form, or argumentatively, excite in the hearer
a disposition to argue and dispute.
There stands a controversial dog at almost every turn ; and
wiicn you approach men on the subject of theologj^, this watch-dog
shows his teeth. Men call it " conscience"; but a dog is a dog.
Where a man is combative, he denies your propositions, and fights
them. And much that is true never finds an entrance into
men's minds because of the malign feelings wliich arc in them.
But tliere is that in music which has the power of putting these
malign elements to sleep. We arc told, you know, in the fable,
that old Cerberus went to sleep charmed by music. Uowever that
296 THE BELIGI0U8 USES OF MUSIC,
may be, sweet hymns do allay malign feelings ; and men Avho are
rude and combative may be harmonized under their influence.
I remember a remarkable instance which occurred in my father's
lecture-room during one of those sweet scenes which preceded the
separation of the Presbyterian Church into the Old and New
Schools. At that time controversy ran high, and there were fire
and zeal and wrath minglecl with discussion ; and whoever sat in
the chair, the devil presided. On the occasion to which I refer, an
old Scotchman, six feet high, much bent with age, with blue eyes,
large features, very pale and white all over his face, and bald-
headed, walked up and down the back part of the room ; and as
the dispute grew furious, he (and only he could have done it) would
stop and call out, " Mr. Maudera-a-tor, let us sing ' Salva-a-tion ' ;"
and some one would strike up and sing the tune, and the men who
were in angry debate were cut short; but one by one they
joined in, and before they had sung the hymn through they
were all calm and quiet. When they resumed the controversy
it was on a much lower key. So this good old man Avalkcd up
and down, and threw a hymn into the quarrel every few moments,
and kept the religious antagonists from absolute explosion and
fighting. It is the nature of hymns to quell irascible feeling. I do
not think that a man who was mad could sing six verses through
without regaining his temper before he got to the end. You can-
not have antagonistic feelings togetlier. If a child is angry, the
nurse tries to make him laugh ; *and he won't,, he strives against it,
because when the laugh comes, away goes the temper. Our feelings
are set like a board on a pivot; and if this end is temper and that
end is good-humor, when the temper goes up the good-humor goes
down, or v/hen the good-humor goes up the temper goes down.
So it is in respect to all the feelings ; they exist in opposite
pairs; and the way to put down a bad feeling is to find out the
feeling which is opposite to it, and stimulate that. This is in ac-
cordance with the law of the mind. And the singing of sweet
hymns and tunes will go further to cast the devil out of men's
minds than any other exorcism which I know of.
The use of hymns, in singing, also, may be spoken of as
preeminently beneficial to individuals in times of sorrow and
distress. I know of nothing that, on the whole, is^ more soothing
to the thoughts and feelings of one who is in trouble, than the
thinking of a song, if he cannot sing it ; but if he can sing, it is all
the better. The sweet sounds Avhich men utter, seem to rise, and
then descend again in dew and rain from the hand of God upon
them, to cool and quiet them. I am sorry for auy one who cannot
TEE BELIGI0U8 USES OF MUSIO. 297
sing. I am sorry for an3'thing in nature which cannot make music.
I know not that the toad ever sings. Beetles do not sing. Worms
do not make any musical noise. When we come up to the cricket
and the whole cicada tribe, one sings in monotone, and another
breaks into syllabic music — the katy-did, for instance — and their
songs are limited in scope and low in quality. But when you rise
above them to the region of the birds, music takes on more beau-
tiful forms. And I know not what the summer would be worth
without its birds. From their first coming in the spring I bless
God, and find it easier to be devout and to aspire. After mid-
August, when the nest has served its purpose, and the birds have
prepared themselves for their southern flight, I cannot repress
melancholy aud sadness that there is no music in the trees or in
the forest. If they do not sing for themselves, I think they might
afford to sing for me.
If you rise still higher, out of the tribe of uninstructed animals
into the human race, you find superior musical gifts and endow-
ments. There the sense of music takes possession of the under-
standing, and of the whole realm of taste, and of the heart itself.
And the tongue by which men evolve the highest thoughts and
feelings, is the tongue of music.
Men often ask, "How shall I restrain wandering thoughts in
prayer? How shall I pray?" Do you suppose that praying means
kneeling down ? Do you supjjose that praying means uttering just
so many sentences before God ? Do you not suppose, when you
say,
" Jesus, lover of my soul,
Let me to thy bosom fly,"
that that is prayer? If you cannot kneel down and pray,
did you ever try to stand up and pray, singing? Two-thirds
of all our hymns are prayers; and if you find it difficult to
pray, why do you not sing? There are many men who cannot
lead the devotions, of their household; but can you not sing?
Cannot your wife sing? Cannot your children sing? I care
not whether you can do it according to the canons of the most
refined taste; can you do it so that it shall be tolerable? If you
cannot lead in prayer, take two or three devout, prayer-inspiring
hymns, and sing them. Then you will have had devotion more
profitable than if you had repeated petitions which you inherited
from your father, or copied from your deacon or elder of the
church.
As a preparation, then, for religious meetings, sing. As a
preparation for the sanctuary and its privileges, sing. As a prep-
298 TEE BELIGIOUS USES OF MUSIC.
aration for self-examiuation, or as a means of pushing in the worldly
stops, and drawing out the religious stops of the organ, sing. And
let the children sing. Joining in the singing of hymns is eminently
profitable.
The singing of hymns also carries with it great relief to care.
There is many a woman, I think, whose life, passed in the house-
hold, is filled with fears and anxieties, and oftentimes with troubles
which her pride never sufiers her to express except toward God. I
believe that there is many and many a woman who endures unin-
terrupted trials, who is shut u^d to herself, and yet is growing in
richness and strength and inward beauty, being sustained through
all her dreary pilgrimage by the power of Christian hymns. She
sings, and the h}'mns that she sings are such as reacli over almost
every conceivable condition of the mind or heart. The very wine
of experience has been pressed out, and hymns have been found to
contain it. So the griefs which come and go in a day can be easily
soothed ; and the sorrow^ and cares which will not go can be made
tolerable, by the sweet aid of song. Joys can be excited out of sad-
ness. Patience can be inspired out of discouragement. The sweet-
est and richest experiences can be attained through the voice of
music. Men can oftentimes find in song, joys which the sanctuary
itself fails to give them.
Such being the power of music, it seems to me that it ought to
occupy .a much more important place in the realm of instruction.
There are those who ask, " What shall make the Sabbath-day more
acceptable? What shall save the Sabbath-day?" If you ever save
the Sabbath-day you must make it attractive. You will never drive
this great American people into Sunday as into a net. You will
never drive men into the Sabbath-day as into a prison-house. If it
opens its cavernous doors, and invites men only to a condition of
restraint and' formal obedience, they will not enter it. And every
American church that would redeem the Sabbath-day must do it
not by holding up texts badly construed or misreasoued upon. You
must make the Sabbath-day the sweetest day of the week. Then no
argument will be needed to induce men to accept it. If you are not
willing to do that, then you should shut your mouth evermore on
the subject of the desecration of the Sabbath. In every household
it is the duty of father and mother to extort from their children, in
after years, the testimony, that of all the days of the week there
was none that they liked so well as Sunday. Of all the days of the
week there was none that I liked so little as Sunday, when I was a
boy. Of all the days of the week now, there is none on which I
work so much as on Sunday. And if to work on Sunday is to
THE BELIGI0V8 USES OF MUSIC. 299
break the Sabbath, then I am one of the greatest of Sabbath break-
ers, for I work about all day, and sometimes all night. But, after
all, it is the joy-day of the whole week to me. And if you would
redeem the Sabbath, make it more cheerful in the household. Give
it the exhilaration of song. Give it the social element which goes
with psalms and hymns. If you do not make the sanctuary on the
Sabbath-day a place of joy and not gloom, you cannot express the
spirit of such a people as ours : but if you inspire the sanctuary with
a noble life of manhood, and with high conceptions that touch the
whole range- of faculties; if the reason, if the taste, if the moral
faculties, if the deeper springs of the soul, are touched, and the mys-
teries of the world to come are sounded out, and men are thor-
oughly roused, and more thoroughly held, then no house Avill be
la3'ge enough for the congregation that will be eager to participate
in the services of religion. For under such circumstances religion
has the power to make men's sorrows lighter, their joys brighter,
and their hopes more rapturous.
The grand trouble with our Sundays is, that they are stuffed.
They are not filled with living food. They are like dead fowls,
all of them dead and stuffed. But men run after life. They
long for vitality. Eestriction is the accident of religion, and
not its nature. Development is its characteristic. And real noble
music is one of the instrumentalities by which we may redeem the
sanctuary and the Sabbath, very largely from danger of neglect.
It is a matter of inquiry whether we are going to get the Ger-
mans to respect our American Sabbath. I do not want them to
respect our American Sabbath. I want them to respect the Lord's
Day. But you cannot get them to respect the Lord's Day unless
they are made to believe that there is such a thing as the Lord's
Day. HoAV can you expect them to worship when tliey do not feel
certain that there is a God? How can you expect men wlio are
unbound, loose in their religion, to observe your Sabbath-day,
R'hich is but an external institution ? The way to make men re-
spect religion is to lead them to respect manhood in themselves
first. It is to wake up among them religious impulses. The ser-
vices of our Methodist brethren are doing a better work among the
Germans than our polished services are.
Wlien religion is made attractive; when it is made, by singing-
and other instrumentalities, to appeal to men's best feelings; when
it makes the sanctuary a place where men are so happy that they
would ratlier part with their daily bread than witli the bread of the
Lord which they obtain there, then there will be no difficulty in
getting men to observe the Sabbath-day. Make it better than anv
300 THE BELIGIOUS USES OF MUSIC.
other day, and then men will observe it of their owu accord. But
you cannot dry it, desiccate it, make it a relic of the past, and
then get men to bow down to it and respect it. Make it a loving
day, a heart-jumping day, a free-thinking day, a day of inspiration
and of hope, and then you will redeem it.
Not only is music destined to have much to do with individual
experience, with the comfort and joy of the household, and with
church worship, but I am not without hope that it will have
an important influence in promoting international peace. And
if you had stood with me, last week, in that great tumultuous
assembly .in Boston, in that building which is four or five
hundred feet long, and three cr four hundred feet wide,
where there were twenty thousand musical performers and thirty
or forty thousand hearers, I think you would have had the same
feeling. For, when the English Grenadier Band marched from the
midst of the choir and came down into their places, they were
greeted with thunders of enthusiasm. And as they began to play
their national airs and ours together, an almost fanatical wildness
was exhibited by the people. And there were thrice a thousand men
who would fain have rushed up and thrown their arms about them —
and I know of one man who would have led. The feeling grew in
depth and sincerity. It was my pleasure to stand near the colonel
of the regiment, who came out with this band, and who has the
general conduct of affairs with them; and I said to him, '"'If you
have any influence with the Cabinet or the Government, or the De-
partment that manages such things, send a message by cable to
England, and tell them that nothing will contribute so directly, at
present, to the kindly feeling of these two nations toward each other,
as for the Queen to give orders that this band shall go to our prin-
cipal cities, and perform some of their principal pieces. We will
give them an ovation. The land will blaze with enthusiasm toward
them. Old England will have a better opinion of us, and we shall
have kinder feelings toward old England. We? Other folks, for
I have kind enough feelings toward her already."
And this was not peculiar to the representatives of England; for
the next day, when the German band came out, it was thought to
be admirable beyond all description. Each band, each day, was
• thought to be the best. There was nothing to compare with the
Tuesday band of England ; there was nothing like the Wednesday
band of Germany ; and there was nothing comparable to tlie French
band of Thursday. Each, as it came out, carried tlie whole enor-
mous crowd of thousands and thousands of the people out of all
sense of propriety, and, even in decorous old New England, they
THE BELIGIOUS USES OF MUSIC. 301
stood upon the seats, and the men swung their hats; and the wo-
men— who had nothing else to swing but their bonnets, which could
not be seen — swung their handkerchiefs. The wildest enthusiasm
prevailed, and having been in and of the crowd, I am witness to
this glorious international comity, this genuine interchange of cor-
dial sympathy and kindness.
Brethren, these great international exhibitions of mechanical
art, and these contests between nations in music, are a great deal
better than international combats. We have seen what we could
do with the rifle and with artillery ; now let us see what we can do
with the reaping-machine and the trombone. We have seen what
we can do with engines of destruction : now let us see what we
can do by competition in skill.
One thing which leads me to sympathize with the combined
movements of workingmen, though I do not approve of their meas-
ures, is the tendency which these movements have in the direction
of i^eace. We shall never put down war so long as the power of war
is in the top of society. Not until working people have their
say, can you destroy the cannon and the rifle. And anything which
brings the common people into relations of kindness and friendship
will have the effect to hasten on the day of prediction, when there
shall be no more war and destruction.
Though I smiled at the notion of a grand peace jubilee before I
went to Boston, when I came away from there, I said, " Whatever
effect may be produced by this thing here, I am satisfied that it is
in the power of music to have an international influence." And the
time will come when, by pictures, by music, by mechanic arts, and
by industrious affiliations, all nations shall be under one brother-
hood, so that it will be impossible for ambition to rend them asun-
der, dr lead man to destroy man.
Let us, then, pray for the days of song. Sing, man; sing,
woman. Or, if you cannot sing, make a joyful noise to the Lord.
Sing in your house. Sing by the wayside. Sing upon the sea.
Sing in the wilderness. Sing always and everywhere. Pray by
siiigiug. Recite truths by chanting songs. Sing more in the
sanctuary. All of you sing. Sing from city to city, from state to
state, and from nation to nation. Let your songs be like deep
answering to deep, until that day shall come when the heaven and
the earth shall join together, and the grand and final chorus shall
roll through the universe; when "the kingdoms of this world are
become the kingdoms of our Lord and his Christ, and he shall
reign forever and ever."
302 THE EELIGI0U8 USES OF MUSIC.
.PEAYER BEFORE THE SERMON".
We rejoice, our Father, that there are so many who sing thy praise eter-
nally. We rejoice that there is a world whose language is music, and where
joy is unceasing, and seeks expression in song. We are glad to believe that
thou art such a one that none can draw near to thee without ecstatic hap-
piness ; and that every lip must needs break forth in its gladness, in its sense
of what thou art, and in its feeble attempt to utter those things which shall
be praise and adoration. How few there are in life who excite in us other
than compassion, or affection in low degrees ! To how few can we look up !
We are of the earth, earthy. Thou only art pure and perfect. Thou only
canst be approached by praise without its easily running into flattery. And
we rejoice that yet one day we shall behold thee, and be filled with gladness
at thy excellence; yea, and be drawn, by thine excellence and goodness,
toward thy likeness ; and be brought into accord with thee, and made beau-
tiful, as thou, in the beauty of holiness, art transcendently lovely.
We pray that on earth we may be prepared for thy service in that land of
liberty where we shall no longer be bound and hindered ; where we shall
no longer be uncertain ; where we shall see thee as thou art, and be satisfied.
Behold, we beseech of thee, those who bear burdens. Teach them, under
all their burdens, to have a cheerful trust in God. Behold those who are in
darkness, and have no light. May they have that faith which sees the invisi-
ble, and which interprets the meaning of hidden things around about them.
Look upon those who are tempted, and are as if vehemently attacked by
adversaries, and are scarcely able to defend themselves. We pray that they
may have strength from God, and be clothed with the whole panoply of the
Gospel, so that they shall be able to stand even in the hour of direst assault.
We pray that thou wilt grant thy blessing to rest upon those who are
bearing the burden and the heat of the day, being called to the transaction
of the secular affairs of life. As their day is, so may their strength be also.
May their hearts not succumb to the temptations of life. May they bear up,
and become ministers of peace. May Christ be known by their fidelity and
integrity.
We pray that thou wilt grant that the number of those who seek to
become men in Christ Jesus may be multiplied. We pray that they may
seek each other, and find each other out. May those in all nations who are
children of God know each other. May those walls of partition which have
honestly but igncrantly been built vip by men's hands, at last be broken
down and taken out of the way. Aiid we pray that men may love each
other, even as God loves them. We beseech of thee that thou wilt grant that
we may be more concerned to destroy the common enemy than to tear each
other to pieces.
Grant that wickedness may cease to have such fascination and power in
all the earth. May there be more light, more knowledge, and more divine
inspiration to make knowledge effectual. We pray for the cleansing of the
hearts of men, and for the renewing of their will. We pray that they may
be born again into the new and spiritual life, that they may behold the
heaven above them, and that they may know what it means. We pray that
thou wilt clothe thy people with such patience and steadfastness that mgi,
beholding their strength and experience, shall be drawn into the great faith
and love of Jesus Christ which hath inspired them.
• We beseech of thee, that thou wilt look upon all those who need, in espe-
cial, our sympathy. If thei'o be those who are kept away from us by sick-
ness, be with them in that sickness, and alleviate their pain. And if they are
walking the last steps upon the appointed path, and are drawing near to the
THE ni-JLiaior^ USES of music. 303
other life, may they begin to discern the tokens thereof. May they behold
the briplit shining of the gate and the battlements, and hear the notes of that
song in which they soon shall join.
If thei-e be those who are Avithheld from us by the sickness of others, be
thou in their hearts to-day, and make the room of duty the sanctuaiy of
God to them.
We pray for those who are separated from us, having gone about every
whither, upon the sea and upon the land. We commend them all to thy
holy care and keeping.
We b6S;;ech of thee that thou wilt be very near to any who are in bereave-
ment, and whose sorrows will not let them rest. Oh ! thou that didst calm the
troul.)led sea, and sweep, by thy word, the storm out of the heaven, thou also
canst comfort those who are in the deepest affliction. In the bosom of thy
love may they find that peace which the world cannot give them.
Bless, to-day, everywhere, all those who preach the word of God. May
they be armed with fidelity and intelligence. May it not be a vain labor
which they shall perform. Gi'ant that thy word may evel'y where he spread
abroad. May it address itself to the consciences and understandings of men
everywhere. May men learn truth, and purity, and fidelity, and love, and
justice, and aspiration. We pray that the knowledge of God as he shines in
the face of Christ Jesus may be boiue all around the world, and that those
great and glorious predictions may not linger, which promise that the whole
earth shall be the kingdom of the Saviour. O Lord God, the signs are
already rising in the horizon. Be pleased, we beseech of thee, to press for-
ward thy work.
Remember any who are in foreign lands to-day, any who are in the wil-
derness, any who are in the midst of the dark minded peoples of the earth,
seeking to lead them into nobler paths. Comfort their hearts. Strengthen
their hands evermore. And though they lay foundations which others shall
build upon, though they sow seeds whose harvests others shall reap, may
they be content to labor anyv.here. May they be willing to do the hard
work, so that others may have ease in their labor; and may they look for
their reward in the kingdom of glory.
We pray that thou wilt gi-ant thy blessing to rest upon all governments
and upon all rulers. Wilt thou T)lefS the President of these United States,
and those Avho are joined with hira in authority. Bless, we beseech of thee,
the governors of the sevoi'al States, the legislatures, the courts, and all offi-
cers and magistrates throughcut our broad domain. We pray that they may-
be men who shall fear God ; and that they may be men who shall do right-
eouslj'-. Grant, we pi'ay thee, that the daj^ may speedilj' come when no one
shall ne(!d to saj' to his neighbor. Know ye the Lord, but when all shall know
him, from the gr(>atest to the least. And to thy name shall be the praise,"
Father, Son and Spirit, evermore. Amen.
PRAYER AFTER THE SERMON.
Our Father, we beseech thee to bless us in the truth which we have con-
sidered. Prepare; us by righteousness upon earth for t-lu? ministration of
sacred song, and for all its cleansing, inspiring, comforting, and instructing
influences. Bless, Ave beseech of thee, the efforts which are made for its
304 TEE BELIGIOUS USES OF MUSIC
extension. Bless its schools and its teachers, and all the little voices which
are lisping music in their first daj-s. Grant that no child who learns to sing
among us may fail to be in the choir above where we hope to sing. Bless the
great gathering which is assembled in a neighboring city. May the hand of
God, which has preserved it from accident or harm, stib be over it. And
may those things which men have faintly or fondly hoped would be accomp-
lished be more and more abundantly fulfilled than they have expected.
Spread abroad, we pray thee, the spirit of song which grows into friend-
ship and gladness of heart, and which unites men to the heart of God. Wilt
thou fill the whole earth with the joy of thy salvation. And to the Father^
the Son, and the Spirit shall be praises evermore. Amen.
XVII.
Peaceable Living.
INVOCATION.
Let thy grace descend upon us, our Father, as the rain upon the thirsty
earth, as the dew upon the perishing flower, that they may revive again.
Draw near to us by thy life-giving power. Evoke from oiu* hearts those
affections which he dormant, or direct them if they wake, that they may
find thee. And grant that thy presence may be to us a cheer and a comfort,
and the shadow of a great rock in a weary land to those who are spent with
the heat of the day. Be thou a light, a Sun of Righteousness, .to those who
sit in darkness, or are chilled with the cold. Bring forth in all the peaceable
fruit of righteousness. Grant that the services of the sanctuary may be
divinely guided— our songs of praise; our prayers; our speaking and listen-
ing; our meditation. And grant that thy presence may cheer all the hours
of the day. that it may be the Lord's day — the best of all the days of the
week. We ask it for Christ's sake. Arnen.
15.
PEACEABLE LIVING.
" If it be pcwsible, as much as lieth in you, live peaceably with all men."-
RoM. xn. I8f.
Living at peace "with our fellowmen is a profitable aim in life,
and is worthy of thought and study, and then of earnest efibrt. It
cannot always be done. The wisest men, the best men, the most
thoughtful men, the men who are most studious of peace, may have
contention forced upon them. Lot could not live peaceably with
the inhabitants of Sodom — to his great credit. Moses could not
live at peace with Egypt, when he saw his people oppressed. It
■would have been a shame if he could. Samuel could not live at
peace when the king, despotic, arrogant, fractious, was misleading
the people. David could not live at peace with SauL Saul would
not let him. The prophets could not live at peace with the idola-
trous people whom they were sent to instruct and rebuke, and who
would not be corrected nor reformed. Jesus could not live at peace.
The most genial, and gentle, and meek, and merciful, and loving of
all beings was he ; and yet, it was impossible that he should live at
peace with his own countrymen, in his own time. Therefore you
find it said, "If it be possible." In this great quarrelsome world,
it is not made obligatory on a man to be at peace with his fellow-
men anyhow. The command begins with the implication that it is
not always possible. The qualitication is, "as much as lieth in
you." You may be at discords ; but see to it that you do not pro-
duce them. Let them be the result of other men's misconduct, and
not of yours.
A man, therefore, may be at odds with his fellowmen, and yet
be a peaceable man — a man peace-loving and peace-seeking. As far
as in him lies he may be living peaceably ; and yet he may be in con-
tention. We must sometimes be in contention in law. We must
sometimes be in contention in great discussions. We must strive and
contend for great moral truths, and for causes which turn on the
discussion of great moral truths. It is impossible that there should
SiTNBAT MonxiNG, Jiino 30, 1872. Lesson : Rom. XII. Htmns (Plymouth Collection)
Nos. 6C0, 73i, 701.
308 PJEA CEABLE LI VING.
be contention where great interests are involved, and where the appe«
tites and passions of men have become rooted in some wrong, with-
out there being cause and occasion of much disquiet and uneasiness
and unpeaceableness.
The Lord himself said, "I am not come to bring peace, but a
sword ;' and so a Christian man, sweet tempered, most sympathetic,
most genial and kind, may agitate his times Avith fierce discords,
and yet may be excusable — nay, justifiable.
It is not in regard to these moral and public reformatory rela-
tions that the passage particularly speaks. It is with respect to our
ordinary conduct in the household, in society, and in tlie transac*
tions of. common business. We are commanded, as a part of our
allegiance to God and of our proper Christian duty, so to carry
ourselves, in all our daily and familiar relations, tliat if there be con-
flict and disturbance, it shall not be our fault. Of course, if you be
proud, you will say it is not your fault at any rate ; but it must not
be our fault in the sight of God if there is not peace and quietness
where we are present.
Men may live together largely in peace from the fact that they
do not care for each other, and do not come near each other. We
are living very peaceably with the Chinese that are in China ; not
so peaceably Avith those who are in California. Men in a vast hotel
are living at peace with each other. That is, they do not know
each other. One does not even know that the other is there. They
have no commerce whatever. It Avould be a pity if a man could not
live at peace with people whom he did not see and mingle Avith.
So, in hfe, Ave may ignore men. "We may have so little to do
Avith them, that Ave shall be at peace Avith them in a negative Avay.
Then, there may be a kind of forced peace. There may be a
peace which is the result of pride and of self-command. Our
thoughts may be truculent, sharp, analytic, bitter. Our analysis is
usually such as Avasps make Avith their sting. Men have inside cen-
soriousness by which they dissect the faults of others, and keep it to
themselves. They are, in some sense, therefore, peaceable ; but
they are not peaceable in the sight of God.
An unexploded torpedo is peaceable ; but we should not con-
sider it an implement of peace. It has everything ready for an ex-
plosion Avhen it is touched ofi*.
And so a man cannot be expected to have the Gospel disposi-
tion of peace simply because he is not in a broil, so long as he has
dispositions which, upon occasion, Avhen a fit opportunity presents
itself, Avill bring liini into some disagreeable collision with men It
may be called a latent Avar — a kind of truce.
PEACEABLE LIVING. 309
Cordial peace — that iu which good-will exists ; that ia wh^ch
men like and are liked ; that in w^hich men give and get happiness;
that in which men help each other — that is the peace which is
meant. Peace which lightens the burdens of life, which diminishes
the friction of life, which takes away the cares of life, which makes
men helpful one toward another, which removes from men all forms
of vindictiveness, of oppressiveness, of exaggerated pride, and of
vanity — that is the kind of peace that is meant. Active, virtue-
peace — not merely indifferent, negative peace — that is what is
meant.
I will point out some of the causes as observed, as experienced,
as shown, which tend to the destruction of peace, and some of the
more familiar agencies by which we may live at peace with all mei..
First, self-seeking is one of the causes of discord — that self-
seekmg which, in little things and in great, tends to violate the
rights of others. All men must, in one sense, be self-seeking.
The term self-seeking, in its offensive designation, does not apply
to those who simply seek food, raiment, rest, and a sphere of ac-
tivity. These are normal rights. Every man has a right to life,
unless it be forfeited by crime. He has a right to all those agencies
which go to give him power and wisdom. So much attention to
our own selves as is necessary for our happiness is not selfishness,
and is not in any odious sense self-seeking. But, over and above
that, there are thousands of persons that are well-meaning, who
disturb those that are around about them by self-peeking. Uncon-
sciously they put themselves forward. Perhaps, because they are a
little more alert, and have a little more experience, they are in first
They get a little of the best on the right and on the left. And
people who are in their presence find it disagreeable. They are not
cheated, but they are second best all the time. They see these per-
sons, who are no better than they are — not so good — in disposition,
having, in little things, the best of life all around about them, by a
sort of constant, alert self-seeking.
Although this does not rise to the dignity of a grave offence, it
does rise to the dignity of mischief. It tends to rile men. It tends
to keep them in a disagreeable state of mind.
If you sit at table in the household, and there be one boarder
who is forward in securing all the delicacies which are served, ; who
has an advantage, by some diplomacy, with all the servants; who ia
on the right side, in some mysterious way, with the superintendent,
and is perpetually favored in all things — there is scarcely one person
in that whole artificial household who does not feel, in some way,
annoyed and irritated. The peace is broken — and that without
any intention on his part to break the peace.
310 PEACEABLE LIVING.
In all our intercourse with men, we are bound not only to avoid
outright and violent selfishness, which is aggressive, but also to
avoid minor forms of selfishness. It is true that a particle of
emery thrown at a man will not hurt him as much as if a rock
were thrown at him ; but a particle of emery in a man's shoe will
annoy him all day long, and take away his peace and comfort,
And a selfishness which does not meet a man, like a lion, in his
path, and attack him with paw and tooth, may attack him in such
a way as to keep him irritated and chafed all the time. There are
thousands of things that chafe our fellow men which we do not
think of; but we are to live peaceably with all men, and we are to
see to it that our influence does not rouse up and chafe their feel-
ings and dispositions.
This is a region in which etiquette is moral duty. Though many
of the forms of society, and much of its usage, will, at times, be car-
ried to an immoderate extent, yet, in the main, etiquette is the com-
mon law of kindness in common things. It is what experience has
determined to be the best under all circumstances, and it is not to
be set aside as something which belongs to the realm of fashion, and
to persons who feel themselves to be greater than their neighbors.
It is hard to get along without friction. Little annoyances, though
they are minute in each instance, are yet like the particles of the
fragrance of a flower which fill the air by their multitude, and not
by the magnitude of any single particle.
Vanity oftentimes tends to peace, inasmucli as it makes men
behave themselves for the sake of being praised ; but when it exists
in excess, it becomes obnoxious, and is chargeable with being a dis-
turber of the peace.
It may tend to amusement. There are those whose vanity is so
curious, so wonderfully made, and so strangely worn, that it amuses
persons as much as a fool's bells do children, or as much as a clown's
stripes, in a circus, do the lookers-on. There are those whom
everybody except themselves knows to be vain, and they are full of
the little indications of vanity. "Where it is combined, in the main,
with good sense, and with sterling qualities, we not only put up
with it, but sometimes even become fond of it.
When men seek for beautiful wood, to use in cabinet work, they
seek, not for that which is straight-grained, but for knots, or for
those parts which are formed where the branches grow together, and
which are full of contortions. Crooked wood, sawed into veneers,
and polished, makes the most beautiful work that there is.
So, sometimes, men's little faults, if they be of the right kind,
are a sort of ornamentation. Though we cannot saw them out into
PEACEABLE LIVING. 311
veneers, and put them over other things, yet those things Avhich consti-
tute men's oddities oftentimes make them agreeable to us. We do
not want men to be like candles cast in one mold, and all just the
same. We want individuals to be distinguishable one from another.
We do not like stereot}'ped people. We shonld not like to have
everybody's face like everybody else's face. It would not be agree-
able to the eye. And we do not like to see persons' dispositions all
alike. One reason why perfect people are not so agreeable as imper-
fect people are, is, that they are so much alike. They have a cer-
tain sort of straightness and precision in their goodness, and we
wish that they were not so good. We like to have our friends carry
their heads high in the air, toward heaven ; and yet, we like to have
their feet on the ground, that they may be alongside of us, and that
we may know that they touch the earth as well as we. Men's faults
sometimes become attractive in one way or another.
There is a disagreeable and ill-advised measuring of one's faults.
Where a man is excessively proud, we have a latent feeling, " Thank
God, I am not so proud as he is." Where a man is stingy, we are
apt to say, " My pocket is large in the mouth." Where a man
stumbles and bungles, we say, " I would not be such a person for
all the world." That is to say, " I am not such a person. I am not
a stumbler nor a bungler." Aside from this, however, there may
be in a man's vanity an element of kindness and benevolence which
makes it not only endurable, but sometimes beautiful and palatable.
But then, where there is an avarice of praise, where vanity
tends to falsity, where it works under guises, and sets snares and
traps to catch praise, a man may be disagreeable ; and so, often-
times, a person, by his vanity, sets people ai'ound about him at odds
against him, and against each other.
Under such circumstances, vanity naturally excites a desire to
punish it. Where we see men in a social circle about us carrying
themselves as they ought not to, every man feels that there is a
small section of the judgment day in him, and desires to avenge
himself on them, by annoying them in some way. If we see that a
man is inordinately vain, we want to humble him; we want to
bring him down; we Avant to stop him in his course. Inordinate
vanity is a provocation to minor forms of vengeance.
How to cure a man who is constitutionally vain I do not know.
I do not believe constitutional vanity can be cured. It may be
made benevolent, and it may be disciplined and restrained here and
there. I have seen pride very much modified. I have seen irrita-
ble persons become very self-governed. I have seen persons who
were inordinately stingy become generous. But I do not know
312 PEACEABLE LIVING,
tliat I ever saw a person in whom inordinate vanity was cured oi
materially modified. Everything seems to play into that fanlt, and
make it permanent. I do not know of anything that will remedy
it except that medicine which cures all things — death. And yet, if
it be possible, as much as lieth in you, though you be vain, live
peaceably with all men. Do the best you can with your vanity.
Pride, or a sense of one's own proper individuality, is one of the
noblest of human attributes. It is the very core of manhood. It
approaches to a moral sense. It is one's own proper, inward, indi-
vidual personality. A sense of our own importance, of our
own worth, in the great sphere of manhood, makes us self-reliant
and independent. It often acts as a moral sense, and restrains us
from things that are base and vile. But where it transcends its
proper foice, and acts in an exaggerated form, it is exceedingly pro-
vocative. It makes men cold, and haughty, and unsocial.
I have seen men in whom there was no more sign of geniality, of
sympathy, or of a sense of their connection with their fellow-men,
than there is of vegetating growth in the icicle. They were abso-
lutely cold among their fellow-men.
Pride not only tends to shut a man up in himself coldly, but it
tends, through haughtiness, to lead men to esteem others less than
themselves. Proud men often look down upon their fellow-men
with a spirit of contempt.
There are two ways of looking down. There is the way in which
a judge looks down on a sneak-thief, when he is about to sentence
him; and there is the way in which a mother looks down on her
babe in the cradle. Looking down is a different thing when it is
love that looks, from what it is when it is indignation, or a sense
of superiority. One bruises and mangles, and the other nourishes,
and fills the soul with joy.
Now, proud men are fond of esteeming others as their in-
feriors, and of carrying themselves accordingly ; and their presence
is a proclamation of contempt. Many persons never go into
the presence of a contemptuous and proud man without feeling
irritated. A man's pride leads him to assume an attitude of defi-
ance, not because he means to throw out a challenge, but because
the natural tendency of pride is to put a man on his mettle.
You go into the presence of a round, rosy, happy, genial-hearted
man, and he says to you, " Well, neighbor, how about tliese little
matters which we agreed to ? Have not you forgotten them ?" You
instantly say, " I beg a thousand pardons. I had forgotten them."
He wins you right to his side, the first moment, and you thank him
for calling your attention to your fault, and make haste to cor-
rect it.
PEACEABLE LIVING. 313
The same tiling happens between you and your proud neigh-
bor, and he looks upon you in a supercilious way, and says, '• I
thought there was an agreeement between us about these matters."
You straighten up, and say, "What if you did." You instantly
throw yourself into a pugnacious attitude, and there is a battle at
once.
Men defend wrongs in themselves, even when they know that
they are wrong, if they are called to account for them by the
haughty pride and assumption of men. Especially this is the case
if we are proud too — and most of us are, in spots. At times there
may be found something of pride even in the most obsequious per-
"V^liS.
""J^js i?yif3e gepfwates one man from another. It leads to a want
of sympainy ueicween them, and keeps them apart. It prevents
their participation in that healthful intercourse on which the peace
and integrity of society depend,
I hinted at the unconscious natural language of pride. One of
the most important practical truths which you observe in the carry-
ing out of life, is that that faculty in you which predominates over
every other will tend to reproduce its action in the minds of sus-
ceptible persons with whom you come in contact. If you, being
extremely weighed down and sober, go into a room where people
are merry, in a short time there will steal over them a sort of liush-
ing, sobering influence. Your influence upon those present will be
like that of a piece of ice in a tumbler of water.
If a physician goes into a sick-room, as every physician should,
■with a chfeerful countenance and with encouraging words, how the
thermometer rises in the patient's mood! There is hope where
before there was deep despondency.
If- you are a mirthful man, and you are in company, it will not
be long before you will excite a spirit of mirthfulness in those who
are around you. If you relate a mirthful story, their memo-
ries will recall mirthful scenes. Your state of mind will reproduce
itself in them.
If you are irascible, men with whom you come in contact will
likewise be apt to be irascible. You go home at night, and say, "I
never saw so many cross people in this town as I have seen to-day."
Well, you carried the fire-brand which set them a-going. Your
combativeness and irritability excited the same qualities in them.
Proud people are "very liable to be met by proud people. You
■will hear a proud man say, "Everybody insulted me to-day: the
drayman insulted me; the ticket-man- at the ferry insulted me;
the car-conductor insulted me; business men insulted me." All
314 pi; ACE ABLE LIVING.
day long the man has been perfectly salted with insults; and yet,
he has brought them all upon himself.
Let a man carry himself as though he were a sovereign ; let
him feel that he is better than other people; let him act so that
pride shall utter its natural language, and everybody will defend
himself against that pride, all bringing the same feeling to bear
in return. Let your dog bark, and my dog will answer him.
So, then, men may, quite unconsciously, by the natural lan-
guage of an overweening pride, stir up their fellow-men with per-
petual irritations and annoyances. A man thinks himself to be
most peaceable ; he does not know why it is that everybody quar-
rels with him ; and yet, he quarrels with everybody.
I need not say that combativeness, in both its open and latent
forms, is subject to the charge of breaking the peace. In its open
form it takes on intellectual phases. There are a great many men
who cannot produce conviction in a discussion, who fail to
convince in preaching or oratory, because they are so dispu-
tatious. If you stand on one side of the street with a bo^s^,
and men are passing on the other side, and you dra\v^ it at
them, they throw up their shield if they have anything to de-
fend themselves with. They do not want to be hit, and so they
endeavor to protect themselves. So, if a man who is discussing
a matter discusses it pugnaciously, and hurls his opinions at you
dogmatically, you take his manner and attitude as a challenge to
defend yourself. You will not have opinions crammed down your
throat. Your self-respect is hurt by a man v.ho undertakes to com-
pel you to accept his views. You are not willing to acknowledge
that he is the only man in the world who knows anything. If he
lays down his doctrine, and says that there is no possible getting
away from it, you say, " Well, I will see if I cannot get away from
it." He provokes you by his dogmatism. This is not the way to
convince men. Many men will take a thought from you as a gift,
hut will not let you throw it into their house as a bomb. You will
often see a man who is in many respects well-meaning and right-
sided, by his excessive pugnacity drive men away from him. I have
known men who would have driven an audience of a thousand peo-
ple away from them every year, all their life long, if they had had
a chance. They were quite unconscious that the reason of their
unpopularity was their own excessive, bull-headed combativeness.
They thought that men were totally depraved, and did not like
the truth, and tluit they did not like them because they preached
the truth.
The same is true in reo-ard to conversation and social relations.
PDA CEABLE LIVING. 315
A man may keep men in a disagreeable mood so that they will not
like to talk with him. When he talks, he legislates ; when he holds
intercourse, he does it as a sovereign would ; and he annoys and
offends men. This is the intellectual form of combativeness.
Men may be pugnacious, quarrelsome in their dispositions,
and yet they may not know it. A. man may have disagree-
able qualities which utterly separate between him and those
around about him, and yet be unconscious of it. " Learn of me,
for I am meek and lowly in heart," said the Saviour. There are
persons who seem never to have known what this passage means.
They are almost invariably quarrelsome. In everything their
whole life puts on the form of attack.
But there are latent forms of combativeness which are more
common. There is what may be called supersensibility. There
are cases where combativeness or irritability is latent. Though it
does not show itself, probably it works in the brain and keeps it
excited.
Sulkiness, moroseness, ali modified forms of temper, are sources,
not only of unhappiness to the persons in whom they exist, but
of annoyance to those who are around about them. All forms .of
observation, all criticism, all wit and humor, which are employed
at the expense of men's feelings, are latent forms of combativeness.
I am sorry for f)ersons who always see the bad first, and the good
last, or never. Whether it be in art, or whether it be in the con-
duct of affairs, or whether it be in social life, one should know
what is harmony and what is discord, what is straight and what is
crooked, what is right and what is wrong. A man that is strongly
sensitive to the beautiful and true and right, is in a healthy condi-
tion of mind — and health is the most beautiful thing in the
world. In the plant, in its place ; in the animal, in its place ; in
society, in its place; in all parts of the mental economy, a healthy,
normal condition — that is the thing which is the most beautiful,
and which ought to be the most attractive.
There are those who think that to see people's weaknesses, and
to hold them up in the light of ridicule, shows a peculiar smart-
ness— something more than a common strength of mind ; but I
do not think it does.
Suppose there should be a fellow so dexterous that, walking
along the street, and seeing an old gentleman passing by, he could
give hirii a nip in a manner so sly that no one could know how it
was done; and suppose he should rejoice to see the old gentleman
jump r' Suppose there was a little boy so cunning that, stooping,
he could hit the man so that he should not know who hit him, and
316 PJ^A CEABLE LIVING.
he should langh to see the mau rise up and look around in amaze-
ment to see where the hlow came from ? Suppose one should throw
a torpedo under a man's feet so deftly as not to he discovered in the
act, and should enjoy seeing the man jump and look in vain to see
who it was that threw it ? Suppose there should be one who, for
his own pleasure, everywhere he went, gave some annoyance to
everybody that passed by him, in ways so artful as not to be
detected? Would you praise him? Would you- say that he was
an expert fellow ? Would you call him a perfect genius ? If you
should see a person sitting on the corner of the street, and somehow
making uncomfortable everybody who went by, and he should
laugh, and for a half an hour tell you how he had fixed this man,
and how he had played a trick on that man, would you not feel
that there was not another such miscreant in society ? And yet,
persons do the same thing mentally. They see all the little obliqui-
ties that there are in men, and use them as a means of annoying
them. They see things which they ought not to see. There are
many things in life which you ouglij: to be ashamed to see, and
which, if you do see them, you ought to pretend not to see. There
is an amiable deception whicli I think will be forgiven. Do you
suppose that at table you ought to see all the things that happen ?
If a lady takes a swallow of tea before it is quite cool, ought you to
know it ? Never. A thousand little things are happening in life
which a proper delicacy would lead you to act as if you did not see.
Things are going on in life which should be hidden as much as pos-
sible. There is nobody who has not a whole museum of absurdities.
And if you like those things, you can fish them out. There is not
a faculty in my soul whicli does not make itself buffoon, at one time
or another, measured by the higher law. There is not a single at-
tribute in man which does not at times make itself foolish. Suc>
things are bound \x^ in the nature of men. They are a part of the
indispensable economy under whicli we are being developed, and are
growing to man's estate. And ought we to think of these things,
and see them quickly, and make them conspicuous, without inquir-
ing what the eifect will be upon the welfare ot others ?
Sometimes men's peculiarities are inordinate, are despotic, and
are the cause of mischief in life. Then we have a right to meet
them and lash them with ridicule. Then it is that sarcasm may
be used like a surgeon's knife. Then it is that wit and humor may
do a legitimate work of humanity. But in the ten tliousand
little interplays of life, men should be amiable, as far as possible,
and should see things that are sweet and agreeable. If they see
other things they should hide them, or should seem not to see them.
PEACEABLE LIVING. 317
You should take the mantle which is on your shoulder, and with it
cover the nakedness of your brother, and not expose him to jeer
and ridicule.
I need not speak of the malign passions — of envy, and jealousy;
and hatred, and revenge— as they exhibit themselves in the store, in
the shop, in the street, in the school, everywhere. The play of
these baser feelings" among men is recognized by all as morally
wrong.
On the other hand, I will mention a few things which make
diredtly for peace. First, let me speak of cheerfulness and good-
nature. I hardly know how to define cheerfulness. It is partly a
mental, and partly a bodily element. There are some who are
cheerful in a state of unhealth ; but generally cheerfulness exists
where one has fulfilled the physical conditions of health.
Also, there is usually associated with it a mental element of
courage and hope. Therefore, in most instances, cheerfulness
belongs to courageous natures. But whether it belongs to the one
class or the other, whatever may be its cause, it is one of the
blessings of life, and yen should seek it for yourself, for your
f^jbiily? and for the community at large.
If any man has springs of cheerfulness and of good-nature in
him, in the name of the God of benevolence let him not stop them
up. Let him rather keep them open, that they may be a source of
joy and consolation to his fellow men;
I have sometimes heard it said of young naen that before they
joined the church they were good fellows, but that afterward there
was nothius^ in them. It is because some men think that reliijion
consists in tying up the natural faculties. On the contrary, I think
it consists in untying them, in giving them a wholesome develop-
ment, and so making them better and sweeter and larger.
We do not put a colt into the harness for the sake of diminish-
ing his power, but simply for the sake of directing it ; and Ave are
putting the harness on men, not to take away their power, but to
organize it for use, and make it more facile. And in regard to
good-cheer, humor, buoyancy of disposition, hopefulness — if a man
has it naturally, it is an inestimable gift ; and religion should make
it more — not less. If you are converted to-day, you ought to laugh
twice to-day where you did once yesterday. If last month you were
a sinner, and were without hope in heaven, and still you were
cheerful, now, if you are a Christian, you ought to have a cheerful-
ness that is sweeter, more ample, better directed. I would rather
transmit to a child of mine a clear common-sense, with a cheerful
and hopeful disposition, and the art of enjoying things as he finds
318 PEACEABLE LIVING.
them, than to give him millions of money, with coronets and hoiiora
innumerable.
The fact is, we build our houses inside. The furniture of our
houses which we enjoy is inside. The riches which are l)est for
us are our constitutional riches. It is the soul that makes the
man — not outside circumstances. " A man's life consisteth not in
the abundance of the things which he possesseth."
A man who is cheerful can alleviate the sadness and gloom of a
whole company where he is. One clear, open-hearted, agreeable,
cheerful, hopeful, courageous nature, is medicine for a hundred de-
sponding souls.
If God has given you a cheerful temperament — use it. Do not
eclipse it, nor hide it under a bushel. If you have become a Chris-
tian here, understand that religion in this place is a religion which
carries with it joy in the Holy Ghost, and not a religion that mopes,
and dwells in melancholy.
Gentleness and kindness are elements of peaceableness. 'i'he
opportunity for exercising these elements occurs every da}' and
everywhere.
I wish, every day, when you go to your morning prayer, instead
of praying that God will, for Christ's sake, forgive your sins, that
he will guide you through the day, that he will prosper you in youi
business, that he will keep you from temptation — I wish, instead
of making these generic, wholesale pi'ayers, and promising tiiat if
God Avill grant them he shall have all the praise and glory, you
would make some specific, retail prayers. Oh! how wholesome it
would be, if, in the morning, you would kneel down by the side of
your bed, and say, " Thou knowest, 0 Lord, that I have an un-
reasonable disposition. Thou knowest that I am irritable in my-
self, and ugly toward others. Thou knowest that I provoke and
disturb those who arc around about me. And I pray that thy grace
may go with me to-day, and keep me gentle in tongue and in
action"! And at noon it would be wholesome to follow that
prayer by another of the same kind. And at evening it would be
wholesome to look back and see how far God has helped you. Do
this, and try it again and again, until it has become a habit with
you.
Be gentle. Be easy to be entreated. That is, when persona
come to you for favors which are reasonable and right, do not let
them have to climb up to the attainment of them as a man would
climb up a cliff to find sea-bird's eggs — at the risk of his life. Be
willing to be good and kind to men.
1 had occasion only day before yesterday to ask a favor — nof f'>r
PEACEABLE LIVING. 310
Tnysell^ bill for another. I went to one man, and laid the case be-
fore him. He Avas reluctant. He surveyed the matter all round.
He looked at it on every side. He raised this, that, and the other
ditlicuh}. And finally, at the very last moment, he said, "If you
eaimoi ilo any better, why, I will."
I went to another man. I sat down, and began to state the ease
to him. I had hardly got five sentences out before he said, " Of
course I will. Let us go right away and attend to it." He jumped
right over me in his eagerness to grant the favor. Ah ! what a dif-
ference there is in the giving of difierent men!
Some men are like chestnuts before the frost has opened the
burs. You have to club them, and club them, and club them, to
get anything out of them. On the other hand, some men are like
chestnuts which have ripened under the frost. They ai'e already
opened, and they rain down their favors upon you if you but jar
the tree with your hand.
If a man is only gentle and kind, and easy to be entreated, how
much of peace he can diffuse among his fellow men !
You are Avishing that you were an orator. A man may be an
orator and yet be a fool. You are wishing that you had genius.
A man may have genius without having common sense; and a
man might as well not be born as not to have common sense. You
are wishing that you were conspicuous. God has given you, in the
place where you are, an opportunity to do more toward making the
world happy, than you could do if he had made you conspicuous,
if you are only hopeful, and cheerful, and gentle, and kind.
This world is full of discords and attritions all the time. Selfish-
ness is double-bladed, and is continually cutting and piercing both
ways. There is conflict and rivalry on all hands. What we want,
above all things, is peace.
The engineer does not let his engines run without oiling. He
oils it at every great stop, and at every joint. Oh, that men could
be engineers of j)eace, and introduce an element which should pre-
vent friction and annoyance, and diminish, from day to day, the
attritions of men, and from day to day increase their comforts! Oh,
that men strove more to make those around about them cheerful,
and hopeful, and self-helpful ! Oh, that men would help their fel-
lowmen, in order that they might help others; that they would lend
to them, in order that they might lend to others; that they would
console them, in order that they might console others ! Oh, that
men would be like their Father in heaven, who "muketh his sun to
rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and
on the unjust"
320 PEACEABLE LIVING.
Human sympathy felt for all men is a source of great peaceable-
ness and alleviation. "We are told to " condescend to men of low-
estate." But do not let men see you go down to them. Let them
find you down where they are, so that they shall not feel that, being
superior to them, you took it into your mind to come down to them.
Men do not like to be patronized in that way ; and if you have a
genuine, kind feeliug toward them, you will not hurt their feelings
by a show of condescension.
I think I can get angry as quick as anybody. I do not think I
am deficient in that Christian grace. But I never saw a man yet
■whom I would not have compassion for, after I had had time to
think, and to couple him with his ovrn trials, and reflect where he
came from, who educated him, what sort of a tussle he has had in
life, and what temptations and provocations he has been subjected
to. Above all, if I look at it a little, and think that we are like so
many insects that battle in this world, when I see one who has
failed, fallen down, done wrong, I think, " After all, he is a man, and
he has eternity before him." And just the first thought of these
things does away with all my hatred of him, and my heart yearns
toward him. I cannot keep hot long enough to be as revengeful as
editors and reformers want to be. I pity sinners even when they
are culprits.
A man stole my horse the other day. If I had caught him
within the first hour after I learned that the deed was committed, it
would have fared hard wath him; but after I had had time to reflect,
I thought, " Let Lera go." But I would travel a great way to save
the man. I fear that nothing will save him; but I am very sorry for
him. I think that I could sit down by his side and talk to him as
if he were a brother. I yearn after the manhood that is in him
I think of the immortality which lies around and beyond it.
I am not so anxious about the evils of my fellowmen as I am
about that which is yet to come. What I think of, is that growth
which shall bring my fellowmen into another life, free from the
temptations of this, and cleansed from all bodily hindrances and
shackles. My hope is that he may stand there so difierently that I
shall not know him as I do in the flesh.
There is a sympathy that we feel for the humanity that is in
men, which enables us to make allowance for them on account of
their circumstances and conditions. And it is one of the fruits of
Christianity. Otherwise, how could God think of us and pity us.
We are taught that there is a divine sympathy with men, and that
God can look upon them with allowance; and we are exhorted to be
of the same spirit ; and as soon as we are, there will be very little
necessity for clasliings.
PEACEABLE LIVINGf. 321
Let mc give a few other simple directions for keeping the peace.
One is, Hold your tongue. Tliere are more quarrels smothered by-
just shutting your mouth, and holding it shut, than by all the wis-
dom in the world. You may be obliged to speak ; you may be a
mother or father and have to scold your children ; you may be a
teacher, and feel called upon to rebuke, with all long-suffering, and
with suffering that is not so long sometimes ; but ordinarily, in
common life, more than two-thirds of all the things which come up
for remark, had better be let alone. Just hold your tongue.
The old Greeks said that a man had two ears and one mouth,
tlfat he might hear twice and speak once ; and there is a great deal
of good sense in it. You will find that if you will simply hold your
peace, you will pass over nine out of ten of the provocations of
lifo.
" But what if men say and do things so provoking that you can-
not hold your tongue ?" Then, above all things, hold it!
Closely allied to this direction for keeping the peace, is another,
which is, Ld things alone. Do not meddle with things. Do not
pick at them. You can make an ulcer out of a pimple, if you will
only pick it enough. All that is necessary is, just to pick it. Leave
things to themselves. When things happen, do not talk about
ihem. Keep quiet about them in the family. Do not tell anybody
about them. If things happen in the neighborhood, do not try to
settle them. The Lord deliver me from those Don Quixote settlers
of troubles who go about the neighborhood fanning to a flame
things that would die of themselves, if let alone. The majority of
troubles in life are like single sparks. If you let them remain single,
they will very soon go out, and nothing will be left but ashes — and
ashes burn nobody ; but if to a spark you put some kindling stuff,
and blow it, you will soon have a flame. The little troubles of life,
which are of daily occurrence, and of which there are so many, are
to be let alone.
"You know that So-and-So has done so-and-so: what do you.
think Ave had better do about it?" Nothing. Let it alone. " You
are aware that So-and-So has been going about fixing things in this
way : What do you think we had better do about it ?" Nothing.
There are two plasters that Avill cure ninety-nine sores in a hun
dred — silence, and letting them alone. This is particularly so in
the household, in the shop, and in other places where men are
brought near to each other.
I might indulge in some strong remarks on the subject of those
who adojit the contrary course — talebearers, who carry and fetch,
and are like dogs that in summer days you will see Ayith a stick iu
322 PEACEABLE LIVING.
their mouth, running here and there with sportive boys. I have
seen persons who forever had rnischievous tales in their mouth which
they were carrying hither and thither. They ought to be employed
in the devil's post-office; they ought to be common carriers of vile
trash — and they are. They are distributing the devil's hillet-doux
throughout their neighborhood.
A dove would sit on a tree, on the gable of a house, or on some
peak, for weeks and months, and never know that there was any-
thing decaying in all the valley beneath him; but a turkey-buzzard
would not sit there three minutes before he would see something
dying. There is a great deal of difference in the nature of birds*—
and of men. There are men who are always seeing something,
always smelling something, always hearing something. And the
moment they hear, they diffuse. They carry abroad what they
hear.
In our homes we suppress disagreeable things — we suppress
stenches. No person who has ordinary decency fails to do this.
It is only in respect to the excretions of the soul that men run
about making themselves nasty carriers of nasty things for nasty
purposes. Where there is no tale-bearer, contention ceases. "Where
there is no fuel, the fire goes out.
You may say, "Is not this line of instruction contrary to
Scripture ? For instance, does not James say, ' First pure, then
peaceable ' ?" I have heard that quoted so long that I thiruk it
worth while to read it. One would really think that no one had
any right to be peaceable until everybody and everything was pure.
Is a man up for heresy? People say, "Let him alone. Do not dis-
turb him. He means right. Time will help him. He will go
right by and by." "Ah! but," says some old hound that runs
down heresy, " does not the Word of God say, ' First pure, then
peaceable ' ?"
Here is a man who has stolen a little. He did not do it in the
right way, and so he was caught. The people are down on him,
and are going to make an example of him. But some one stops
them, and says, " Do not destroy the young man, for this his first
or second fault. Save him. It is better to reform him, if possible,
than to destroy him. There is nothing which answers the ends of
justice like reformation." " But, ah !" says some old man who goes
in for punishing wrong-doers, " ' First pure, then peaceable.' Let
him give evidence of reformation, and he may be spared. Other-
wise, let him feel the lash."
Let us see what is said here :
•' But the wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle,
PEACEABLE LIVING. 823
and easy to l)e entreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without parvialifcy,
and without hypocrisy."
It is not speakuig about conduct. It is simply speaking of that
inspiration wiiich comes from good. Then it enumerates the differ-
ent steps not in the order of cause and effect at all, nor in the order
of a bill of items, nor as I would say, " I shall open my subject by
showing so and so." It is not to be supposed that here priority is
determined at all. James says, "First pure, then peaceable." He
might just as well have said, "First peaceable, then pure." Or,
he might have said, "First gentle, then peaceable, and then
pure." It is simply a recapitulation. It is not a philosophical
statement, observing a given order of causation.
" The wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable."
It is not meant to be understood that a man must not be peaceable
until he is pure. If that were the case, quarrelsome men would ex-
cuse themselves as not responsible, saying, "I am not pure yet;
and the command is that I must be first pure and then peaceable."
Such an interpretation of this passage would open the doors of uni-
versal indulgence and "icense. The text is a mis-quoted one. We
are to be peaceable for the sake of purity, as well as pure for the sake
of peace. It works both ways. We are to be gentle for the sake of
peaceableness, as well as peaceable for the sake of gentleness. The
two things are interchangeable.
Once more. How much better it is to be under the benison of
God, and inherit the blessings Avhich have been pronounced on
peace-makers, than have the remunerations which those men receive
who live to irritate their fellowmen, and to fill human life with
spines and prickles.
I am sorry for this weeping and groaning old world which rolls
around as though it were set to perform a requiem in the universe
by day and by night. It is sad to think of the depths of the human
troubles, and mistakes, and stumblings, and overthrows, and de-
structions, which are going on throughout the earth.
I sit, at eventide, and look over on yonder city, with its myriad
lights scattered along the shore, which appear like the eyes of
watching dragons ; and I think, " If all those houses were uncov-
ered, and I could look into them, would I see more chambers of
gladness and joyfulness, or more of sadness, and sorrow, and heart-
aching, and disappointment and excited desires ungratified ?' That
great city is a smothering reservoir of human suffering, as well as
of human aspiration and enjoyment ; and the whole world groans
and travails in pain until now.
But blessed are the peacemakers. Blessed is every man who car-
324 PEACEABLE LIVING.
ries himself as the miguouette carries itself, homely and small, but
with more fragrance than it can keep, filling the air with sweetness,
and rejoicing every man who passes by. A Christian man, though
he be humble and inconspicuous, like the mignonette, should be
full of the fragrance of love and gentleness and peace. Or, if he
be more aspiring, let him be as the honeysuckle, that never climbs
so high that it forgets to blossom, and never blossoms so high that
it cannot send down fragrance in showers to the low-lying creatures
beneath it. Whether you be high or low, let there be enough of
the influence of God shed abroad in your heart for you and for
those around about you. So shall you be children of your Father
which is in heaven.
This is better than worldly logic. It is better than the decrees
of authority. It is better now, it will be better through life, and it
will be more satisfying in the dying hour. You will never, in the
morning of the resurrection, be sorry for any tear that you have
wiped away ; you will never be sorry for any aspiration that you
have excited ; you will never be sorry for any kindness that you
have done ; you will never be sorry for any blow that you have
withheld ; you will never be sorry for any bitter word unuttered ;
you will never be sorry for refraining from those things which open
graves in men's souls ; you will never be sorry that you lived
peaceably with all men, though you will be sorry if you have quar-
reled with any man.
May God grant that we may be His children, and so love peace.
PBAOHABLE Livnra. 325
PEAYEK BEFOEE THE SERMON.
We draw near to thee, our Father, remembering the mercies of past days.
Thou art not to us only what thou art made known to be in thy Word,
Thou hast translated thyself unto our experience, and the meaning of thy
word we have found out in our Father's house and by the way. Through
life, in sorrow, in anguish of heart, in prosperity, in crowning joys, we
have discerned thee. Thou hast given us glimpses of thyself through
ever}" opening experience of our lives ; and as thou bast been our fathers'
God, so hast thou been our God. Thou hast been the God of the patriarch*
and of the prophet, and of the martyr; and yet, thou hast made thyself
nearer to us than thou dost seem when we read of thee in them. Thou hast
walked with us. We have communed with thee. Thou hast tenderly
upheld us in our weakness. Thou hast comforted us in our sorrows. Thou
hast made the invisible space around about us populous. Thou hast built up in
our imagination, and caused to glow with all things which are to be desired,
the home, the heaven, which thou hast promised us. Thou hast granted us
some sense of the mystery of godliness, and some sense of the majesty of
God ; and our thoughts have been pilgrims through the mighty realm where
thou art; and though, by searching, we canuotflnd thee out to perfection,
we have discerned thee. As they that look upon the mountains cannot see
all that is in them, nor the whole range thereof, so have we not found thee
out; and yet we have (explored thy nature, and learned truly that which we
know. We have discerned dimly where point after point thou dost recede
toward the infinite and the eternal ; and we rejoice in that which we know,
and in the overhanging glory of that which we discern faintly, and in the
faith of that which is unknown, and which will yet to us transcend in beanty
all that now we can frame or fashion by our imagination. For thou art not
less than an earthly father or an earthly mother. Thy glory is not less than
the glory of an earthly potentate. Thoii dost lift thyself up in eternal excel-
lence far beyond anything which man can kindle or know. And we shall
not be disappointed. Thy tenderness will be more exquisite than we think.
Thy gentleness will transcend all the measures which we have of gentleness
among men. Thine infinite goodness, thine all-conquering love, the sweet-
ness of thy personal presence, the glory, the beauty of that estate into which
thou wilt bring us, the nobleness of thy friendship, thy converse— there is
nothing that eye hath seen, or that ear hath heard, or that it hath entered
into the heart of man to conceive, which can be compared to these things.
We lielieve that they exist, though we do not know exactly what they are.
And we rejoice in them.
O Lord, we desire to be made more and more the recipients of that
faith by which we discern invisible things, and perceive that things which
are not shall overcome things which are. The noise of life, its strifes
and its cares, are too much for us. As a mirror is dimmed by the breath
of him who looks into it all day long, so we are shadowed by onr very
duties. We are overcast by things which are good as well as by things
which are evil. We are warped, biased. We cannot endure trouble and
defeat as men in God should. Nor can we stand in the lilandishments
of prosperity as firmlj" and securely as we ought. We are walking through
a desert laud, pilgrims and strangers, discouraged, at times, by short day
journeys. We are easily ove»coino by weariness. We are overborne by
despondency in the midst of discomforts. But, O Lord our God, thou com-
fortest u^, an i thou wilt unto the end. We rejoice that we are not shut up
to perfeetiuQ as the condition of thy sympathy and thy love. W<! rejoice
32 G pi: A CITABLE LIVING.
that we are conscious that thou hast made us, and that we are under a provi-
dence which is shaping us, and that thou knowest what we are, and that not-
withstanding our weakness and sinfulness thou art not discoui"aged concern-
ing us. Thou art not weary of thy charge. Tliou art not surprized at anything
whicli we do. Thou knowest that we are babes, and more patient art thou
with us than the nurse is with the child. Thou knewest our imperfections
in the beginning, and more generous and lenient art thou with us than a
mother is Avith her little one.
Now, Lord, we desire, over against thine infinite lenity, thy waiting
patience, thy long-suffering and loving kindness, to raise up some sense of
obligation in ourselves — some gratitude — some exhibition of love and thank-
lulness — something that shall show us that the sun has shined, and has
brought out some things that grow, and have beauty, and bear fruit. Be
pleased to grant that we may be filled with the fruits of the Spirit, and that
we may more and more abound in them, and that thine eye may be delighted,
and that men around about us may be cheered and comforted by the work
which is wrought in us by the Spirit of the living God.
We ask for the forgiveness of our sins, knowing that they are already
forgiven. We ask for the continuance of thy gracious presence, knowing
assuredly that thou wilt continue to be with us. The sun shall rise and set
before thou forgcttest those who are under thy care. We pray for thy
divine compassion, knovriug that as a father pitieth his children, so, already,
the Lord pitieth those who fear him. And yet, thou hast made it sweet for
us to ask even for invisible thirJgs. Thou hast made it a blessed thing to take
thy favors, perfumed with thy sense of our naed, and with thy forethought
iu giving that which we desire. We would be roceiitaeles of thine influence.
As the sun shines in the dewdroji according to its measvire, so shine in us.
Fill the whole of our little orbs with thy presence, so that thy life shall aug-
ment ours, and sustain it. And day by day may we walk with God, until
by and by the welcome and joyful word shall come flying to us, borne by
angel messengers. Thy father hath sent for thee. And then may all the love
of children be awaked in us, and by faith and confidence may we with cheer
exchange thuigs which are seen for things that are unseen, knowing that
God, by his angelic missengers vrill convoy us safely, and bring us home to
the land which we have longer', for, to Jesus the Mediator of the New Cove-
nant, to the Almighty Piither, and to the aU-quickening Spirit.
And to the Father, the Son and the Spirit, shall be the praise of our sal-
vation forever and ever. Amen.
PEAYER AFTER THE SERMON.
Our Father, we pray that thou wilt grant thy blessing to rest upon us,
and upon all the truths which we have pondered. May they not fall upon
the ovxtward ear alone. May we have some thought of improvement. May
we begin, to-day, in some respects, to live better and higher than we
have lived before. Fill us with that divine Spirit by which we have been
redeemed, and bv which we are living from day to day, though with mani-
fest imperfections and sins. We pray that thou wilt l>ind us to each other
by th(^ corfis of sympathy and of kindly affection. We pray that pride may
be chastened, that obstinacy may be taken away, that every evil and malign
})assion may be subdued, and that thy grace may reign triuuiphant in every
heart. We ask it for Christ's sake. Amen.
XVIII.
The Law of Liberty.
INVOCATION.
We draw near to thee by our heart, O Father ! Thy love is omnipotent
In thee we have infinite hope; and out of thee none. For while thou art
governing things mauimate by thy right hand, thou art governing us by thy
thoughts of love and mercy. We are not beasts that perish. We are the
sons of God. And we come home, this morning, to thee ; and thou needest
no persuasion, only that we should recognize thy hand and loving mercy
and open our hearts in faith, and take the bounties which are already pre-
pared for us. Shine forth, O Holy Spirit of light and comfort. Smile be-
nignly. Eternal Father— God of all love— Saviour— our Elder Brother and
nearest Friend, by the understanding of whom we understand all the rest.
Give us, this morning, the tokens of thy presence and of thine interest in us.
And so may we know that we are heard and accepted by the inward draw-
ing of our souls God-ward to-day. Bless the service of the sanctuary, our
joy one with another, and our sweet fellowship in Christian liberty. Bless,
we pray thee, the services of instruction, and the oiferings of devotion. May
all the services of thine house, and of our houses, be acceptable in thy sight,
O Lord, our Strength and our Redeemer. Amen.
18.
THE LAW OE LIBEETY.
" ?< . nd fast, therefore, in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free,
and Oo Qot entangled again with the yoke of bondage." "But if ye be led
of the t pirit, ye are not under the law." — Gai. V. 1, 18.
There are two kinds of lawless people — those who are under the
law, and those who are above the law. The one class are a very
bad sort of people, and the other are the very best sort. A man
who is under the law, and lawless, is thoroughly wicked. A man
who is above the law, and lawless, because he has already incorpor-
ated into his own. nature the tendencies which the law was set to
produce, is nearly perfect. Relatively he is perfect. To be under
the law'is a condition which is destructive of liberty. It is rebel-
lious, disorganizing, and so, pain-producing. To be above the law
in a sense of more than obeying it — in the sense of super-obedience
— is joy-producing, ennobling, perfecting. The liberty which comes
from the flesh, in the ordinary acceptation of the term, is pro-
nounced sensual or devilish ; but there is a liberty which transcends
that immeasurably in scope and privilege. This is divine.
What is freedom ? If I were to put the question at large, most
men would say, perhaps, " Well, it is the permission or power to do
as you have a mind to." That is it. That is true. It is doing as
we have a mind to. But doing as they have a mind to brings men
into the most degrading bondage. How is that? The men who
are always doing as tlicy have a miud to are men who are forever
knocking against difficulties, getting into troubles, coming under
arrests for violations of law and public sentiment, and destroying
the peace of their own minds.
Says one, "You educate people not to do as they have a mind
to, and yet you say that the highest idea of liberty is to do just
that." I do. Our highest personal liberty consists in our doing
as we have a mind to. " Does not the definition lack something
of clearness, then ?" It docs. There is something left out, or not
SCNDAT MoRNiNO, May 28, 1872. LESSON : MATT. XI. Htains (Plymouth CoUectloiO
Nob. 5u1, coo, 701.
830 TEE LA W OF LIBEBTY.
added. "And what is that?" Let us come to a better undeistand-
ing of it by some reading of life — by some familiar illustrations.
Consider how many laws there are which aflFect a man's body —
the laws of light ; the laws of heat ; the laws of gravitation ; the
law of sleep ; the law of food ; the law of digestion with reference to
food ; the law of exercise ; and scores innumerable of other laws.
When men are yet young and inexperienced, and have no one
to teach them, how perpetually they are getting themselves into
trouble because they violate these laws ! They have no mind to
keep them; and so they are all the time gashed, or burnt, or
suffering from sickness, or undergoing various annoyances. They
are in bondage because of these laws. But as they learn more per-
fectly, so that they use their eyes according to the law of light, and
their ears according to the law of, sound, and their mouth accord-
ing to the laws of health ; selecting their food, doing such and sucli
a thing because the law requires it, and rejecting such and such a
thing because the law forbids it — then they are set free from these
trials — then they grow out of a state of bondage into a state of
liberty.
Children have to think about a thousand things which tliey for-
get when they become men. The little child, when it begins to
walk, has not learned to take a single step. It has to think where
it shall put this foot, and where it shall put that, and has to poise
itself carefully, and use its mind as well as its body. But a man
walks without thinking. What is the difference ? One is under
the law — has not learned it — is yet subject to it; the other has
learned it so perfectly that he is emancipated from it. The man
does automatically, what it requires an effort on the part of the child
to do. The child is in bondage, and the man is free, because the
child does not keep the law, and the man does.
Those laws that touch the body are relative, in a certain degree,
to each man ; and yet, they are generically alike. That which is a
violation of law in one man may not be so in another. Take the
law of sleep. Men are so differently constituted that in the same
act one man violates that law, and another man does not. There
are some men who must have eiglit hours sleep in twenty-four ; and
there are others who do not need more than five or six hours
sleep in twenty-four. There is a relativity in these matters. There
are some laws that touch men differently. And yet, all men are
subject to these laws. He that violates the laws of his physical
organs is at once pursued, arrested, convicted, condemned and
punished, by that nature of things which we call the necessity of
material law. A man, in short, is treated as a prisoner, and re-
THE LAW OF LIBERTY. 331
strained of his liberty, if he does not obey natural laws in their
various degrees, according to their relative importance. And, on
the other hand, he that intelligently accepts, and heartily obeys
known natural laws, has health, and good spirits, and vital buoy-
ancy, and joy, and a largeness of liberty. The man who is con-
stantly rubbing and galling against the law, is under the law ; but
the man who is thoroughly cognizant of the requisitions of the
law, and obeys them, is above the law, and is free. Por, what is
the law, as respects man, but that which God thought of when he
meant to make the most of a man under his circumstances ?
The way to become that which God had in his mind in making
us is, to follow his laws. By following them it is that we come to
the fullness of ourselves. The way toward largeness is not to rebel
against law, but to follow the indications of it. He who has ac-
cepted law, — who has conformed his life to it, — who has made it, in
some sense, a part of his own will, does just as he has a mind to,
because he has a mind to do just as he ought to. A man who is
ignorant of eating and drinking has a mind to eat and drink
everything that is put before him ; and he has time to repent
of it afterwards. But when a man is thoroughly instructed in re-
gard to eating and drinking, and is familiar with the laws of health,
and has learned to conform to them, he sits down to a bountiful
table, and he also eats as he has a mind to ; but he has a mind to
eat only things that are good for him. In both cases men do as
they like ; but in one case it leads into trouble, and in the other
case it lifts above all trouble. Obedience to natural law is lib-
erty ; and it is the only liberty that a man has in this world.
But this does not quite bring out the truth which is involved in
this subject ; so we shall have to keep reading the book of experi-
ence and nature. It is not enough to accept a law of voluntary
obedience. No man knows anything well so long as he thinks
about it. No man can do anything perfectly so long as he wills to
do it, with conscious volition. No man is perfect until he comes to
the point of unconscious, automatic, involuntary activity. Habit
is the hint of perfection, where it is habit in right things, and on
right principles. It is not enough for a man to say every morn-
ing, in respect to the laws of health, "What are they?" and to
think about them all day long, and to strive against temptation,
and overcome it feebly by obedience. When he does that, he is in
the first stage — the battle stage — the stage of the cross — the stage of
the yoke and the burden. No man has reached obedience to law
until he has gone through that stage, and learned to obey with such
facility and perfection that he does it without knowing it.
332 TEE LA W OF LIBEETT.
If I step upon a little bit of plank — a joist, for instance— in tlie
street, to avoid a muddy place on the sidewalk, I walk along over
it without thinking. I can walk on that joist, which is only four
inches wide, as well as I can on the rest of the pavement ; and I have
not a thought about it. But put that joist between two towers, a
hundred feet high in the air, stretch it across from one to the other,
and make it as tense and taut as you please, and let me be called
upon to walk over. The least misstep would plunge me to the
ground and kill me instantly. I begin to think what it is that I
am called upon to do. And the moment I begin to think, I cannot
do it. I will not venture on that plank because the consciousness
of what might happen renders it unsafe for me to do it. When you
try to do a thing, you cannot do it as well as when you do it with-
out trying.
There are ministers here to-day who have oftentimes tried to
make a great sermon, and failed ; and who have oftentimes made
a great sermon when they did not try. When they thought
that they would do their best they have done their poorest ; and
sometimes they have done their best when they did not think of
doing it. Familiar knowledge and habitude brought them to an
automatic state, in which they could do things which they were un-
able to do by a special effort. It is conformable to law, that when
we set out to do something great we do not do it.
A person who is unbred and unaccustomed to society, going into
company, never behaves well. Why ? Because he instantly begins
to think, " How shall I enter that door ? Which way shall I go ?
How shall I stand ? What shall I do with my hands ?" The mo-
ment he thinks about his hands, and his feet, and the posture that
he ovight to take, and what he shall say, he is awkward and clumsy.
People say that he is green — not ripe. But see a person who is ac-
customed to society. How naturally he enters! How quietly he
moves! How unconscious he is of himself ! He stands gracefully.
His hands are posed easily. He talks naturally and pleasantly. He
knows what is proper, and does it without thinking. He has known
it so long that he has forgotten it. The knowledge of it has en-
tered into his unconscious volition. We breathe without thinking
of it unless something turns our attention to it.
Now the mind can be brought to a state in which it will per-
form the great majority of its actions just so automatically — that is
to say, without the conscious exertion of the will, just as one
breathes without conscious volition.
Let me make a few illustrations in three ranges — that of the
body, that of the lower forms of the mind, and that of the moral
realm ; for on this idea turn very important considerations.
TEE LA W OF LIBERTY. 333
When a soldier goes from the farm a histy young fellow, vrell
built, but bent from holding the plow and the like, he has a
careless manner of handling himself; and he is placed under
drill ; and the sergeant puts him through the postures. It is
exceedingly awkward for him, at first, to bring heel to heel, and to
stand straight, without hooping either way, and get his body into a
right line. He has to think about himself before and behind, up
and down, and he looks very gawky. It is very hard for him
to conform to tlie rule of bringing the palms of his hands to the
front, and his fingers to the seams of his pantaloons. And he does
not know what to do with his shoulders. He stands as thousrh
he had a spit run through him, and he were trussed for roasting.
It is very difficult for him when he begins to take the steps and
march in time. Every single conformity to his instructions requires
thought, and causes him pain, and holds him in bondage. But by
and by, after six or eight months, go and see that same fellow, when
he is sent as an orderly to deliver a message. See how he meets his
supei'ior, and salutes him. See what a fine carriage he has. See
how graceful and manly he is. See how perfectly he moves. And
he is not conscious of these things. He does not think about them.
He has learned them, and become so familiar with them that they
are a second nature to him. He has gone through the bondage of
trial, and subdued every muscle of his body to the various postures
which his vocation as a soldier reqmres ; and now he assumes them
without a thought. He has broken through into perfect obedience;
and perfect obedience sets him free from self-consciousness. "What
he has learned makes him a man of liberty.
When the violinist first takes his position before his master, the
young man is told how to place his feet, and how to hold his body.
He would take up the violin as if it were a saw, and the sounds
which he made on it would not be unlike those of a saw, if he were
left to his own untaught nature; but the master says, "So must
you take up the instrument, and so must you hold it, and so must
you draw the bow across it." It seems strange to him that he must
do so ; but as he is told that that is the proper wa}'-, he tries to
follow the directions given him. All the movements have to be
studied and practiced before he can become graceful and facile in
his manipulations, and produce sweet effects, and exhibit energy
and fire. It takes months and months, and perhaps years, for him
to make a proficient musician of himself; but by and by he be-
comes perfect, and then it is a thousand times more natural for
him to do as he has been taught, than to follow his old nature.
Then he is a performer that has learned his liberty by obedience to
334 TRE LA W OF LIBERTY.
law. Then lie has hrohen in his liand. And the same is true of
the pianist.
Take another instance which is applicable to the lower under-
standing. Let a man who does not understand the French lan-
guage go to Paris. Or, let a man go there who only knows the
French language as he has learned it from books. We learn a lan-
guage three times : we learn it with our eyes, to read it ; Ave learn
it with our ears, to understand it when other people speak it ; and
we learn it with our tongue, to speak it ourselves. But let him
who has only learned a language by the eye undertake to help
himself by speaking it, and what a bondage is he in ! I know.
I speak feelingly on this subject. You have been a man of some
fluency in your own country ; but in France you do not know
how to get your verbs out, nor how to put them in shape, and you
forget your substantives and adjuncts, and make a fool of yourself,
trying to communicate your ideas. A man in Paris who has
learned the French language by sight and by hearing, but not by
the tongue, may have imperative wants and desires, and may suffer
and well-nigh perish, because he has not the power to make himself
understood. But if he remains among the French people, he grad-
ually becomes familiar with their manner of speaking. The process
is a slow one ; but at first he learns a few words, and tlien a few
phrases ; and he goes on, step by step, until, by and by, after he has
been there a year (it would take five years, if it were I), he can
talk with the utmost fluency. And now he has gone through his
bondage-period, and come to a condition of freedom. And he
forgets all about his instruction, for the thing is inside of him, and
not outside any more.
Take another illustration. Here is a boy whose father was a
thief, and whose mother was fitly married to such a father. He
has been taught from his childhood that stealing was a proper in-
strument with which to fight his way through life. Tlie tendency
to steal was born in him, and it has been bred in him. Until he is
eight or nine years of age, his idea of one's superioj-ity is the being
able to lie more shrewdly and steal more adroitly than another. He
is noticed, and taken out of the nest of vice where he is, by a
generous-hearted, noble man, who pities him and yearns to save
him. He is washed and dressed, and he feels some more self-respect
than he has been accustomed to feel. He is talked Avith and
reasoned with, and he begins to have some perception of his condi-
tion. He sees other children than those whose companionship he
has been used to, and he begins to feel that he is in a different at- *
mosphere. And at last the idea is born into his mind that truth is
TEE LA W OF LIBEBTT. 335
a real quality, — that it means something, — that it is desirable, and
that lying and stealing are bad practices which he ought to get rid of.
It is a good while before he gets up to that ; bui? at last he does get
up to it, and he says, " I am determined to break myself of lying
and stealing, fo/ 1 accept the law of truth and the law of honesty."
But he is not through with the work of reformation yet, by a good
deal. In easy places he will keep his resolution, and will not lie
nor steal; but he will be constantly coming into hard places, and
will break down again and again. It is months and months before
he meets with any marked success in his efforts to reform ; but in
the course of a year or two he works himself up to sucli a moral
state that he feels the grandeur of truth and the beauty of honesty,
and his tendency to deceive and cheat is lost, and he speaks the
truth of course — he speaks it inevitably. Yea, and some years fur-
ther along, he speaks the truth without thinking whether he is
speaking the truth or not. So well drilled is he in speaking the
truth that it comes to him naturally. He never stops to see what
the words are as they come out of the die. They all have th% image
and superscription of truth on them. He has risen superior to the
law of truth and the law of honesty, by exacting from himself per-
fect obedience to them. It took him a good while to do it ; but
now that he has done it, he dwells perpetually in that superior realm.
These illustrations are of universal application. In coming to
obedience to any law, first we perceive the desirableness or necessity
of it; then we determine that we will obey it; then, by drill and
practice, we are enabled to obey so perfectly that we do it uncon-
sciously. And when we come to this point, the law has so passed
into our being that it is a law in us, and not a law on us. It is a
law which, if I may change the figure, we have overtaken on the
road, and passed before, so that it is behind us, and we are in a state
of liberty.
So long as you refuse to obey any law which is fundamental to
the development of society, you are in bondage to a tyrant who
stands over you, as it were, and, with a rod of iron or a whip of
scorpions, at his own leisure or will, chastises you ; for laws, if
they do not get obedience, exact penalty. It is not until you
have learned what the law is, and accepted its requisitions, and
drilled yourself in compliance with it, so that it has become a part
of your very life, your meat and drink, to obey it, that you are free
from it. When a man does right so strongly that he does it Avith-
out thinking of it or registering it, then he is free from the lasv.
" What is that ?" " A." " What is that ?" " B." " And what
is that ?" " C." This is for little children. Who ever called a boy
336 THE LA W OF LIBERTY.
up out of the senior class in any college, and required him to say
his A B C's ? He is beyond the spelling-book ; but it was by learn-
ing it that he got beyond it. We have to learn to cipher in the lower
forms of arithmetic, before we can take up the higher forms of
mathematics. We take these lower forms on our way upward, and
have to, before we have liberty to go up.
We can understand, from this line of analysis and observation,
the mystery of the passage which I read in the opening service this
morning, and which is contained in the eleventh chapter of Mat-
thew's Gospel :
" Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give
you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and
lowly in heart ; and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy,
and my burden is light."
Do not you see, according to the line of this truth which I have
unfolded, that when you take up any great duty, the beginning of
it is a yoke to you ? But if you fight your Avay through, by train-
ing, to a perfect obedience to the law of duty, there ceases to be a
contest", and the thing becomes involuntary, natural and easy.
Every great duty that tends to lift a man from the animal
toward the spiritual — from the sensuous toward the divine, every
great moral maxim, comes upon a man as a hindrance, as a yoke, as
a chain. If one submits to the law, — if he accepts it in the inward
man and carries it into practice in the outward life, he will come to a
liberty which he would never attain if he did not conform himself
to law ; and the yoke will be easy, and the burden light,to him.
The first step, therefore, is — burden. The last step is — ease. The
first step is bondage to the yoke. The next step, and the next, and
the next, are toAvard broad and perfect liberty.
The young bird that hangs quivering on the nest — how feeble
it is in its wing ! and how poor it is at flying ! But by springing,
with the aid of its wings, it goes a little way ; and then it
rests, panting. Oh, how hard flying is to the young bird ! But,
by hunger, and the persuasion of its parents, it is induced to ven-
ture again, and perhaps goes fluttering down to the ground. Oh,
what hard business it is to fly ! But, gathering strength, it flies up
to a lower bough. Then it hops to another bough. Then it tidies
to hop to another, which is twice as far off", and misses it, and lights
on the ground again, where it rests and pants. Then it rises on its
wings, and goes up, and up, and up. And now how proud it is
that it can reach in its flight the loftiest bough of the overspread-
ing tree ! And it looks around, and congratulates itself, and says,
" Am not I a bird ?" And before a week is gone it is seen far up
above the highest trees, and has perfect liberty to go whither it will.
THE LA W OF LIBEBTT. 337
So, when men are born into duty, their fii'st steps are burden-
some and feeble ; but soon, by practice, they lift themselves above
the entangling thickets, above all obstructions, and have the liberty
of God's air. And they dxQ free. They have gained strength of
wing by which they can fly whithersoever they will in their Father's
realm.
We learn, too, what is meant by one's being a law unto Mm&elf.
This is a phrase which has stumbled a great many persons, and led
some into sloughs of sensuous indulgence, and thrown others into
paroxysms of fear lest they should fall upon a false interpretation
of it, and so go wrong. What is it to be a law unto yourself?
Simply to have embodied in yourself God's laws. You are not a
law unto yourself, until you do what the law requires better by
automatic action than by voluntary effort.
By systems of ritual which largely prevail, men are required to
make genuflexions before a cross. What is that for ? Ask any in-
telligent priest, and he will say that it promotes reverence. I can
see how among children and ignorant persons it may promote
reverence ; but as those children and ignorant persons develop in
their religious nature, there will come a time when no outward
symbol will be required to develop reverence. Every Christian
ought to aim at slich a condition of growth that the feeling of rev-
erence shall pour out in such a tide that there shall be no need of
genuflexions or symbols or images to produce it, because his own
nature is productive of it.
As soon as a man has learned what the will of God is in respect
to law, he forgets it. That is to say, he has put the law in himself,
so that it is registered there, and set to perform its own work.
I never think of the whole physiology of sleep when I go to
bed. I go to bed on general principles, and let the particular func-
tions and results of it engage the attention of whomsoever they
concern. I never avoid fire because I reason out the whole effect of
going into the fire. You do a thousand things every day for the
sake of law, without once thinking about law. You go along
Broadway, and in threading your way, or crossing the street, at the
same time that you are quickening your step he^e or slackening
your pace there, — at the same time that you are turning out for some
foot-passenger, or dodging this way or that to avoid being run over
by some vehicle, you are following up, in your thoughts, some
debtor, and taking measures to secure what he owes you, or you are
planning to evade some creditor who is pressing you so hard as to
make it uncomfortable for you. Your body takes care of itself,
and your mind is engaged with business matters, at the same time.
338 TEE LA W OF LIBEBTY.
Your body is going thx-ongli a series of compound gymnastics, and
at the same time your mind is involved in a complicated, intellec-
tual process. And each operation is carried on independent of the
the other, and unconsciously. Therefore' in these respects you are
a law unto yourself.
Do you suppose a man would drive better who should have
a book telling him how to do under such and such circumstances,
and should depend upon that book, than he would if he threw
away his book, and was guided by his own sense and intuition,
independent of direction or reasoning ? Would he not get into
trouble twenty times in the former case, where he would once in
the latter ? A man is not fit to do anything well till he can do it
without thinking about it.
Suppose a man came to you and offered himself as an account-
ant, and you employed him, and found him adding up columns of
figures, and saying, " Two and two are four; and four and two are
six ; and six and four are — let me see — eight ; no, six and four are
ten," how long Avould you keep him ?
Brethren, though you laugh at it in arithmetic, that is the way
you manage matters of grace. God sends you to school : and what
does he find ? Here is a man that is red in the face with anger.
Somebody has poked an unseemly story off on him. He says, " That
man had no business to do so. Still, I am a Christian, and I ought
not to get angry. Oh, if I could only catch that man ! But it is
not right for me to feel so. Nevertheless, he had no business to
do it. I will come up with him yet. But, being a Christian, it is
wrong for me to indulge in such thoughts." Such a man, as a
Christian, is what such a man as T have described is as an account-
ant. Neither of them knows his business. '
See how men deal with themselves in the matter of humility.
They try to be humble by the exertion of their will. But nobody
will ever be humble by trying. If humility does not come to you,
and spread all over you, as the light of the sun spreads over you, it
will not manifest itself to any purpose in your life. The same is
true in regard to loving one's enemies. You cannot love your ene-
mies by mere trying. Trial is the first stage in Christian develop-
ment, but do not call yourself an expert, a proficient, a Christian
par excellence, until the distinguishing, Christian graces come to
you in ways that are spontaneous, automatic, abundant, overflow-
ing, consentaneous, symmetrical, and broad as the stream of life —
until every thought and feeling has been subdued to the supreme
will of God, which is love. When you have reached that condition,
then you may call yourself an expert Christian. You think you
THB LA W OF LIBEETY. 339
are a Christian -when you set at naught in your religious life
rules which you know to be thoroughly true everywhere else. Oli,
how much we have to learn yet ! Oh, how much grace it takes
to do a little work in men !
We sec, also, in the light of this discourse, why so much of
Christian life is imperfect, so unlovely and so unjoyful. One reason
why there is so little that is lovely in Christian life, is that
there is so much partialtsm about it. Men tend to run into a
few experiences, and consider them critical and decisive experiences, «
and think that they are going to draw their dividends of joyfulness
on the other side. They think that if in this world they live well
enough to occupy a respectable position in the church, and to main-
tain respectable social connections, that is enough. They have not
such an idea of Christian life as Mr, Zundel has of this organ. It
is vast and complex. It is three organs in one, as we have in the
body the soul and the spirit, according to the Pauline theory. And
the stops in the organ may be likened to the faculties in man. If
one stop is out of order, and a tune is played, no matter if all the
rest are in order, that one spoils the effect of all the rest. And if
any faci-ilty in man is educated and trained wrong, it has power to
throw all the other faculties into discord, and mar the result of their
action.
There are many persons who are very eaa-nest and devoted in the
performance of their public religious duties, but whose lives in pri-
vate are anything but religious. I have in my mind an old mother in
Israel, who was an attentive listener, and who was a gauge by which
I could tell how I was preaching. When she began to weave up and
down, I knew that I was on the right track, but when she stopped
weaving, I knew that I was getting off the track. She was remark-
able for her zeal at religious meetings ; but at home she was a joerfecfc
shrew. And she had not a child that was not an infidel. It was
that one discordant stop that threw tiie line of life in that family
into jangle and discord.
You may liuvo in your house twenty rooms. Half of them may
be well ceiled and well finished; but if you leave out the doors and
windows in the other half, so tliat the wind and rain and cold come
in, the good condition of the first half will not help it. It will be as
bad as though the whole house Avere without doors or windows.
The apostle says, " Put on the whole armor of God." Where a
man is armed so that he cannot be hit in the head, nor in the
back, nor in the legs, nor in the arms, nor in the hands, nor in the
bowels, but has forgotten his breast-plate, the javelin may strike
through and destroy him as much as though he were not armed afc
340 THE LA W OF LIBERTY.
all. A man may perish if he is j^rotected in all but one spot, and
that is left unprotected. That spot is enough for the devil's archery
— and he knows where it is generally.
When you look on Christian life, why is it so unfruitful ? Why
is it so barren ? Because men so seldom have an idea that Chris-
tianity means resplendent, magnificently divine, spiritual manhood,
brought out of the imperfect elements of the flesh, the soul and the
spirit, here ; because they attempt to make one or two faculties
' strong, and neglect all the rest; because mainly these are so low,
so undrilled, so crude, so intermitting, so in excess of the great
Christian feelings.
I remark, again, that nobody is so much in bondage as the man
who recognizes the claims of God's law upon him, and in a small
and faint way attempts to fulfill it, but never succeeds in coming
to perfect obedience. No man is so unhappy as he.
Did you ever see a locomotive start a long train of freight-cars ?
The engineer puts on the steam, and the locomotive jerks one car,
and then the second, and then the third, and so ou ; and by the
time the last one is reached, the train has gained considerable mo-
mentum. But suppose, instead of keeping up this momentum and
increasing it, the engineer should stop the cars, and go over the
process of jerking this dead weight and starting it again! What
does the engineer do ? He puts on steam and gets such an impulse,
that when he shuts off steam the train will go half a mile simply by
its momentum.
Now, in the practice of manly traits men, in many cases, get up
no momentum ; sometimes because they are afraid to ; sometimes
because they think they must examine themselves, so as to be sure
that they make no mistake. It is with you as it is with everybody
else. If you suspect a man and watch him, and do not put any
trust in him, you will make him untrustworthy. The way to make
men trustworthy is to trust them, and make them feel that you
trust them. And in your own case, if you would succeed, have
confidence in yourself, give yourself liberty, trust yourself; get your
way and direction marked out, and then go ahead ; and do not stop
till the thing is done. Then stop and see how you have done it,
and take wisdom for the next time. Somehow, get up steam, get
up momentum, have courage, fervor, enthusiasm, headlongness, in
things right. These elements are indispensable in this world. The
person who says, "I desire to love, and I think I love, but am I sure
that I am right ?" and stops to examine himself and see whether he
loves or not, turns an emotionary experience into a ratiocinating
eelf-inspccting process. Men are suspecting, cautious, untrustiug
THE LA W OF LIBERTY. 341
of themselves ; and so they get no impetus, their whole life la
chopped up into morsels of self-examination, and there is no power
in them.
What sort of time would a watch keep that you stopped every
moment to see how it was getting on ? What sort of music would
that be which was intermitted every ten notes to wind up some
string, or fix some pipe, or put the instrument in order in some
way ?
You must trust yourself, you must give yourself some liberty,
and that liberty must have some lunge. Therefore, take your aim
right ; be sure that you mean right, and then go ahead.
" But will not a man make mistakes in this way ?'' You will
make mistakes anyhow. " Will not a man get into difficulty ?"
You will get into difficulty anyhow. If you push forward you will
get into one sort of difl&culty, and if you hold back you will get
into another sort ; but there is this advantage in pushing forward :
that thus you will develop faster in manhood and power than in
any other way.
Let me say, here, that in bringing up our children we must act
according to this Scriptural idea of liberty. Men think that their
children must be governed ; and their idea of governing is often
about equivalent to a cooper's idea of holding a barrel together.
He gets so many staves, and puts one hoop around them at the
bottom, another in the middle, and another at the top ; and then
he drives the hoops home ; and every stave is in its place ; there is
not one vagrant ; and Avitli good usage they will all stay where
they are for a hundred years ; but it is nothing but a barrel, after
all.
Here are the children in a family, and "there is a pattern char-
acter. It is attempted to bring them up according to that pattern
character. They are cufied here and driven in there, and watched
everywhere. And when the hoops are put on and driven home,
people say of them, " Perfect children!" — perfect barrels! There
is no real and natural life in them.
The way to bring up children is to bring them up to know
what are the laws that govern them in moral, social, and physical
life. The way is to put them where they Avill have to fight with
each one of these laws, and subdue it. When a child has gone
through this process, he has become a law unto liimself. If you
govern your children in the family, restraining them in every di-
rection, and giving thorn no liberty, you make automatons of them.
How is a child ever going to learn to drive, if his father always
holds on to his hands, and pulls the reins through his hands? I
34:2 TEE LA W OF LIBEBTY.
used to ride the horse to water behind brother George, but I never
rode him alone, until one morning when I took him out into the
road, and got up on his back, and headed him in the right direc-
tion, and started him off at a fair pace. With some difficulty I
contrived to hold on this time. The next time, encouraged by the
success of the first ride, I thought I would go faster; so I struck
the horse with a switch, and he broke into a canter. Knowing how
disagreeable it was to change from a canter to a trot, I kept him in
a full canter, till he reached the brook's edge ; and there he stopped
suddenly — but I did not ! The liquid argument that followed was
one which I never forgot. I rode better the third time for my mis-
hap the second time. I never needed to ride behind anybody after
that.
You cannot teach a child to take care of himself unless you will
let him try to take care of himself He will make mistakes ; and
out of these mistakes will come his wisdom.
Fathers and mothers are oftentimes so excessively conscientious
that they spoil their children in bringing them up, because they
never develop in them the instinct of self-care and manly independ-
ence. Where a child is kept under, till he is fifteen or eighteen or
twenty years of age, and then is sent away from home and thrust
into temptation, what is the result ? Some children, under such
circumstances, have a vengeance to execute. They say, "I have
been shut up all my life, and now I Avill take advantage of my lib-
erty;" and they go headlong into degrading and wicked indul-
gences. Other children say, " I have been brought up, from my
infancy, to obey somebody else ; and now I will obey nobody but
myself." And so they defy laws and magistrates. The consequence
is, not having become a "law unto themselves, they run into trans-
gression and get into trouble.
I obey no magistrate in Brooklyn. I do not obey the asses-
sor nor the collector. I obey myself It is my pleasure to be taxed
for the support of the commonwealth. It is a personal gratification
to me to do my part toward carrying on the Government.
Do I avoid lying because the Bible says, "Lie not one to
another " ? No. I avoid lying because I like truth better than
lies. It pleases me to tell the truth better than anything else. I
do it not only because I fear God, but because God's will seems
so much better than anything else. I do it to please myself in
pleasing God.
We should rear our children to obedience; and they should be
taught obedience by self-control. The child is commanded to do
the thing that is right. He reluctates. He is punished. Instantly
TEE LA W OF LIBEBTT. 343
lie* wants some reason. Obedience is enforced. " Why must I do
so, father ?" Because I tell you to — that is why." Sometimes it is
put in less complimentary phrase: "I will whip you if you do not."
But I ask you, ought a child to obey its father and mother because
they are his father and mother, or because tliey stand for certain
divine laws? Ought not the motive to obedience to be, through
father and mother, Grod ? The apostle does not teach children to
obey their parents, so that father and mother shall be the back-
ground. God Almighty is the background, and the child obeys
God in obeying his father and mother.
I will detain you but for one other application, though I have a
long line of them, which time will not allow me to use.
We are attempting to come to a larger liberty in society. Men
must come to liberty through bondage. It cannot be helped. You
cannot give the citizens of a State liberty by the enactment of con-
stitutions and laws, nor by the repealing of constitutions and laws;
but you can give them liberty by developing in them that self-
government which is liberty. If that be undeveloped, liberty can-
not be guaranteed by any law or constitution.
• Therefore it is that, though you may confer nominal liberty, it
is Christ that makes men free; it is the Spirit that leads men w^
above the law, in the best sense of fulfilling the law in one's self.
Education, practical moral culture, physical development, all those
things which go to make large manhood — these are the alphabetic
letters by which you are to develop the literature of liberty.
I believe in the law v/hich entitles the slaves of the South to
liberty ; but I do not believe that they are free yet. "Why ? Be-
cause they have not learned self-government. They Avill not learn
it in this generation, nor in the next. All the laws that have been
enacted, or that may be enacted, cannot efface the mischiefs of bar-
barism and of slavery, and bring men at once into that perfect man-
hood which Christ inspires, and which carries with it liberty in the
truest sense of the term. It will take generations to bring men up
to the level of that light and liberty in which they can stand sever-
ally in their own individual freedom, doing what is right because
they have learned Avhat is right in their condition and circum-
stances. When men have had their personal battle with the laws
of God and of men, with tlie laws of nature and of grace, and sub-
dued them inside of themselves, so that their will is God's will, then
they have entered upon the higher form of liberty.
But it is not the black-faced man alone that needs to learn this
love of liberty. All through society it is the same thing. You
may shout on the Fourth of July as much as you please, but you
844 TEB LA W OF LIBEB TI.
are not free, who are bond-slaves to lust, self-indulgence, pride, enyy,
avarice, or passions and appetites of any kind. You are Satan's
slaves. You are slaves as long as God's perfect will, expressed in
nature outside and grace inside, is not made known to you intelli-
gently, and yon have not accejited it, and arrived at a state of auto-
matic action under it. A knowledge of the law, its acceptance,
unconscious obedience to it, is liberty; but nothing short of that is
liberty.
Therefore it is we say that the Gospel contains the germ of
liberty — that Gospel which opens the prison-^oor, and breaks the
chams, and lets the captives go free : that Gospel which gives men
manhood, and inspires them with virtue, aud makes them pure, and
true, and sweet, and loving, and God like.
May God give us a longing for liberty — not a longing to throw
off law, but to adjust it to our nature and condition ; not a longing
to do as we have a mind to, except as we have the mind and will of
God. May God bring ns, through a knowledge of the Lord Jesus
Christ, to those higher experiences which come through that purity
of character, that afiluent example, that divine manifestation, Avhich
he develops by his people and church, that we may be burning aiid
shining lights in the midst of a perverse generation, until the Ee-
deemer shall come and call us home.
PEAYER BEFOEE THE SERMON".
We rejoice, O Lord our God, that thou dost teach us to pray, and that
thou dost incline us to say, Our Father ivMch art in heaven. We have learned
that to mention love out of the heart is to think and to feel it. We have
learned that love is worship. We have learned that there is nothing higher
than this which we have to offer, and that they who give love, give all that
is worth giving. And when we draw near to thee, and lift up our hearts
toward thee, and love thee, we rejoice that it is to thee — worship. Thou dost
not ask it at the hands of those who know thee to perfection alone. Nor
dost thou require that it should he such love as fills the heavenly host with
ecstatic joy. Thou art pleased with the love of the least and the furthest off
of thy creatures.
We know how it is. Thou hast not hid thy secret from us, since thou
hast ordained us to he in our households in the small, what thou art in the
great household in infinite proportions. And though we joy and rejoice in
our children who have grown up into the measure of our thinking, we do
not despise the little ones that are lower down and afar off. We are rejoiced
when the babo itself strives to love, and, according to the measure of its
littleness and imperfectness shines out fondness toward us. Thou dost not
wait till we are full grown. Thou art willing to take the beginning and afar-
off shining of our hearts' affection.
How selfish we are that we should try to love ! How little there is in us
that has th(! power of loving! How little we have of discernment' How
simple our thought of God is! How unrich thou art over against us! How
liast tUou been stripped bare by our thoughts, and made to be nothing lovely,
THE LA W OF LIBEBTT. 345
but stern and terrible, so that we shut our eyes and turn ourselves as from
coming storms and bolts ! It was only when we beheld thee as prefigured
and revealed in the Lord Jesus Christ; it was only when thy heart was dis-
closed, and we beheld thee through thy government; it was only when we
beheld thee insi)iriug men, and redeeming them by thine own sufferings; it
was only when we beheld thee as One who came, not to condemn, but to
save— not to demand saeriflee, but to grant mercy— it was only at such times
that we began to learn to love. But then how little did we know ! How
pale is the Christ that lies on the printed page until the divine Spirit gives it
life and color. But on evei-y side cut of the Spirit that is breathed into uni-
versal human life, Ave learn to put together the letters which spell thy glori-
ous name, and go on building up in our thoughts the grandeur of love, and
its power, its infinite self-sacrifice, its joys, its happiness, its penalties, its
yokes, its burdens, and its imspeakable benefits. Then, in the actual life of
men who are being formed, we find that which exalts thee, enthrones thee,
and makes thee chief among ten thousand, and altogether lovely. And so,
in the chamber of imagination, by faith, we dwell with thee, and behold
thee ; and there are hours when all the power of oiu' being cannot sweep
around to take in the scope of the wondrous excellence which we perceive
in thee, O thou crowned Savior, suffering no more as upon earth, in patience
and in burden-bearing, and thinking not of thyself, but of others, and suffer-
ing not for thyself, but for others — the great thoughtful Father, bearing the
burden of the household forever and forever — to thee we bring such hearts
as we have, that they may lift up their affection upon thee, and rejoice in
thee, and have a better vision, and hope for a better living. Lord God
Almighty, it is thy Spirit that hath implanted in ns the germs of love. It is
thy Spirit that hath drawn out our hearts, though poor and selfish and
proud, to their present development. It is by the grace of God that we are
what we are in all that is good, and in all that promises good.
And now we commit ourselves to thy saving providence, to thy glorious
grace, to thine ever-watchful personal love in Christ Jesus. The whole air is
full of angelic ministration. All of human life feels the working of thy
providence. All that thou thinkest is taking form thioughout thy vast
domain, not according to the measure of our present infantile thought, but
according to the grandeur and proportion of thy creating thought and
upholding power. Though now we could not see thee and live, yet we shall
see thee when we rise to a more glorious condition. There we shall have
potency to measure thy thought and thy work. And then, cleansed from
delilements, and emaneii^ated from the flesh, with all that are in the heavens,
and all that are on the (>arth, and all that are throughout thy vast uni-
vei'se, we will cry out. Thou art icorthy to reign.
And now, O Lord, we beseech thee to forgive us our sius. We are
ashamed to ask to be forgiven, when we know that we are already forgiven.
We are ashamed to ask as if we were chiding thine indolent steps, when our
very desii-e to be forgiven is the sign of thy being before us and awaking in
us these thoughts.
Accept our yearnings. Accept our aspirations. Accept all those germs
out of which definite thoughts come. As men feel that the air, in summer,
is full of strange and sweet odors, which come from they know not what
open flowei-s, so th( nights in us come from we know not what source. Thou
knowest our thoughts afar off. Before thee the verj' intents of our hearts
are ]ilain. Accept, then, th(> .«ervic(.' which comes from we know not where,
but which moves in us, and fills us, at times, with an unspeakable sweetnsss
and sadness, being now full of prophecies of good, and now full of forebod-
ings of doom. These inward experiences, blind to oiu- apprehension, and
dumb to our tongue, thou knowest altogether. .Accept them, O Lord our
God, Father and Savior.
346 TRE LA W OF LIBEETY.
And we pray that thou wilt help every one of ns in the battle of life.
Oh, how sorry we are to see the white banner east down. But, blessed be
God, though it be cast down it is not destroyed. Blessed be God, we have
here and there evidences and signs of victory. We behold many points that
seem to us, in their acclivity, in their steepness, impossible to win. But how
many men have subdued pride in all its ruggedness by the power of the love
of God through Jesus Christ! We behold selfishness and its widespread
cohorts ; and who shall overcome it ? Who shall know its secret meaning ?
Who shall understand its strategy ? Who shall be able to meet it in battle,
when it simulates retreat, and then returns with augmented force and
sweeps away everything in its course ? And yet, against selfishness we shall
be conquerors, through Him that loved us. So give us courage that we may
never give up, but may fight manfully from day to day, that we may be
clothed from head to foot, leaving no place assailable.
And we pray, not only that we may contest against evil, but that we may
learn the divine art of overcoming evil with good. Not only may we over-
come evil, but may we bear the fruit of righteousness, so that men shall look
upon us as we look upon trees in the garden which are loaded with good
things, desiring to partake thereof. So may we perform our duties in life,
and fulfil thy commandments, that men, seeing our good works, shall glorify
our Father which is in heaven.
We pray that thou wilt grant thy blessing to rest upon every family that
is represented in this assembly, and upon every heart that is here. Thou
knowest the condition of each one. Thou knowest what are the innermost
thoughts and experiences of our lives which are hidden froni all but thee. •
O merciful Savior ! thou that didst draw thy disciples apart at twilight,
and sit under the olive tree, to commune with them, wilt thou draw us apart
from day to day, and commune with us, according to our several conditions
and necessities.
Bless all who are strangers in our midst. May the convocation of thy
servants, gathered out of all this land, to take counsel of the things which
are for the welfare of thy Zion, be under thy watchful care. Give them
wisdom. Give them elevation of heart. Give them consecration to the
divine work in which they are engaged. Give them hope and coui-age in
contemplating the greatness of the field which lies before them. And grant
that the years which are to elapse ere they assemble again, may be years not
only of sowing, but of abundant reaping. And may those who shall be
called to go home to glory, be prepared for translation. And may others be
raised up to take their places.
Grant that thy servants of all churches may be prospered of God. May
thy Spirit cleanse the imperfections of human nature, so that in our admin-
istration only that which is good shall take effect. And everywhere, may all
things work for the promotion of thy cause and the honor of thy name.
Lord, take care of ns, and of all who are thine, while we live. And may
we not be afraid to die. May death be to our thought as the soimding of the
trumpet. May it be to us what the signal of the morning is to those who are
sick, and who have tossed vrearily on their couch through the night. As
thou art making heaven richer by drawing and hiding there our dearest
ones ; as thou art putting our treasure there, and teaching our willing hearts
to go thitherward, so grant that the joy of expected release and of certain
triumph, and of anticipated treasure, may comfort us on the way. And
though hitherward it may seem dark and forbidding, wilt thou, by the light
of thy countenance, take away from us fear, and give us courage and hope.
And, at last, when we go home, may it be with shoutings of that grace which
sustains us. And as our voices die away on earth, may they mingle with the
choral voices in heuv( n.
And to thy name shall be ijraises immortal. Amen.
XIX.
What is the Profit of Godliness?
¥HAT IS THE PEOFIT OF GOD-
LINESS %
" For bodily exercise proflteth little ; but godliness is profitable unto all
things, having promise of the life that now is, and of that which is to come.*'
1 Tim. IV. 8.
The apostle, writing to Timothy, who was the bishop of the
Greek Church iu Asia Minor, had his eyes iipon the athletic drill
and discipline which prevailed among the Greeks, and which was an
important part of the education of their youth. Various games and
contests, success in which turned upon physical accomplishment,
had led men to put upon them an unwarrantable estimate. And
when the apostle says that " bodily exercise profiteth little " (or a
little wltile, as the margin has it), he evidently refers to that phys-
ical culture which prevailed in Greece — to a degree, perhaps, which
has never been equaled since.
" Godliness," he says (as if it were something distinguished from
this exterior development) " is profitable unto all things, — and for two
reasons. It carries with it profit, prosperity, iu the life that now
is, as well as the promise and certainty of the life that is to come."
That men, by godliness, should reap a fruition and harvest here-
after, is not surprising to those who have at all been instructed in
religious things ; but there are many who have supposed that god-
liness was in a man's way here ; that so far from being profitable in
all things, it stood right in the path of those who would reap honors
and worldly good. Yet, our text makes the declaration without
exception, that it "is profitable unto all things, having promise ol
the life that now is, as well as of that wliich is to come."
What is yoilUness 9 If it meant merely that a man has reverence,
and that he prefers the appropriate duties of worship, there might
seem very little reason for supposing that that would stand con-
SuNDAY Evening, July 7, 1872. Lesson : PsA. XLEt. Htmns (Plymouth CoUectlon)
Noe. 903. 72a.
350 WJSA T IS TEE PEOFIT OF GODLINESS f
nected witli great i:)rosperity in worldly things. It might be be-
coming, and worship might even be regarded as accomplished by
it ; but that simply being a worshiping creature should materially
affect a man's worldly prosperity, does not appear so plain. I appre-
hend that godliness means a great deal more than that. It includes
that ; but godliness is conformity to the whole constitution of
things which God has decreed and marked out. In other words,
living according to nature (interpreting that word nature in its
higher sense) is living according to God's law. He who conforms
to the laws by which God has surrounded him in the natural world
and in human society ; he who is spiritually conformable to the
divine law, and who is in all things liviug as far as he can accord-
ing to the divine prescription, shall be prospered in the life that
now is, as well as inherit the life that is to come. So that godliness
means something more than merely religion, in the narrow and
technical sense of the term. It means having a wise view of all the
laws of our being and condition, and living in conformity to them.
Moreover, when it is said that it has in it "the promise of
the life that now is," we are not to narrowly interpret this. We
ought not to suppose that a man will be prospered in everything
that he 'wants to prosper in, or that if a man unwisely chooses a
profession or walk in life, and seeks it from the mere fact of godli-
ness, he will inherit success. For instance, if a man who has not
one natural gift of the orator should seek celebrity and poAver by
oratory, is it reasonable to suppose that he would succeed merely
from the circumstance of his being godly ? A man, with a clumsy
hand, without skill, and without inventive thought, is not justified
in attempting to be an inventor simply on the general ground of
godliness. We are not to suppose that a man who has no commer-
cial training is to plunge into business and make this plea: "I live
in conformity to the laws of my being, and shall be prospered in my
pursuits."
We are to have a larger idea of prosperity than is seen in any
of these special things. For, although even where men are badly
matched with their affairs, right living will make disaster more
bearable and less mischievous; although the godly man will, with
ill success, reap more and better things than the ungodly man with
good success, yet, we must take a larger view of what success in life
is, and of what godliness will do for men. That which, on the
whole, promotes their greatest happiness, must be considered. Their
prosperity now means their Avelfare. It does not consist in the de-
velopment of any one part of their nature, but the whole of it.
Godhness has an immediate relation to that which is the foun-
WHAT 18 THE PROFIT OF GODLINESS f 351 '
dation of all enjoyment — a good, sound, bodily condition. What
profits it that a man has art, beauty, symmetry, — an abundance of
exquisite things about him, if he be blind? What profits it that a
man is able to surround himself with delightful music, if he be
deaf? What profits it if the dance goes on day and night in a
man's halls, through the varying holidays, if he be laid up with,
rheumatism or gout, and cannot even move in his chair ? What
profits it that a man has stored in his mind learning — wonderful
masses of learning — if his health be so broken down that his physi-
cian refuses him both book and thought? The condition of enjoy-
ment in this life is, that one is in a sound state of bodily health.
Godliness, or a conformity to the great laws of our condition, in-
cludes physical health — works toward it.
Moderation of appetite ; restraint of undue desires ; that quiet-
ness of spirit which comes from the belief in an overruling Provi-
dence ; that undisturbed equilibrium which comes from faith in
God — all these are, looking at them in their very lowest relations-,
elements of health — of a sound physical condition. The influences
that undermine health — the dissipations, the gluttonies, the drunk-
ennesses, the excessive pleasures which drain out, prematurely, the
vitality of men — these are forbidden by a wise reference to the laws
of our condition. And among the things which men at large who
live godly lives will reap, and may expect to reap, is good, sound
health, which i^ a grand constituent of all worldly prosperity.
Next consider how much a man's happiness in this life depends
upon his disposition — both with reference to himself and with refer-
ence to his social surrounding. It is not Avhat you have about you,
but what you are, that determines how happy you shall be. If you
are envious and jealous, you cannot be happy — not uutil bitter is
sweet; not until black is white. If you have malign feelings up-
permost, they will always be corrosive. Such feelings disqualify
vou for social enjoyment. Excessive pride takes away from the
ipower of enjoyment. Excessive vanity takes away from the capacity
of enjo3^ing in this life. Overweening sensibility, whether it
springs from selfishness, or from an unnatural development of
nerve— whatever may be its source — acts to deprive men of their
social enjoyment. How much you shall enjoy depends on how
moderate you are in your demands. If you are of sucli a na-
ture that you think the world Avas made for you ; and that, though
it does carry along a few other people, yet, in the main, it is kept
up for you; and that God, on the whole, thinks more of you, or
ought to, at any rate, than of all other beings— if, with this
sovereign vanity and conceit, you are measuring what you have, or
352 WEAT IS TEE PROFIT OF G0ELINES8 f
what you ouglit to have, there will not be a day of the three hun-
dred and sixty-five which will not seem stingy to you. Every hour
,that distils a dew-drop of mercy will seem to be cheating you of the
floods of bounty which you ought to have. Some men spend so
much time measuring what they deserve, and what they really have
or have not, that they are never happy. Men who are not willing
to be content with small measures of enjoyment ; who are forever
making the condition of their happiness lie before them ; who
never press out the clusters and drink the wine of their actual ex-
perience, but are always placing it far forward, and further for-
ward— such men cannot be happy. They have dispositions which
carry in -them the essential vice that works toward misery and dis-
content.
Some man may say, " If I were not cribbed and confined as I am
here, and if I had that man's means, would not I be happy ?" Let
his condition be changed. At night when he is asleep, put him in
the circumstances of that man whom he envied. While the novelty
lasted he might experience some pleasure; but no sooner would
he get wonted to his new condition, than the same causes which
wrought discontent in him in his former state would make him dis-
contented still. You cannot make a discontented nature happy by
.covering it up with silks. You might wear a diamond ring .on every
finger, and a coronet on your head, and you might be the centre of
admiration in your circle ; but if you had not the quality of being
happy in you, you would not be happy. You cannot, by the abun-
dance of the things which he possesses, make a man happy.
Why, a child may put its hand on a harp that has been chorded
and tuned, and music will come out of it; but a giant might smite
against the body of an oak tree, and there would be no sound of
music. There is no music in it. It is the quality of the thing
struck that determines whether it is musical or not. The chords
are in us, or nowhere. If you have not the nature in you which
tends to the production of happiness, all the influences which you
can bring to bear will not make you happy ; pleasure will bring no
melody; riches will bring no deep-seated joy; and honors and aspi-
rations will yield no happiness.
Godliness, by its very nature, reduces a man to a certain conform-
ity with the laws of his condition, and makes him content therein,
and so works upon his disposition that it becomes amenable to the
law of happiness. It is restrained in its overweening pride, or wide,
circuiting vanity, or harrowing discontent. It is made to be more
childlike and simple. It is brought into conditions in which hap-
piness may distil upon it from ten thousand little things. A man
WHAT IS TEE PEOFIT OF GODLINESS? 353
who wishes to see beauty in nature must not watch for it in gor-
geous sunsets always — though they will come once in a while. Let
him watch for it in ten million little facets which glisten in the light'
of the sun, by the roadside as well as in the rich man's adorned
grounds. We must see it in the motes and bugs, in the minutest
insects, everywhere.
So, then, we are to reap happiness and satisfaction, not so much
fi'om great cataclysms and paroxysms, as in little things, that have
the power to make us supremely happy.
Another thing. Men's happiness depends more upon their rela-
tions to society than we are apt to think. Where men have the art
of fitting themselves to their circumstances and their companions,
there is great satisfaction in these also.
There is a true sympathy, a true benevolence, which is godly.
It is the fruit of godliness. The not thinking of ourselves more
highly than we ought to think, but thinking soberly, as God has
dealt to every man the measure of faith; the giving-aud-taking-
spirit; the art of saying pleasant things; the art of not saying
disagreeable things; in other words, charity, that covers a multitude
of sins, that rejoiceth not in iniquity, that rejoicetli in the truth,
that beareth all things, that endureth all things, that is not puffed
up, that doth not behave itself unseemly — this is a condition of great
enjoyment. I think there is to be reaped from the face and heart
of men great fruition, if one is only in such relations of sympathy
■with them as to avail himself of that fruition, which is open to all.
Alas ! there are many persons who do not know how to carry them-
selves among men ; who are not interested in them ; who, for the
most part, look upon them as a carpenter looks upon a chest of
tools — as cutting instruments, which he can use. If they cannot
use them, they regard them as of no value at all. If when you look
upon men you ask, "How much are they worth? What can I do
with them ? What use can I put them to ?" If you go among men
with a mean, selfish spirit, how little happiness will you find in your
social intercourse ! But if in the child and in its sports, you see
something to make you smile; if toward the laboring man you have
a kindly good will, and if you find companionship with all who
are virtuous in the various walks of life — with those who are high
for certain reasons, and those who are low for certain other reasons;
if yon feel a generous brotherhood and sympathy for men, then there
is a vast deal of enjoyment for you in this life, which comes simply
from your aptitudes for fellowship and friendsliip.
Xow, it is the peculiar office of a true godliness to subdue the
heart to ibis universal amnesty and sympathy, so that they who
354 WE A T IS TEE FBOFIT OF G 0DLINES8 f
are godly, ■who live in conformity to the will of God, in all their
circumstances, shall reap more or less enjoyment. Godliness, by
changing men's condition, prepares them to be happy; and by giv-
ing them affinities for things about them produces conditions of
happiness.
There are also other ways in which godliness works toward hap-
piness. It gives to men a motive in this life without concentrating on
their worldly endeavors the utmost of their powers. No man can be
happy in life without having some business that tasks him; for happi-
ness means manhood. Quiescence brings no consciousness of en-
joyment with it, though it may bring great profit. But no man
has a business to which he applies himself assiduously, and which
he sees succeeding, without enjoying himself. I do not know that
there is any better enjoyment for a man than to have been mated
to some vocation which suits his nature and disposition, to have
heartily accepted it, and to make it the occasion, every day, of the
activity of every part of his nature. The outgoing of a man's own
self, legitimately and industriously, with the constant expectation
of success — there is great enjoyment in this.
At the same time, let this enjoyment be coupled with the moder-
ating, restraining feeling that if earthly enterprises fail and come
short, this world is not the only refuge, and worldly affairs are not
the only things of value — that though the house perish, and the
garments be wasted, and the gold and silver take wings and fly
away, and all things perish, yet there is a God, there is a provi-
dence, there is hope, there is a home, and there is immortality ; then
the happiness is greatly increased. If we work within the sphere
of Christian faith in secular affairs, Ave reap a great degree of satis-
faction in this life — more than most men are wont to reap from
their outward circumstances.
Then there is the consideration of those qualities which go to-
make su<ccess in business. Now I come to that which men call
"prosperity'' — namely, succeeding in their affairs, not only so that
they shall be able to sustain their families, but so that they shall be
able to improve their condit'ion, and be called "prosi^erous men."
Piety, especially in any narrow and technical sense of the term,
does not necessarily make men good business men. A good busi-
ness man is one who has good common sense. And common sense
is a bo7'n quality. If it be not in you, I do not know how to help
you. If one limb is shorter than another, we can splice out the
shoe ; but if a man is born without common sense, I do not know
of any crutch or splice that Avill supply the lack. He must wiggle
on the best he can. But the Word of God, while it speaks of
WEA T IS TEE PEOFIT OF G ODLINESS 9 355
"fools," of the "liecdless," of the "unwise," and what not, hi the
main takes it for granted that men have common sense, or ad-
dresses itself to men who possess this quality. It does not have
much to say to your theology, or your metaphysics, but speaks
mainly to your common sense.
When there is this root-force — good common sense — in men, then
godliness — that is, self restraint — a wise conformity to all the known
laws of their being — does tend to produce just those states of mind
which in the end result in commercial prosperity.
In the first place it gives a man trustworthiness — a quality
which is as rare as the gold of Ophir. A man whose good judg-
ment you can trust; whose honesty is sterling] who is just the
same behind your back that he is before your face ; who loves his
neighbors' affairs as if they were his own ; who does what he prom-
ises to do; who is faithful, and continuous in his fidelity; in short,
who is trustworthy — the j)rice of such a man is above rubies. Men
in general, if you were to put them up at auction, might not bring
much.
A drove of horses that came from South America the other
day was exposed for sale in one of the open lots of the city. I
went to look at them. They may have been all that they claimed
to be, but such a scrawny set of skin and bone I never saw before.
They Avere put up at auction, and brought small prices.
If men, as they go, in Wall Street, were put up at auction, I
do not think they would bring much. Men are not much thought
of, taking them as they average. A person would hesitat-e about
bidding on them.
Let me have taken one of those horses, and put him in the
trainer's hands, and had his speed brought out so that he could
make his nine and ten miles an hour on the road, and then put him
up at auction, and how many bidders would there have been ! How
many would have been glad to possess him, and Avould have been
willing to pay a good price for him !
The trouble is that we do not believe in men. They are too
apt to be one-sided. They are swayed by circumstances. They are
assailable. They are forgetful. Tliey are untrustworthy. But
once let a man be known to be of good parts, and above suspicion
or reproach or temptation, and there is no gold that can be weighed
over against him.
Men talk about being honest and industrious, and yet never
getting along in life. You put too higli an estimate upon your hon-
esty. Men do not believe you are as honest or as faithful and
prompt as you believe yourself to be. But where all the parts
356 WEAT IS TEE PBOFIT OF GODLINESS 9
of a man are morally sound ; where be is free from vices of every
sort ; where lie has fidelity, conscientiousness, industry, good judg-
ment and intelligence ; where he is so trustworthy that you can
bring the screw to bear upon him, and, though you turn it never
60 many times, not be able to break him until you crush him to
death — he is invaluable. And I say that just in proportion as men
approach to that, they are more and more important in a commer-
cial age, and in a great commercial community.
Now, it is the tendency of the ethics of Christianity to produce
just such men. If religion does not produce them, it is so far
spurious or imperfectly administered. There is a difiFerence be-
tween ethical religion and ecclesiastical and doctrinal religion.
But where a man has Christian ethics ; where a man is truth-
speaking and reliable ; Avhere a man is founded upon the rock
Christ Jesus, and cannot be moved from it, I say that godliness
tends to success in commercial afiFairs. I need hardly point
you to the fact that the classes from Avhich the prosperous men of
the community spring are not the wild living. The men who
honor God in their households ; the men whose children have been
brought up to moderation of desire and to self-restraint; the men
whose children have been taught weekdays and Sundays ; the
men who believe in God, and in responsibility to God, and are
sober-minded, and have that depth of earnestness which comes
with early teaching in religion — these are the men who furnish the
successful lawyers and merchants and business men in every direc-
tion.
If you take the different classes of religionists, where shall you
find more Christian ethics than among the Quakers ? Where shall
you find more carefulness in daily life ? And among what class
will you find more Avorldly prosperity, and more enjoyment in it,
than among them ?
"When I lived in the West, a merchant told me that during
twenty years he never suffered the loss of a quarter of a dollar
from a whole Quaker neighborhood. You might take whole settle-
ments, and say that they were exemplifications of the fact that
"godliness is profitable unto all things, having the promise of the
life that now is, and of that which is to come."
So I might go on and reason almost endlessly; but I should be
met by many, saying, '• While in a general way this may be true, it
must be admitted that there are brilliant exceptions. Here is a
man who sought ambition, and very soon flung off all competitors.
They were too careful. They had conscience, and would not climb
by the ways that he resorted to. But he, being bold and unscrupu-
lous, climbed, and stands hisfh."
WE A T IS THE PROFIT OF 0 ODLINESS 9 357
Ob, that you could take down that man -who stands so high !
The man who has risen in viohition of all the commands of God,
who has had some success in the way of a brilliant career in ambi-
tion, and who now wields power — take him down ! Put his quali-
ties ill the alembic and analyze them; enter into an examination
of his nature; look at what he is made up of ; look at the mere
matters of tendency and of enjoyment; see whether that harsh,
severe, burning spirit of his is a prosperous spirit, simply because he
has reached some lurid height, by his overweening ambition. Is he
prosperous because he has reached the point that he wanted to
reach ? Is he happy ? Does he bear the mark of enjoyment on hid
brow'?
The saddest face that I ever looked upon, I think — the most
heart-touching and tear-bringing — was that of Daniel Webster, as I
sat and looked across at him, wlien he went home to die, a broken-
hearted man — -a wreck. He had staked everything for ambition.
Virtue was not his besetting sin. Although he had a certain moral
admiration, he ]iever had deep moral impulse. He did not believe.
He threw himself away upon his ambition, and failed. Although
he had world-wide renown as an orator and statesman, the thing for
which he strove he missed ; and he went back disappointed, sinking
down through step by step of stimulation, until death closed the
sad and piteous scene. His was one of the saddest lives in Ameri-
can history. It would be looked upon by many as one of the most
successful of lives, if a rewarded ambition could be regarded as being
success. He had everything all the w'ay up except the bauble at the
top which he sought. He longed to be President, but he could
not be. The bubble was pricked, and he died. What sort of man-
hood is that which fails and loses everything because any one thing
that a man sought in this large, round age, and set his heart upon,
he could not have ?
There is the eminent but not honored name of Fisk. Coming
down into the city, he despised men, if he did not God. What
cared he for morality ? Where was his godliness. AVas there ever
a man who lived so fast, and did so much, and rose so high? Let
me tell you, young men, that the success of that man did not depend
upon his wickedness. The reason why he did succeed was that he
was an exceedingly able business man. He had admirable qualities
in him. He was sensuous in his habits; but in business matters he
was both bold and cautious. He was, among his companions, a
man whose word was to be trusted. He had uncommon adapta-
tions. His success resulted from that which was good in him and
not from those elements in him which were bad. The Ihingg that
358 WITA T IS THE PEOFIT OF GODLINESS f
were bad in him made his success less brilliant and less enjoyablo.
It was his vices that slew him. It was his real virtues that gave
him his eminence. You are fools if you suppose that he succeeded
because he was bad.
"Ah, but," you say, "that may be the case with some men ; but
I do not believe there was ever a better man than such and such a
one ; and he Avas signally unsuccessful. If there was ever a godly
man, he was one. He used to pray every morning, and distribute
tracts every evening ; he used to attend the prayer-meetings regu-
larly, and participate in them ; he used to do everything that a
really godly man would be expected to do; he used to do all he
could for the good of the community that he was in."
All that may be true ; but godliness does not teach a crow to
sing like a nightingale. If a man has gone into a business which
he is not fit for, he cannot make up Avhat he lacks by taking part in
prayer-meetings, or distributing tracts, or anything of that kind. A
man must use his good sense in adapting himself to his business.
He must select a business that he is competent to carry on. To
choose wrongly in establishing one's self in business is a violation of
the law of success. A man may be qualified for one kind of life.
and not for another. A man may make a good minister and a poor
general ; or, a man may make a good general and a poor minister. A
man may make a good artist and a poor artisan or worker in
metals. Men must avoid those spheres for which they have no
aptitude. If a man attempts to prosper in a sphere for which he is
not fitted, piety will help to supplement his weakness, but it will
not crown him with commercial success.
And yet, many a man has failed utterly in business, and his life
has been a better success than the life of his neighbors who never
failed. I know such men.
If I had my choice, I would rather live in a hovel, with a joy-
ous, genial, kind, cheerful companion, in one room, with all my
little delf on one little shelf; one room, redolent every day with
true enjoyment ; one room, with the companionship of one on
whom the morning came full of brightness and sweetness; one
room, and good digestion ; one room, with songs enlivening the
day ; one room, baptized by the influences of religion ; one room,
where God's sweet angel of mercy has brought invisible gifts that
never spend themselves — if I had my choice, I would ratlier live in
one room in such a hut than in the resplendent mansion through
which the prosperous man wallcs, and sees nothing that comforts
him, and nothing that his eye delights to look upon.
Oh, that great, brilliant, marble house on the comer ! Oh,
WE A T IS TEE PBOFIT OF G ODUNESS ? 359
the gallery of pictures that stands behind it! Oh, the magnificent
glass, crystal-cut, that lets the light through the windows — or would,
if it were not for the splendid rags that are hung up inside ! Oh
the massive furniture! Oh, the gorgeous upholstery! And oh,
the thin, stingy man who walks up and down in the midst of all
this rich abundance ! Would you change with him ? I would
rather trundle a wheelbarrow than be a curmudgeon in what men
call " prosperity " in this world. Money in your pocket and hell in
your heart do not make you prosperous. Eeeking contempt, rasp-
ing selfishness, avarice that is vulgar and remorseless — is that pros-
perity? Is that what you want to live for? Was it for that that
your dear mother brought you to the baptismal font? Was it for
that that your father uttered prayers over your head every morning ?
Was it for that that there were well-springs of sentiment and aspi-
ration opened when you came into life? Was it for that that you
came down into life with full freight of anticipation ? Was it to
pile up money, and waste manhood ? Does prosperity come in that
way ? You cannot have any prosj^erity that corrupts manhood.
There is nothing prosperous which does not make you more than
you are.
Although a man may fail in his outward work in life, yet, when
you come to one who is called " a prosperous man," you will find
that, compared with him, the first is the more fortunate. Though his
goods are gone, though he is wasted, though he can no longer look
upon a large exchequer, and though his expectations are disap-
pointed, yet, within he has sweet content. He has gratefulness
toward God. He has a heart full of rebounds of sympathy. He
has faith and hope of the future. He is waiting for his coronation.
In that land where the gold shall never grow dim, nor lose its
luster — there is his home. And even here he has more of heaven
than the man who is prosperous merely in worldly things. For
"godliness is profitable" to him in this life. He has food, and
raiment, and shelter, and friendship, and character, and men bow
respectingly to him — and that is enough.
Many a poor man goes along the street whose name would not
be worth a snap on a note. He could not get a l)a'nk in New York
to lend him a hundred dollars for a month. He is of no market
value whatever. But if your dear child Avas dying, and you did not
know how to pray, he is the very man that you would send for.
You would say to him, when you were in distress, '* Come to our
house."' Ah ! a man may not have outward prosi)crity, and yet
prosper. He may have that which money cannot buy — peace, hap-
piness, joy. Tlie power of making joy he has; and is he not pros-
pered ? Is he not well off? ^
C60 WHAT IS THE PROFIT OF GOBimESSf
Fiuallyj taking society at large, those wlio get the furthest
from the rules of morality; those who have the most doubt and
distrust in regard to the overruling providence of God; those
who have a leaning to their own wisdom; those who are proud and
selfish, and do what they have a mind to regardless of the welfare
of others — they are not preeminently prosperous, even in material
and commercial things. On the whole, looking through society
collectively, that part of society which is most moral, Avhich is most
conformable to the Christian life, gives more instances of prosperity
than any other — so many more as to be noteworthy. And I say to
all the young in my congregation, " Do you suppose, if there be a
God (and yon scarcely can doubt that), he, being the Governor over
this world, has made holiness of heart the law and duty of your
life, and made the woiid so that this holiness of heart shall be un-
congenial with success and run counter to it ? Do you suppose that
his laws are so ordained that prosperity will never follow obedience?
Do you suppose he reverses in grace what he legislates in nature ?
No. The God Avho made the heaven and the earth, and governs
them both, and will one day bring you into judgment, with all the
nations of the earth — the quick and the dead — he has declared that
" Godliness is 2Jrofit(ible unto all tilings ; having promise of the life
that noio is, and of that ivhich is to come"
WEAT IS TEE PBOFIT OF GODLINESS? 361
PKAYER BEFORE THE SERMON.
We draw near to thee, our heavenly Father, with thanksgiving for thy
mercies. Thou hast heard our prayer, and hast blessed the day. Thou hast
irawn near to us, and caused us to draw near to thee. Thou has given us
okens of victory. Thou hast spread abroad in our hearts that spirit which
orings forth love. And we have rejoiced in thee. We thank thee for that
light which comes by faith and hope, which cheers us in our mortal course,
which sheds abroad light upon our affection and upon every duty, and which
makes the day, and even the darkness, light.
And now, O Lord, we desire, this evening, to make mention of thy good-
ness. AVe desire to be familiar with the humble boldness mth which thou
hast invited us to draw near to thee. Thou knowest our iunermost wants—
those which are most secreted, which no mortal eye can behold, and which
we cannot tell to any though we would. All is open before thee. Yea, more
plainly are we read by thee than we are recognized by ourselves. And we
beseech of thee that thou wilt grant unto us, by thy Spirit, not the things
supplicated, but the things needed. Guide our petitions day by day, that
we may ask what we really need ; that we may not plead our desires simply ;
that we may not mistake our own best good. May we be able, every day,
to say. Thy will be done, and to accept the evolution of thy providence as
an iudication of thy will, and in all circumstances to And therein content-
ment. May we rejoice to believe that our life is in a school, and that thou
art dealing Avith us both as a parent and as a teacher, and that we are learn-
ing by the things which we suffer, and by the thmgs which we enjoy. And
so may there be a meaning of life to us more than that which the world can
give. Interpret to us thy dealings thus through our inward experience.
May we learn patience, and hope, and faith, and perseverance. May we
learn, from day to day, gentleness, and meekness, and forbearance one with
another, and all humbleness of mind, as becomes those who are living upon
God's forgiveness and mercy. And yet, while we are hnmble in view of our
unworthiness, may we feel the exaltation and inspiration which there is in
our petitions to thee as children, adopted into thy family, made hcii-s of the
eternal blessedness of heaven, and in commerce with thee. May we lift up
our heads. May we rejoice that nothing can harm us. AVho shall separate
us from the love of God in Christ Jesus ? More and more may we lay hold
upon thy precious promises and assin-ances. More and more may we seek to
make our life worthy of this relationship. Help us to overcome our easily-
besetting sins. IIolp us to recognize the thiugs in us which are vain, or
proud, or sellish, or worldly, in any undue form. Help us rightly to live.
May we be able to overcome evil. May we be able to strive against all things
which defile, or which mar the innity of our spirit, so that thou mayest dwell
with us. When we thiuk what corjpany thou umst keep to dwell in us, we
shrink at the boldness of aslcing thee to enter such hearts as ours. O grant
that there may be in us courage of thought and nobility of soul. Be thou
in us,-so to elevate and establish us 'n\ all things which are good, that thou
mayest be able to take complaisance in us.
We pray, O Lord our God, that thou wilt help us every day to remember
our duty. May we cease to do the things which are harsh and pain-bearing.
Lf it be thy will, may we seek, day by day, as good soldiers, to do the thiugs
which are most righteous. May we rejoice in rest and in ease when thou
givest it to us; but may we willingly meet thy north-wind and thy winter,
and bear hardness as good soldiers, when thou dost send them.
W(? pray that thou wilt grant thy blessing to rest u])on any that are in
362 WHAT IS THE FBOFIT OF GODLINESS?
thy presence, severally, as thou sccst that they need. "We pray that thou
wilt comfort those who need consolation. Enlighten those who are stumbling
in dai'kness. Guide ayight those who are unceitaiu of the way. Inspire with
the beginnings of new life those who are dead in trespasses and in sins. Wilt
thou grant that those who are discouraged, by many futile efforts, from
living a better life, may gird up their loins again, and persevere to the end.
Be with all those who are bearing the biu'dens of life, and exercised by its
cares and responsibiUties. May they seek everywhere to so carry themselves
that they shall be worthy to wear the name of Christ.
Bless all the churches of this city. Wilt thou guard their interests. May
their membership increase. Grant that their counsel in things good may be
wise, and that they may be united more and more perfectly to each other.
May thy kingdom come everywhere, under all forms. We pray for the
advance of intelligence and justice and humanity. ■ May the nations of the
earth cease to contend. May they learn war no more. May force and vio-
lence perish. May the spirit of truth and equity prevail in all the earth, and
thy name be glorified among thy people. And to the Father, the Son, and
the Spirit, shall be praises everlasting. Amen.
PEAYER AFTER THE SERMON.
Our Father, we beseech of thee that thy blessing may rest upon the word
spoken. Grant that we may have faith in thee and in thy promises. May
we not be weary in well-doing. May we not distrust thee. May we trust in
the Lord, and do good. Though the wicked seem to prosper, and though
violence, and pride, and ravening and discontented avarice, seem to have
their way, yet may we wait and see the frowning of thy providence beat
down these usurpers. May we behold how, in the day and in the night, and
in the periods through which thy plans ran, thou art exalting the humble,
and blessing the poor, and crowning with success those who are willing t-o be
moderate in their desires, and making the happiness of the earth in its low
places.
We pray, O Lord our God, that we may have faith to believe, not only
in respect to the world to come, but in regard to the world that no w is, that
thou art a^lministering for our good.
Bless the young. May they make no mistakes in the beginning of their
life. May they take straight lines. May they walk in ways of righteousness.
May they be truthful. May they be upright. May they be honorable before
God, and in the sight of men. And we pray that they may not be deluded
with a desire for sudden riches unearned. May we not seek to break into
the house of fortune and get our robber-goods. May we be willing to sweat
and toil, and strive, and Avait for their prospeiity, so that when it comes they
shall be inured to it, and not ruined by it.
We beseech of thee that thou wilt convoy us safely through life. And
when these mortal scenes shall pass, bring near the vision of the blessed
land. And into it may we enter, not as by fire, but triumphing, met and
greeted by those whom we have helped upon earth, and by those who have
helped us in heaven, and by thee, O Father, Son and Spirit. Amen.
XX.
The Religion of Hope.
INVOCATION.
Grant us thy blessing?, our Father; for by thine invitation we have come
hither. We yearn for thy presence, we feel the drawing of thy Spirit ; and
this is thine invitation. Help us, then, to rise r.bove care and trouble. Call
back our thought from all painful I'etrospect. Give us this day to look for-
ward by hope and Ijy faith, and to discern thee, and tlie realm where thou
art, and to take possession befoi*ehand somewhat, of those joys which await
us there. We pray that thou wilt accept the offerings which we bring thee —
not servile nor enforced offerings, but the risings up of tender thoughts, and
grateful memories ; the inspiration in our hearts of reverence and gladness
before thee. And having refreshed our spirits m thine, may we return more
faithful ill friendship, more disinterested in kindness, more interested one
for another; and may we receive that strength in the sanctuary which shall
make us competent for all the sufferings and duties of the week which is
before us, and of life itself. Hear us in these our petitions, for Christ's Jteke-
Amen.
20.
THE EELI&IOI OF HOPE.
" For we are saved by hope ; but hope that is seen is not hope ; f dr what a
man seeth, why doth he yet hope for?"— Rom. VIII. 24.
Not only is the eighth of Romans the most profound in its
interpretation of the higher forms of spiritual life, but in no other
part of the New Testament that I know of is there so profound
and afl'ecting a view of the condition of men under nature. In
the context the apostle says, " We know that the v/hole creation
groaneth and travaileth in pain until now. And not only they,
but ourselves also, which have the first fruits of the Spirit, even we
ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to-wit,
the redemption of our body."
Then comes the text — "For we are saved by hope," etc.
The apostle, then, has a full recognition of the mysteries of life
and of the struggles of life — especially as they turn upon the ques-
tion of character. All the perplexities which arise, the aspirations,
the self-condemnation, the yearnings, the disappointments, the con-
flicts which men have through their imagination and in the whole
realm of conscience, come up before the apostle's mind ; and the
way out of them is by the portal of hope. The Christian scheme,
as it is centered in love, is characterized, throughout, by the element
of hope. Nor do I know of any other development of religious feel-
ing that has taken on a systematic form in the world, which has had
hope for its genius and its distinctive peculiarity.
There has been a struggle toward a universal religion in all na-
tions more or less imperfectly developed, usually organized around
some one or two of the great passions or sentiments of human
nature. Fear has been the most universal impulse. In almost all
tlie religions outside of Christianity, and to a large extent in the
preliminary developments of Cliristianity under the system of the
Jews, fear held a preponderant position. And to-day, men worship,
throughout the globe, for fear of the gods. They deny themselves
Sunday Mohnino, July 7, 1872. Lesson : Bom. Vni. »-39. Hymns (Plymouth CoUcctlonj
Nos. 78, 604.
366 TEE BELIGION OF HOPE.
pleasures, or tlicy take on unwelcome duties, under the impulse of
fear. This is a motive of great consequence; but it is intrinsically
low in the moral scale. So long as men are what they now are, they
never will get along without the principle of fear. It is scarcely to
be conceived that anybody Avill rise so high in the scale as not to
have fear, either in its latent and indirect or in its open action
The lower men are, the more positive must fear be in them.
Tlie neglect of duties or insjoirations of duty must be accom-
panied with such a vivid and distinct sense of fear as to wake up
the dormant and comparatively inelastic and insensitive natures
of undeveloped men. But as men grow in culture, fear assumes less
and less a distinct and overt form, or becomes latent. For instance,
it is fear of hunger to-morrow that drives the savage to the
least industry to-day. But as w^e become civilized, wo do not
earn our daily bread by the direct impulse of fear, but from
an indirect and latent form of it. We are not conscious of it until
"we analyze ourselves, and bring it up to the surface. But willi the
love of activity, with the impulse of ambition, with all the variety
of motives which inspire industry, there is also a cautionary feeling.
And when fear has taken the shape of caution, it is an element
of sagacity and discrimination, and works in almost all proportions,
with almost all faculties, and does not work solely and sovereignly
in and of its own self
Eeligion in its earlier stages derives important help from fear ;
and as men are uncultured there must be more and more of it.
That part of religion and those aspects of government which take
hold on fear become more and more imperative as you go down the
scale, and as moral sensibility wanes ; and when you come to the
point where men iire but little better than animals, you cannot gov-
ern them in any other way than that in Avhich you govern animals.
As it is the goad and the whip that stir up the lazy ox, so it must
be the goad and the Avhip that shall produce moral sensibility in
men who are but little above the ox. But as you rise from this low
condition, the number of possible motives increases, and you can
■work the same and better results by anotlier and ascending class
of stimulants, till by and by men lose a consciousness of fear, al-
though in a minor and covert way it is still brought to bear upon
them.
But when fear is the generic impulse of religion, religion is
usually superstitious. It seldom exalts the cluiracter. It may serve
to correct in men some external and more glaring crimes and vices
and sins, but it never makes rich manhood. Fear never wove a
character full of curious threads and ligures. It is a coarse-handed.
THE .BELIGION OF HOPE. 367
^tFong-pdlnied, but not skillfiil-fiugered, causation. If you are to
make men large, full in the subtle elements of character, some
higher inspiration than fear is necessary to be their schoolmaster.
In all religions conscience, too, has been a fundamental element.
It is a fundamental element in the Christian religion. It is required
in directing practical efforts. It is emploj'ed to hold in subjection
men's impetuous and inharmonious passions.
Conscience is the sense of right, with the corresponding sense
of the reverse — wrong. But when it is enlightened, when it acts
under the influence of reason, and in connection with the imagina-
tion, and with an idealized sense of the divine law, and of the pos-
sibilities of human character, it can never bring peace ; it can never
produce happiness.
The whole seventh of Romans is occupied with the natural history
of a conscientious man who is determined to be hapj^y in the at-
tempt to live rightly; and we see the fruit of it. "When a man acts
under the influence of conscience, the law,- to him, is higher at
every step than his fulfillment of it. Conscience grows in its
requisitions faster than human life can fulfill them. A low con-
science may not trouble one; but a conscience that is idealized
or enlightened Avill be at once the provocation and the mockery
of every man's attempt to live a high and resplendently holy life.
There can be no settled peace built upon conscience, in the higher
forms of Christian living. It is the popular saying that no man
can be happy who has not a sound conscience, and that if a man
has a sound conscience he need not fear anybody. This is true in
men's civil relations. We do not need to fear the law when we have
our conscience on our side. If a man has fulfilled the duties which
are imposed upon him b}'' the laws of the land and his social re-
lations, and has a conscience void of offense, he is without that solici-
itude which men excite among each other. When, however, he con-
templates not the ideal of civil law, nor that of social or public
sentiment, but develops before his mind the divine ideal of char-
acter, the inward life, the richness and depth and perfectness and
sweetness and lovableness of true manhood; when he unites in his
thought the two worlds — the physical world with its develop-
ments, and the spiritual world with its elements — and brings the
Divine nature itself beneath the horizon, then, if he attempts to
live a perfect life as indicated by this higher rule or ideal, conscience
must forever be his tormentor. We never can be as good as we
think we ought to be. We never are as fine as our conscience in-
terprets refinement to be. We never are as pure as our conception
of purity. We never gain such control of our passions that they
368 IHE BELIGION OF HOPE.
do not have their throbs and fevers. We are forever under the
dominion, to a certain extent, of our lower nature ; and if a man's
peace is to be derived from the testimony of his conscience that he
is perfect, peace will be unknown to him. N"ay, there have been no
more affecting instances of a Avant of peace than those which have
been develoised in the experience of righteous men — men who were
putting forth every power of their nature to live justly, but who had
in themselves testimony that they were falling short in every point
of their ideal. If religion centers on conscience you cannot derive
the element of peace from it. You can get inspiration enough,
quickening enough, stimulus enough, — but not peace.
Now, no scheme is Christian whose predominant results are not
recognized. Developed natures are more subject to disturbance than
natures that are undeveloped. All natural religions bring men
so far along as to disquiet them. Tliey bring them so far as to
raise in them an ambition of goodness, and an aspiration toward
goodness, such that they make the most potent eftbrts toward it;
but all mere natural religion stops short of producing the condi-
tions of peace in men. Christianity alone secures peace. The
genius of Christ's religion is to yield what the apostle callsj " The
fruit of the Spirit." When the Spirit has carried religion to its
ripeness so that it bears fruit, what is that fruit ? It is love, joy,
and peace — the three elements which are scarcely to be found in
the results of any natural system of religion — love universal ,' joy,
of which there is more seed planted and less reaped than of any
other quality in the universe ; and peace, which sleep cannot bring,
nor the will enforce, nor any ingenuity or curious contrivance distil
upon the soul, but which, if it come at all, must come from the
heavenly realm. Men can sooner divide witli their hands the
moisture of the seas, and scatter it abroad and bedew the flowers
with its gracious night-chrism, than they can give peace to their
fellow men. We can give excitement, we can give some forms of
rude joy; but a settled indwelling and abiding peace — who can
bring it to himself, or give it to another ?
The fruit of the Spirit is love, as opposed to the whole flow of
natural selfishness; joy, as opposed to the sadness which proceeds
from the constant misinterpretations and mistakes of life ; and,
more strange than all, in this vast creation which hath been groan-
ing and travailing in pain until now — peace. And it is the genius
of Christianity that it has the power to produce love and joy and
peace. And if Christianity produces these, it must produce them
with all the facts of man's organization and condition in view — -
it must be because there is in the God who constructed the world
TEE EELIGION OF HOPE. 3G9
and its system, and avIio lias revealed the Cliristian faith, a nature
that stands over against the facts and conditions of men so as to be
in sympathetic adaptation to them. It fits the actual facts in the
human condition, as will fall out in this discussion.
The production of this fruit — love, joy, and peace — will throw
remarkable light, then, upon the nature of Christianity, when we
consider Avhat a state of things Christianity is designed to deal with.
Consider, in the first place, that it is not a gloziug compromise;
that it is not a system of indifierence which tends to make it a
matter of unimportance whether a man is good or bad. Righteous-
ness has nowhere else such intense motives as in Christianity. No-
where else is it required that manhood should be made up of such
precious materials ; that it should rise "so high ; or that it should
be so comprehensive. Nowhere else is the aim of living made so
conspicuous — namely, the perfection of men in Christ Jesus.
Whereas in other religions men are made perfect in their relations
with each other by an outward morality and a condition of good
citizenship, Christianity counts these things as mere rough foun-
dations, and demands that a man should be made perfect in the
interior life ; in the range and reach of the imagination ; in the
whole round of the intellect; in the whole crystal palace of the
moral sentiments. He is there to be so molded, educated, har-
monized, balanced, sweetened, perfected, that he shall stand up as a
son of God, perfect in Christ Jesus. A man may be endowed with
just such faculties as we are, and yet they may be carried so high,
and attuned so perfectly, and made so continuously productive and
symmetrical, that he is fit to be called, in one sense, equal with
Jesus Christ — that is, a fellow-heir with him ; one among so many
brothers adopted into God's household, with Christ as an elder
brother, and standing alongside of him, being possessed of a like
character or nature.
Here is a high aim. It has no conformity with a low estate, nor
toleration of it. It is not content with a mere worldly prosperity.
The manhood which Christianity , inspires and contemplates and
demands, is the highest manhood conceivable.
■ Consider, next, what is that condition of things into which men
come in this world. Every man is born into the world without his
own leave. He cannot take his pick of the faculties that he will
bring, but awakes what he is. His nature is determined, not by
his will, but by laws occult and unknown. Every man comes into
life with a bundle of tendencies which he inherited through his
parents, along a certain line of race-qualities. As different let-
ters spell difierent words in literature, so the different faculties,
370 TEE BELIGION OF ROPE.
in different proportions, in each individual man spell that man's
name, as different from the name of every other man. We
come into life without any inventory of what we have. We are
born with forces beating in us which we do not know the meaning
of We have, when we set out in life, the coarsest, most unculti-
vated, external character. And this character is to be built up in
each individual according to the charter of his inward life. If a
man were born symmetric, wholesome in every part, unquestionably
this fact would have a direct influence uponhis morality. It would
give him rest. It would bring no abnormal strain upon any part
of him. But if a man be born with an exquisite sense of approba-
tiveness, so that praise or blame produces in him a feeling of ecstasy
or anguish, and if, withal, he be born deformed and with dis-
torted features, so that every eye looks upon him Avith aversion, has
he the same chance to carry himself with an equal balance as that
man has who is harmonious Avithout? Is not his physical organ-
ization one that is all the time girding and girding upon his most
sensitive, his inward, his moral nature ? Do not men depend upon
their physical conditions for a thousand things which render calm
their interior faculties or stimulate them to development ?
A lily hits the mark every time. There is no difficulty in
planting the seed and having a lily that will with certainty send
up its stem and open its pure white flowers. No lily-seed ever ojiens
a duck or a hawk or a blackbird, but always a pure white lily-blos-
som. Is it so with men? Plant the seed. Up comes a malignant,
ugly, selfish, embruted creature. Plant again. Up comes a round,
laughing, gay, joyous, sunshiny creature. Plant again. Up comes
an intensely practical creature. Plant again. Up comes a low,
sensuous nature. Plant again. Up comes a singing poet. Plant
again. Up comes a genius for music or painting. As we plant,
men unfold every conceivable diversity of qualities. If Ave plant
lilies, the result is the same the Avorld around, with no essential va-
riation ; but men, when dcA^eloped from the seed, manifest traits
which differ from those of thfir immediate progenitors often as
widely as it is possible for human nature to differ. If you put men
into a temperature where it is winter nine months of the year,
and where the other three months are comparatively unfruitful,
Avill their development be the same that it would be if you put
them in a temperature where there are eight months of bountiful
seasons, and but tAvo or three months of cold weather ? Do yon not
suppose that the climate in which men are reared, and their physical
conditions, have a powerful influence upon their moral character?
The chances of men who are born Avhere ignorance prevails are not
THE RELIGION OF HOPE. 371
the Siime as the chances of men wLo arc born in the midst of schools
and churches. A child that is born to a pirate has not the same
chance in liie as the child that is born to a Howard, or any other
philantliropist.
Then, the social inflnenccs which surround men liave much to
do witli what they are. Has the child that first sees the light at
the Five Ponits in New York the same chance that the child has
whose early associations, and whose thoughts of purity and fidelity
c nd truthfnhaess, are fostered in the bosom of a high-toned Chris-
tian household ?
When yon come to go down to the root of things, and see what
men really are, taking them race by race, and nation by nation, the
problem is not so small as men make it out to be, who reason upon man-
kind. Man/ci7idis, a generic phrase. We can deal with men very easily
till we come to take them stock by stock, community by community,
neighborhood by neighborhood, and study minutely all the causes
which act upon them, taking into consideration their original con-
struction, thoir hereditary nature, the conditions under which they
exist, and the influence of manners and customs which meet them
at their birth, and work upon their nature through life. Every
man who is bora into this life encounters the requisitions of man-
hood, and every man who has the inspiration of manhood waked
up in him is obliged to begin his development at the point where he
finds himself, and under all the restrictions and burdens and trials
which belong to his condition; he has to commence his battle and
work on the way to perfect manhood with the endowments which
he possesses. And the problems are almost as multitudinous as the
men who arc born into the world. While those who are born of
Christian parents, and inherit the influences and tendencies which
have been handed doAvn through Christian households for genenv-
tions back, find comparatively little trouble in living a highly de-
veloped life, those who are born of un-Christian parents, and in-
herit the opposite influences and tendencies, have to toil and
struggle against their circumstances and conditions, and find them-
selves almost irresistibly swept along the downward course.
And yet, Christianity is for all men. It is adapted to all — the
high and the low ; the well organized and the badly organized. It
requires of every man according to what he hath, and not ac-
cording to what he hath not. And over all this mass of men, yet
divergent and discordant, the divine Being spreads that system
whose central light is hope.
Hope ? How can that be 'r* How can it be that the law of
God requires love to God and love to man, and that there shall be
372 TEE BELIGION OF HOPE.
a perfect manhood, with this' for its nucleating center, about which
the crystalHzation shall take place ? Considering the conditions of
men, and the circumstances in which they are placed, in life, how
can that be the divine law ? When you look upon the race of
mankind as they are born into life, and as they are, hoAv can you
say that Christianity shall be a scheme of hope for them ?
"Ye are saved by hope." I can understand it only in one way —
namely, by considering that while it is the nature of God to work
out for men that ideal, ultimate character to which they are to
come, it having pleased him to create them for the conditions in
which he has created and re-created them, there is that in his na-
ture which enables him to wait patiently, and mold gently, with
paternal fidelity, all these various classes of men, in their several
relations, and to give them, every one, such a hold upon him that
he shall hope. That is to say, in every step of strife, in every
act of yearning, there is something of the Lord Jesus Christ pre-
sented as the soul's model, which inspires hope. We are saved, not
by what we are, but by what we hope to be. We are'saved, not by
the purity of our spirit, but by the hope that, striving upward and
onward, we shall reach a state where the spirit shall not be un-
worthy of God.
I did riot make myself small as a seed. He that made me small
as a seed, and made it necessary that I should raise myself up
through dangers and struggles to a higher development, is in us.
And he has a heart of love and pity which fits him to be the God
of such as we are, working our way toward the Lord and Sa-
viour Jesus Christ. In other words he has the patience to wait.
He has a spirit of forgiveness which passes over iniquity and trans-
gression and sin ; and every soul that is born into life, no matter
how high or how low, no matter under what obstruction or dark-
ness, no matter where, and begins to aspire, has a right to say, " I
am saved by hope — not by what I am, but by what God is."
Our children, in the household, when they begin to develop at
two or three years of age, are raw in every faculty, forming the
absu-rdest judgments about things, having the most fantastic imagi-
nations, and the most irregular passions and appetites, and not
Having learned how to develop themselves symmetrically ; but we
say of them, " They are children." And when they become angry,
we sweeten their temper, and bear with them, and forget, with
every going down of the sun what there has been of fault in their
conduct during the day. "We help their imperfection. We remem-
ber their transgression but to heal it. And we do for them in pro-
portion to their needs. The child in the household that is nervous,
THE BETJGION OF nOFE. ■ 373
and irritable, and disagreeable, receives ten times as much sympathy
and kindness from the fatiier and mother as the naturally sweet
and gentle and equable child.
So we learn by our experience that there is a patience and there
is a love which is a medicine for vice. And since the earth is what
it is by the decree of God, since men come into life by the everlast-
ing will of God, since men find their way from the conditions in
wliich they were born, toward a perfect manhood as far as they go
by God's everlasting decrees, it is rational to suppose that over
against this struggling mass — the creation groaning and travailing
in pain until^now — there is a Heart that is competent to meet this
troublesome problem, and that out of the heavens will come the
love and goodness of God, and all those divine elements which
more than make up for the deficiencies of men ; that God is
still brooding and brooding over them, and still persuading them,
and still, by things visible or invisible, by their mistakes and suf-
ferings, by their hopes and joys, by a thousand influences, edu-
cating, fashioning, forming them, so that under all conditions they
have a right to hope.
If a man sits dovrn and makes an account, saying, '• Here is
what I am to be, and here is what I am," he cannot but feel, "Oh
wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of
this death ?"' If a man takes the debit side, he cannot find hope
or joy. The ideal of Christianity is so high that no man can bear
to look at himself over against that magnificent picture.
At a friend's house, lately, I saw what was apparently a little
book lying on the table, and I took it up. On the outfjide was
The Portrait of an Angel. On opening it, I found that it was a
mirror. x\nd oh ! what an angel I saw in it !
If a man takes the mirror of an ideal Christian manhood and looks
at himself in it, what he sees himself to be is not exactly his pattern
of a man in Christ Jesus. All the way through life, if 3'OU measure
yourself by the law of God, or by the ideal manhood that is in Christ
Jesus, there is nothing but despondency, nothing but despair, nothing
but iiopelessncss that can come from it; but if there sits in the center
of the universe a great Soul of Love, which, through the long ages,
lives but to form and fashion and bring home, finally, sons and
daughtei's to glory, then no man who wants to be a man need have
occasion to despair. There is no man who wants to be better,
though he is conscious of being burdened with innumerable trans-
gressions in the past, but can bo saved by hope. A mau who is
hopeful says, "The impetuosity of my temper, which I have striven
against for months, and which I thought I had conquered, broke
374 TEE BELIGION OF HOFE.
down the barriers yesterday; nevertheless, God is on my side.
Though I am bad enough, there is hope for me in the future.
There is everything for me in the heart of God ; so I will labor and
strive on." Your passions are strong; you watch against them
with all the power of your will ; and yet, in some unfortunate mo-
ment you are swept away. As a prairie blazes, and then lies black
with ashes when the fire is gone, so your experience, after having
taken you through the fire, lands you, often, in ashes and sackcloth.
You say, "It is the hundredth time. Woe is me ! Who shall de-
liver me from the body of this death ?" And yet, after shame, after
mortified pride, after the flagellations of a despotic conscience, there
rises up an undiscouraged wish, " Oh, that I might be free !" This
is the voice of God calling out from the very depths of the heaven
of love, and saying, "Ye are to be saved by hope."' There is hope
for you. What if in a thousand things you find your petty selfish-
ness creeping in ? What if it is like mildew that steals into the
most secret places ? What if it is like dust that intrudes into the
closest-shut watch ? What if it is like rust that corrodes whatever
it can touch ? What if there be ten thousand cutting, wasting
evils in you ? God made you ; he loved you and loves you. Jesus
Christ has redeemed you ; and he waits upon you and watches you
and influences you. You are just as wicked as you think. You
are a great deal more wicked. You are under just such condemna-
tions as you think, and they are more awful than you dream. The
point where you do not magnify, where you do not realize the
truth, is the divine government — the redemptory power which sits
in the center of the universe, sovereign and everlasting. God is
bringing men out from prison; from Siberian captivity; from dun-
geons ; from every conceivable condition of misery. They are in
the midst of all manner of burdens and trials and sufferings, but
they are saved by hope ; for the Spirit knows what they need better
than they do, and prays through ihem with groanings unutterable;
so that they have reason to be hopeful, and to believe that there are
in them the beginnings of tendencies which shall lead them upward
toward God.
So long as there is this divine love, and this divine yearning,
and this divine, guardian care, there is courage for every man who
desires to aspire, or wants to go up.
There is not, to-day, in all the world, following the equator
round, a seed that has not liberty to sprout and grow if you will
put it in the soil. But if you take a 'seed, no matter what its na-
ture may be, and hide it where the sun cannot find it, there is not
in all the summer, on the equator and both sides of it, any influence
that can make it sprout.
THE EELIGJON OF HOPE. 375
If men, living in this world under a constitution of infinite
patience, gentleness, mercy, love, and hopefulness, choose to seques-
ter themselves from the stimulating light and warmth of the all-
merciful God, they can remain outcast, unsprouted and ungrowing.
There is not a man, no matter how coarse and animal and low down
he may be ; there is not a man, however he may be beset and beat
about with temptations, that wants to grow, and is growing, even
if he makes but one leaf in a year and one joint in a season — there
is no such man who may not hope ; not because he is so good,
but because God is so good ; not because of what he has done or is
doing, but because of what he means to do hereafter. I do not
believe that anybody, in going to heaven, makes a leap so that from
being very imperfect here he is, as it were, by a click, transmuted,
and made absolutely perfect there. I believe that we go out of this
life into conditions of blessedness where temj)tations are gone ; where
the passions and appetites are left behind ; where motives to good
are multiplied ; where certainty takes the place of suspense or
doubt; and where we go on from point to point upward, those that
go there low starting from the low-down point, and those that
go there high starting from the high-up point. A man may escape
to heaven so as by fire ; but he will have to make up there what he
omits here. Or if he is far developed when he goes there, he will
stand in the midst of thrones and dominions and potentates, by
reason of that which he has enabled grace to do for him in this
Hfe.
It is not my object, however, so much to open up the doctrine
of the future, as to hold the thought of hope and encouragement
before every man, whether in the church or out of the church, who
is struggling under his OAvn sense of imperfection, and of condemn-
ation in ( onsequence of his failure in his attempt to be a whole man
all throu'gh, and who, because he is not able to keep up a symmet-
ric obedience and conformity to the ideal which is presented to him
of true Christian manhood, is tempted to give up the endeavor. I
desire to help those who are in danger of becoming sour through
discouragement, and then cynical, and then censorious, watcliing
others, and saying of them, '' They are not as good as they pretend.
I am not very good, but I am as good as they are." Far better is it
for men to know that we are all born into life full of imperfections;
that life means all that it was meant to mean; that the theory and
problem of human life is development out from the lowest to the
highest condition of moral character; that there is a providence
exactly adapted to the wants of the race, which supervises them
paternally and maternally, and that there is in it not only patience,
376 TEE BELIGION OF HOPE,
but infinite waiting, and love and forgiveness. I desire to say to
every man, high or low, good or bad, — Let hope lead you to righteous-
ness. Do not listen to the voice of fear. Your God is love, and
your religion is peculiarly inspired by the element of hope. If you
have tried to follow the right, and failed, try again. If you have
been cast down by your adversary, grasp your weapon and attack
him again. If you persevere you will prevail. More are they that
are for you than are they that are against you. God is not without
witnesses. No one in the universe knows as well as he what the
weight of testimony is against bad men, and what they have to
suffer. No one understands their case so well as He before whom
they are to stand in the judgment. But if you were to gather to-
gether all the renowned fathers and tender mothers that are on the
poi:)nlous globe to-day, or that have been since time began, they all
would not equal in depth and strength and vastness the sweet ten-
derness and gentleness that there is in Jesus Christ. The heaven
is full of the glory of God, and of the love of God ; and it is under
the influence of God, and of the future in which we hope to dwell
in his presence, that every man strives to be better — that the sinner
strives to be good ; that the good man strives to be a saint ; and
that tlie saint strives to rise still higher.
It is not what we are that saves us. By the grace of God we
are to be saved ; and that grace is named Love. God brings us to
himself, as parents bring their children to themselves, because he
loves us.
It is "to that Saviour, brethren, that we have given our vows and
our allegiance. It is to the name of that Saviour that we owe all
that we have had in the past, It is from him that all we hope for
in the future is to come.
We are to-day to refresh, by these symbols, our memory of the
earthly life of our dear Lord, by which he manifested to us, to the
world and to the universe, this nature of divine pity. Eather than
that the world should perish, he perished. He gave himself for
men. There is a symbolism of divine government. There is an
interpretation of divine love and mercy.
As many of you, therefore, as yet feel your need of divine suc-
cor ; as many of you as feel that by nature you are children of
wrath ; as many of you as feel that you are imperfect and un-
worthy ; as many of you as feel that you need patience and gentle-
ness and watchfulness, and are willing to accept them at the hands
of Christ, and are willing to say to him, " Poor, blind, naked, ut-
terly sinful, I come to thee for succor, and I trust thee" — so man]?
of you have a right, to-day, to partake with us of these emblems.
THE BELIGION OF HOPE. 377
Oh, guilty lips ! oh, heart full of all bitterncBS ! oh, treacherous
ones, who have sworn often and broken your vows ! do you ask me
if you may come? Yes. Not if you come in order to find an
apology for evil, but if you come to find a remedy. Has any man
here lived by stealing, hating it, and hating himself, and longing
to be an honest man, and striving with some success to overcome
it, and yet often cast down ? And does he look wistful and say,
"I wonder if that would help me ?" You may come and see if it
will help you. Is there any man here who feels Avhat sordidness
means, and watches against it, and prays against it, and is betrayed
by it, and day by day feels that it is an enemy stronger than he is ?
Do you say, " I promised God a hundred times that I would over-
come it, and every time I have broken my promise, and I am
ashamed to pray any more " ? Do you look wistfully at this table,
and say, "I wonder if I should get any strength if I took those
emblems" ? If you want to try it, take them. This bread and
this wine are not too good for a man who wants to do better, and is
in real earnest, trying to be better. These simple memorials are
meant to encourage those who want to live a godly life. Come,
therefore, and take them, not for the sake of saying, " There is a
secret influence in them which rubs out the past, and I am cleared
up to this time" ; but if you acknowledge that you have been going
wrong, and you are sorry for it, and you want to be better in tem-
13c-r, and delivered from every wicked and worldly way, and you
mean to reform, and to avail yourself of all the help you can get,
and you think that this ordinance will bring you nearer to God, then
I say, in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, that you have aright to
participate in it. It is for Such as you that the Saviour gave his
life.
Oh, sinning men, under the condemnation of your own con-
science, and under the withering contempt and scorn of your fel-
low men, you do not know how tenderly God thinks of you, or how ,
his love draws you toward him. Turn from men and ministers and
churches if you have received no benefit from them, but turn not
away from Christ Jesus ; for he sorrows for you. Having died for
you once, he now lives forever for you. And because he is so good,
you are not so bad but that you may be saved with an everlasting
salvation.
I invite all tliose who are making an effort to live a godly life,
in sincerity and in truth, whether they be members of our faith
and order or not, whether they belong to the great Protestant body
or the great Eoman Catholic body, or whether they belong to no
church at all; I invite all those who are conscious of sin, and are
378 THE BELIGION OF HOPE.
striving to break away from it, and want help, to partake of the
broken body and the spilled blood of Christ, their Saviour and my
Saviour, and the hope of all sinners.
PEAYEE BEFOEE THE SEEMOE".
Thou art bountiful, O Lord our God. The heavens are full of light. Thy
ways are light ; and yet, to us, they are often dark and obscure. Thou seest
the end from the beginning ; and yet, to us inextricable confusion exists in
affairs. We know not how to compass thee ; nor do we know how to under-
stand thy wonderful workings ; and we can only trust, and believe that the
Judge of all the earth cannot but do right, and that, finally, when we shall
behold things in the light of thy countenance, we shall see thy divine wis-
dom guiding all which seemed irregular, and lea^rn that thou hast wrought
out, in thine own way, infinite excellence and infinite glory.
We desire, O Lord, to trust, not in our thought of thee, but in thee. We
desire to believe that thou art greater than our utmost stretch of imagina-
tion, and that thy greatness is not in power as much as iu purity, and in
gentleness, and in wisdom, and in love, and in all that makes the soul blessed.
Infinite art thou, and infinite art thou in thy moral excellence, which tran-
scends all human experience, and all the following of our imperfect
thoughts. And when we rise into thy presence we shall not be disappointed.
We shall not find thee different from what we expected in that thou art less
excellent ; but thy glory will overflow in us in wonder and sweet surprise,
and the power of thy presence and the joy and gladness of thy being will
kindle in us such joy that spontancousl}" we shall cry out, as do they that
are round about thee, Glorj^, and honor, and praise, and power and dominion
be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and to the Lamb forever.
And now, O Lord, we desire, wandering in twilight, or in darkness, or in
noonday, to have firm trust in thee. And while we may fall one from
another, while man maj^ deceive man, while we are in the maze of cunning
and deceit, v/hich fills human life with distrust and uncertainty, grant, O
Lord our God, that we may find in thee a present help, and an alleviation of
fear. Grant that we may find rest and comfort when we are under the
dominion of our own selfishness. May we find hope even in the discourage-
ment which we have when we compare our life and character with thy law.
Ma}' we live by hope, and be sustained from day to day by that which our
souls do so much need.
Now, we beseech of thee, O Lord our God, that thou wilt grant thy bless-
ing to rest upon every one especially as he needs. Grant to those in thy
presence this day, that their secret desires may come up before thee, inter-
preted, if not by words, yet by divine insight and understanding. And grant
an answer to all those secret prayers which thy people bring to thee, nol
according to the; wisdom of their asking, but according to the wisdom of thy
beholding. And if it be best that they should walk in darkness, let not their
cry for light bring light too soon. If it bo needful for them that the yoke
should be borne, or that the burden should be canned, take it not off. Love
them, O Father, for their good, and with chastisement make them worthy to
be called thy children, if that be best.
We pray that thou wilt grant to all those who are in affliction the saving
Jense of the divine presence with them. If there are any whose troubled
lEE EELIGION OF HOPE. 379
spring from the ground and the dust, may they feel that they are under the
guiding hand of a Father, and that all thinjrs shall work together for good
to them that love God. May they who are borne down by trials hear thee
saying, Though for the present it is not joyous T)ut grievous, yet afterward
it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness. Grant that all Avho are in
affliction may have the blessing of Almighty God resting upon them, and
that they may become more humble, more gentle, richer in faith, richer in
fore-looking hope.
AVe pray that thou wilt sustain those who are in the midst of disappoint-
ments, who are chafed by cares, and who are perplexed by the various things
which surround thcra. May they look to thee for guidance. And by thy
providence wilt thou indicate to them thy will.
We pray that thou wilt make us independent of our circumstances in so
far that we shall feel our manhood to be more than property and more
than standing. May we be grateful for whatever is round about us that sus-
tiiins us. And yet may we look to thee as a better portion than anything
which the world can give.
We pray that thou wilt draw near this morning to those who need guid-
ance in their households— guidance in respect to their children, and guidance
in their domestic relations. O Lord, we pray that thou wilt give the wisdom
of patience and gentleness and self-denial to all who need it. And grant
that they may be faithful guides whom thou hast appointed to take thine
own little ones and bring them up to manhood.
We beseech of thee that thou wilt draw near to those who are separated
from their friends ; whose hearts are burdened by the absence of those who
are near and dear to them. And wilt thou bless those absent ones wherever
they are. Will the Lord especially make the light of his countenance to
shine upon their way, and be present with them always and everywhere,
upon the sea or upon the land, whether they are among strangers or among
friends. Be thou around about them, that thy providence may defend them,
and lead them to all good. And we pray that thou wilt grant that those who,
afar off, to-day, send back yeanlings and longings for the companionship of
those whom they have left behind, may have the blessing of the Son of God ;
and may our hearts and theirs unite in a common hope and faith, and in
common prayers.
Bless the strangers who are in our midst. Grant that they may have thy
guidance in all the la^yf ul errands of life. Save those who are in despair.
Give courage to those who seek to build themselves up in life. Grant deliv-
erance to those who are in despondency. Bless the memory of those who
are to-day calling back to thee with much home-sickness to their friends who
are afar off. Take care, we pray thee, of their households during thei."
absence. And in thine own good time return the wanderers to the center of
their hearts' affections, laden with the experiences of God's great goodness
to them.
We pray, O Lord, that thy truth may this day be glorified in our midst.
May there be some souls thirsting for the water and himgering for the bread
of life. We pray that thou wilt bless <his church and all its members, and all
its schools, and %11 its varied labors for the welfare of men. Grant that thy
Spirit may more and more abound here; as a Gre may it consmne the
dross. May pride and self-seeking and envies and jealousies be unknown in
the midst of this people. More and more may men be willing to labor, not
for their ov.ti honor and glory, but for the glory of God in Jesus Christ, and
lay foundations that others may build upon them and take the credit, while
they have borne the burden and heat of the day. ilay there be that dis-
interestedness in all the members of this church which wixs in their Master
Jesus Christ ; and we pray that we may follow him, not alone in joy, but in
880 TEE BELIGION OF HOPE.
sorrow; not alone in victory, but in bearing the cross. So may their life be
rich in the sight of God while to men they may seem to be living without
joy, without ambition, and without successes. Grant that there may be in
them a holy hope, and a yearning and an aspiration for things nobler and
better than this life can give them.
We pray that thou wilt grant thy blessing to rest upon the churches of
this city, and of the city near to tis, and upon the churches throughout our
land, of every name. May thy Gospel be more and more faithfully and
clearly preached.
"We pray for the schools and colleges and seminaries of learning. We
pray for the sanctification of newspapers, that they may become, in thy
providence, is so many moving institutions carrying light abroad and pour-
ing radiance upon the dark places of the land.
We pray for the poor and the outcast. We pray for those new-made
men who yet sit in darkness, and lack schools and culture. Raise up those
who shall be willing to spend their lives for the sake of those who are des-
pised. We pray that thou wilt turn the hearts of men to each other, and
overcome the conflicts which impend. We pray, O God, that thou wilt be
found in the midst of this people, counseling them to wisdom, and guiding
them to things which shall be for the furtherance of thine own honor and
glory. Let thy kingdom come every where. Let thy will be done, on earth
as it is in heaven. And to thy name shall be the praise, Father, Son and
Spirit, evermore. Amen.
XXT.
Spiritual Fruit-Culture.
INVOCATION,
O Lord, how great is thy glory ! In the stillness which thou hast en-
forced upon us by reason of these mortal bodies, we cannot hear all the glory
and the joy of those that are about thee ; but thou art abiding in eternal
gladness; and they that have reached unto thee are glad with thee; and out
of the divine sphere come, as far as we may take them, sucli things as com-
fort, and leave us hope. But chiefly out of thine own soul, grant unto us,
this morning, Father, the fullness which we need to become thy children in
that estate which we inherit because thou art our Father. Bound to us by
the ties of love, how great are thy desires! and may they be manifested in us
to-day. Wilt thou help us to feel the relationship which we sustain. And
may we draw near by faith and by love to rejoice in thy presence, and in the
largeness of the liberty which we have as children of God. Bless the ser-
vices of the sanctuary — its offices of instruction, of devotion, of meditation.
Bless the day here, and at home, and everywhere. And may thy name
be glorified, and ourselves greatly comforted, through Jesus Christ the
Redeemer. Amen,
n.
SPIRITUAL FEUIT-CULTUEE. .
" The woman said unto him, Sir, give me of this water, that I thirst not,
neither come hither to draw."— John IV. 15.
There is no fairer spot in Palestine than that which was the
scene of this remarkable conversation. It was one of the most
charming of valleys; on either side were beautiful mountainous
hills; the climate was delicious. It is known among all Oriental
travelers as the perfection of beauty. It was early the scene of the
patriarch Jacob's love. Here he purchased possessions. He sunk a
well. It was a rugged well. All the geological formations in that
region are of limestone, filled here and there with caves. The rocks
are everywhere seamed, and are not difficult to be wrought by
hand. And Avhen the well is sunk through that formation — not,
like our own, dug in the crumbling earth, nor curbed with perish-
able wood, or Avith stone or Avith brick — when a Avell is sunk through
such a medium, it stands forever. And that well remains to this
day, answering its purppses as faithfully and as perfectly as it did an
hour after Jacob himself first drew water from it.
Those Oriental wells often were so large that steps were cut
around the interior down to the Avater. At other times, Avhen they
were not so large, the AA'ater Avas draAvn. A curb Avas put around
about the exterior, and over the stones of this curb, or, over a kind
of rude AA'heel (a wheel Avithout motion) a cord Avas put by Avhich to
draAv up the Avater. It Avas upon such a curb — upon these stones
which were laid about the mouth of the well to defend it — that our
Saviour sat. It Avas at the sixth hour of the day, or twelve o'clock ;
and noon in that climate meant heat. No Avonder that he was
tired.
When this very smart, capable Samaritan woman came to draw
water, she came, doubtless, Avith her bucket of skin and Avith a long
cord — for each one brouglit his oAvn utensils to the Avell, as there
were no permanent fixtures for the use of all that came. By his
Sunday Morning, Juno 18, 1872. Lbsson : John IV. a-27. Hymns (Plymouth Collection)
Nos. 180, 6T5, 819.
384 8PIBITUAL FBUIT-CULTUBE.
features, by his dress, and by his general demeanor, she knew at
once that he was a Jew. Therefore, when he asked her for water,
though she seems to have been a yery kind-hearted person, gener-
ous (too generous!) she thought it necessary to assume toward him
the air of a sectarian, and to remind him that he was a Jew, and
that if he drank of the water from her bucket, it was as a favor.
Thereupon arose a conversation. She said, " Why do you ask me,
a Samaritan woman, you being a Jew?" Jesus replied, " If you
knew who I am, matters would be reversed ; you would ask favor
of me instead of my asking it of you ; for I could give you living
Avater which, once drank, would quench thirst forever." Thus he
gave an external symbol with an internal meaning ; but the woman
caught the outside only. And she said, " The well is deep." And
looking him over and seeing that he carried nothing, she said,
"Where is this water ? You have nothing to draw with. "Where
do you propose to get it ? Give it to me, that I come not here any
more, neither draw." If there was any way that could economize
labor, she wanted to know it. "If you have the secret of any out-
gushing spring in this region where I can get water without so
much trouble, tell me where it is. If there is any way in which
you can abbreviate my daily toil, I will thank you for that." The
language is the language of one who would have been glad to have
the bounty, but who did not desire the necessary labor by which
to procure it. " Give me this water, that I thirst not, neither come
hither to draw."
It is not necessary to pursue the narrative beyond this point,
although it is one of intense interest, and one of the most remarka-
ble, because, occurring in the earlier part of our Saviour's career, it
developed to this woman some truths which to others were devel-
oped only toward the very close of his earthly life.
The spirit of this woman has gone through time, and animates
men to this day. The Christ. that is the Master of us all, whatever
term we please to call him by — Providence, or God, or Saviour — we
are soliciting perpetually, as the woman did, saying, "Give me, that
I labor not." It is not, " Teach me how to earn," or, " Teach me
the method of obtaining": it is, "Give me of this water, that I
come not here to draw. It is wearisome, in the broiling noon. My
steps are many. I am tired of labor. I desire the benefit without
the necessity of obtaining it through appropriate toil."
It is on this subject that I wish to speak this morning — namely,
the very prevalent disposition of men to seek religious benefit in
some way which does not imply education and personal endeavor
and responsibility. Men do not expect physical results except by
SPIRITUAL FBUIT-CULTUEE. 385
appropriate effort. I mean civilized men — men of our race and cf
our times. That there are indolent tribes, whose wants are few and
supplied by nature, and who, their wants being so supplied, are
always small and reduced in manhood, I do not deny ; but in our
time, in our nation, we are enterprising, ambitious, desirous of
much, seeking much ; and so far as physical gifts are concerned,
although we know that they are dependent largely upon natural
endowments, yet we know that much of that which is needful for
the procuration of physical results is far beyond our reach or inter-
ference. We are schooled out of the notions of fate, and men of
enterprise, studying the wise adaptation of means to ends, are neces-
sary.
So parents do not pray that God would inspire their boys with a
skillful trade. They put them out in apprenticeship, and pray God
that the boys may attend to their business, and take proper steps to
learn that trade. It is not supposed that the secret which is hid
in the hand will ever be developed by prayer through divine grace."
If a man has skill of hand, it is to be developed by training, and not
by praying. In contrivances, in the skillful adaptation of things,
men believe that we must come to results which they seek through
the application of those causes which, experience has shown, deter-
mine effects.
There are those still who speak of luch. The number decreases
with intelligence and with enterprise. Luck usually goes with the
lazy, if it goes with any, — I mean the faith of it. As. men become in-
telligent they care less and less for luck, so-called. But health is
luck. Good habits are luck. Industry is luck. Frugality is luck.
A sense of the fitness of time, of men and of opportunities — there is
luck in that. "Very little luck is there in waiting for things; in
standing and hoping that something will fall down in your way,
you know not how ; that somebody will lose his wallet, that you will
find it, and that the owner of it will not turn up. There are those
who desire to be fed without earning what they eat. There are
those who desire to be clothed without obtaining the raiment which
they wear. But in intelligent classes men have understood that if
they wish physical things — houses; implements; barns, and har-
vests in them ; shops, and products in them ; storehouses, and busi-
ness in them — these are not to be had simply by reading and long-
ing, nor even by praying for them. Did you ever suppose a man
prayed himself into bank-stock, and into large farms, and into nu-
merous ships. We have given over praying for these things.
"We pray for ourselves, that we may be so guided that we shall
thiuK right, and so inspired that we shall labor right ; but we
386 SPIEITUAL FBTJIT-CULTUBE,
connect with our activity all the things which we desire in
respect to onr physical sphere. Men do not look for intellec-
tual results except by the appropriate application of means to
ends. We never pray for general knowledge. We do not teach our
children to pray for general information. We teach them to use
their eyes, and to employ their ears. We teach them to read. We
teach them to keep company with intelligent persons, and learn,
wherever they go, so to increase their knowledge. This is not in-
consistent with the petition that God will sustain us in the exertion
of our natural faculties. But we have got rid of the supposition that
knowledge comes to us by any divine afflatus. It is the glory of
the common school, the academy and the college, among a self-
governing people, that they make us feel that if we want any-
thing intellectual, we must get it by the adaptation of means to
ends. Education, training, development, cannot be attained with-
out effort. If knowledge is to be general, and still more if it is to
be special, it must be striven for. If a man is going to have a suc-
cessful law practice, he must press himself into it. Men labor for
these things, and pray in connection with them. Intelligent prayer
does not remove, nor lighten, in the slightest degree, the sense of
personal responsibility, and the conviction that appropriate causes
will develop the desired result.
So, no man prays for books. E"o man prays for newspapers.
No man prays that he may have the benefit of schools and colleges
without going through them. No man prays for the results of pro-
fessional skill Avithout the drill which leads to them.
There is one apparent exception to this universal rule. It is
supposed by many that geniuses are separate and apart from men
ordinarily; and that wliile the common people, without genius, are
obliged to work for what they have, men who have genius come to
success without labor. We are not wrong in supposing that there
is such a thing as genius. Genius. is only another word for a more
highly organized condition of the brain. When men's brains are.
organized at the lowest state, they are merely susceptible of having
an impression made upon them. In the intermediate state, the
brain has sufficient vitality to act under the effect of stimulus. In
a still more highly organized state, it has the power to act, not as
in the stage below, by the application of stimulus, but by self-
stimulation. It is so strong that it acts of its own self Therefore
its action is called "automatic." What we call "genius," belongs
to one whose organization is so fine and large that it acts by its
own stimulus ; and Avhere this is the case in the whole brain., it is
universal genius. If it is on the art side alone, we have an art-
SPIMITUAL FBUIT-CULTUEE. 387
genius. He is a genius in but one directioi^ A man is a genius in
the direction in whicli his faculties are highly organized..
Now, it is certainly true that men who are organized highly
work more easily and more fruitfully than others ; but it is not
true that they do not have to work much. It is not true that men
ever have results^ even if they are men of genius, for which they do
not labor. That is indispensable. There is no man that lives who
feeds on miracles. All men are under the government of God,
which is a government of cause and effect, whether it be easier or
harder.
The eagle gets over the ground a great deal faster and easier
than the ant ; but the ant gets over the ground. And the eagle,
although he gets over more ground in a second than the ant does
in an hour, does it by Avork of wing, employing muscular power,
just as the ant does.
So the highest natures, although they get over the ground much
faster than the lower and more vulgar natures, do it in the same
way. Their power is greater, but it is under the same laws. And
a man who is never so much a genius is not released from the re-
sponsibility of study, of practice, of education, and of applying
means to ends.
If a man is near-sighted, and feeble-sighted at that, and reads
with extreme difficulty, spelling every word as he goes along, he
toils a great deal more than I do, who, looking at the page, take in
at one glance the whole verse, though I take it in by the same
method that he does. When you analyze it and trace it to its
elements, it is the same act, performed under the same law, by the
same operation. The only difference is in the rapidity — and that
comes by practice.
Men who have intuition instantly see into things ; but the
seeing is by the same process, and in accordance with the same rule,
as it is in the case of those who go through slow and delayed and
grudging steps. Because a man is a genius, it does not follow that
he is one to whom everything is revealed — to whom thoughts
come, and in whom emotions arise — without any preparation or re-
sponsibility, lie may be a genius in poetry ; but the most eminent
poets have been the hardest students since the world began. He
may be a genius in military affairs; but no man ever trained him-
self more assiduously in military affah's than Ccesar, or Napoleon,
or Frederick, or any other of the greatest generals. It is work that
furnishes the fulcrum by which genius labors.
In general, men believe that if ordinary people are to be intelli-
gent they must study. If they are to have skill in any direction,
388 SPIBITUA L FB UIT- C ULTUEE.
they must practice for it. This is specially true as yon go up. If
you take tlje higher range of mental experience, no man is supposed
to be a good metaphysician by nature. Men come to skill in meta-
physics— not by nature, but by practice ; by endeavor. The higher
forms of intellection are by special endeavor. No matter how much
musical endowment persons may have, they do not feel that they
are musicians till they have had long and patient drill. The night-
ingale asks for no master, and sings without notes, and sings to the
night, and sings to the stars, and sings to itself; but it sings only
what the nightingale thinks and feels. Much as we talk of the
sweetness of the nightingale's music, what is there in ten thousand
nightingales, singing through ten thousand moonlit nights, out of
the thickets, that can compare for one single moment with a
symphony of Mozart or Beethoven or Haydn ? There is thought,
there is moral feeling, there is affection, there is hope, joy, aspira-
tion, grief, wailing, there is the whole range of life, in a true musi-
cian's work; but in the singing of birds there are a few notes
which mean what you make them mean, but in and of themselves
are they nothing. He that is called of God to be a musician, is sim-
ply called to prepare himself to be a musician. His knowledge
comes by study and training.
Some persons are born more graceful than others ; but no man
becomes entirely graceful without culture. Training in manners,
in postures, in athletic exercises — especially those which are de-
signed to give grace and beauty, and personal accomplishment or
embellishment ; all that relates to the esthetic part of the mind of
man — these things produce their fruit. All men, seeing what they
desire, seek it by the application of ascertained' causes which pro-
duce such and such effects.
It is only when we come to the next higher range of faculties —
to the moral sentiments — that men begin to act on an entirely
different scheme. If it is drill of body; if it is common sense; it
it is the application of thought-power and will to the commercial
affairs of life and mechanical operations; if it is anything which
relates to the school; if it is the cultivation of thought and taste;
if it is the achievement of results clear up to the sphere of moral
sense and religious feeling — the law is without variableness oi
shadow of turning. We have that which we seek, and seek by
proper methods. Though mai are taught, and justly, to pray for
the things which they earn, and which they gain by studious en-
deavor, yet every man feels that there is such a relation between
cause and effect that it is absurd lo ask for anything for which he
does not labor.
SPIEITUAL FB UIT- C ULTUBE. 389
I ask God to bless the season; but it never prevents me from
studying the nature of plants, and discovering their laws, and
bringing to bear my knowledge of them in their cultivation, treat-
ing one according to its nature, and another according to its nature,
and using my experience in the application of causes to the produc-
tion of effects. In business, the great bulk of men's lives is spent
in gaining results by the application of means to ends, according to
the methods which experience has taught us to be best.
But when we come into the realm of religion, there is the im-
pression that God works there by the efficiency of the Holy Ghost,
and that there is in that particular realm such an irresistible 'sweep
of the divine Spirit, that the peculiar and distinguishing qualities
of Christian experience fall down from heaven upon us of their own
accord, as the dewdrops fall upon the flowers — that they are put
upon us by the Spirit as clean raiment is put upon the child by the
mother. Men have the impression that religion is something so
different from other exercises that there is a different order and a
different law that govern it. There is a lingering feeling that while
we must work for worldly ends, we must wait for spiritual ends ;
that while we must apply causes for the procuring of results which
relate to the intellect or the bodily or the social sphere, for the higher
spiritual elements we must pray.
Now, we must pray for everything that it is proper for us to
have. AVe must pray for the highest things, and for the lowest.
But I affirm that there is no more reason that we should pray for
morality than for corn. There is no more reason that we should
pray for meekness than for flowers. There is no more reason that
we should pray for the gift of the Holy Ghost in changing our
hearts than in changing the condition of our bodies, if we are sick,
to a state of health. It is proper to pray in either case, because we
are working in a double sphere of activity — the physical and the
spiritual. Whether we are working for the body, for the intellect,
for the social life, or for the life of the soul, we co-operate with the
divine mind ; and there is a reason for supplication in one part of
the mind as much as in another. There is no more occasion for
praying in the realm of moral thought than in the realm of the in-
tellect ; no more in the realm of tl\e highest faculties than in the
reahn of the lowest. There is just the same reason for studying and
laboring for the things which pertain to the kingdom of righteous-
ness that there is for laboring for the things which pertain to the
kingdoms of this world.
To a large extent this impression springs from the idea that re-
ligion is something other than the action of a man's own nature ;
390 8PIBITUAL FBUIT-CVLTUBK
that it is in such a sense a divine creation that it cannot be said to
pi"oceed from tlie normal action of the faculties of the human soul.
There have been those who sujjposed that a new set of faculties was
created upon conversion. There are those who suppose that the
action of every pjirt of a man's mind is so inherently wrong that
nothing which a man can think or feel or do can be properly called
religion. There are still others who believe that there descends
from God a mystic grace, an intangible and inexplicable element ;
and that it is the descending of this upon the soul that constitutes
its religiousness.
Eeligiousness is simply right-mindedness toward God and toward
man. He that carries all the faculties of his being reverently, lov-
ingly and obediently, according to the divine law, is religious. To
be religious is to act in accordance with the laws of the mind from
the highest to the lowest of its endowments. Although in the re-
ligious life there are some actions and experiences which are higher
than others, yet all right actions are religious. You have not two
minds, one to think about the world with, and the other to think
about God with. You have not two hearts, one of which is used
for religion, and the other of which is used for natural purposes.
That mind which you have according to the requisition of God is
always in harmony with that nature which he has given to us.
People have had this impression — that religious results come,
not by education, and not by specialized causes for certain effects,
but by some mysterious power which results from the efficiency of
the Holy Ghost. Now, such is my behef in the reality and existence
and agency of the divine Spirit, that I think I should have no hope
and no faith as a minister and as a laborer for the enfranchisement of
mankind, if it were not that I believed there was an all-prevalent,
vitalizing, divine Spirit. I should as soon attempt to raise flowers
if there were no atmosphere, or produce fruits if there were neither
light nor heat, as I should attempt to regenerate men if I did not
believe there was a Holy Ghost. I have faith in the divine Spirit
spread abroad over the whole human family, which is really the
cause of life in the higher directions; and it is this faith that gives
me hope and courage in all labor.
Nevertheless, this divine influence is not irresistible in such a
sense as to relieve men from the responsibility of developing every
one of the spiritual elements. The Spirit of God does not sweep
over the mind and cleanse it from everything that is wrong, and in-
stitute in it everything that is right, and then maintain it in its
regenerated state by divine efficiency. God wakes up the soul, aud
then says to it, " Work out your own salvation with fear and trem-
SPIRITUAL FBUIT-CULTUEE. 391
bling ; for it is God that worketli iu you to will and to do of his
good pleasure." That is the ground on which we work. The in-
spiration of the divine mind gives us possession of our own facul-
ties, and we are to labor with them, applying the proper causes for
the attainment of given results, as much in religious as in secular
things.
In the light of this explanation, I remark, first, that men wish
to be converted so that the whole field shall be cleared, and so that
they will have nothing to do but to go right forward in the new
life. They believe, as it were, that if God will only touch the rock,
and let the springs of sanctified affection gush out, then, just as
soon as they have found their channel, their life will be like the
running of a brook out of the mountains and through its channel,
down to its destination, unchecked and undisturbed. They think
that if they are once converted, they are converted for all time. It
used to be taught that, once a deacon, always a deacon ; once an
elder, always an elder ; once a minister, always a minister ; and, ac-
cording to this general scheme, once converted, always converted.
And so men feel that when God takes hold of a man's heart,
when the man is regenerated, when by the power of the Holy
Ghost he is translated from the kingdom of Satan and darkness
into the kingdom of light and of God's dear Son, it is a work that is
completed. I say it is not a completed work.
Here is a man who has been lying around, a lazy vagabond, suck-
ins: his substance from those to whom he is related, and he is taken
to the great West, put upon a hundred and sixty acres of
ground, and told to work out his own living. He has his ground ;
he owns it; he is no longer one of the lazzaroni ; and he goes to
work on his farm. It is not converted yet. It has on it thorns
and briers and weeds, and it brings him in nothing, at first ; but
he goes to work, and by his industry and application begins to de-
velop its resources. He is an honest yeoman, he is the owner of
property, and he has been converted from a street-beggar into a man
of means and respectability ; hut his own conversion is not com-
plete, any more than the conversion of his farm is complete, which
he has begun to cultivate, but Avhich needs much tilling to bring it
to a state of perfection. When a man is converted, he has a. new
start — that is all. The work of his conversion is not carried
through.
Now, no man was ever taken from darkness to light so that he
saw clear through to the kingdom of glory at one glance. When
a man is taken out of the gall of bitterness and the bonds of in-
iquity, the augel comes to him as he did to Peter, knocks off his
392 8P1BITUAL FBUIT-CULTUBE.
chains, opens the door, and says, "Else up, and go out." And
when he has risen up and gone out, he has to find his own way to
his friends, and has to get his hviug as best he can.
In regard to rehgious things, men are under precisely the same
necessity of drill and education, and of the application of means
to ends, that they are in any other sphere of life. If a man, there-
fore, expects that there is any labor-saving conyersiou, he is greatly
mistaken.
" But," it is asked, " when Paul was converted, was not his
conversion instantaneous ?" Yes, his conversion was instantaneous
— only in that sense, however, in which the conversion of any other
man is instantaneous. His will was changed at a defiuita point of
time ; and that is so in the case of nearly everybody who is con-
verted. " Was he not made an apostle almost in the twinkling of
an eye ?" No. He was struck, and dumfounded, and blinded, and
confused, and was sent to Damascus ; and he lay crying and pray-
ing until Ananias was sent to him to tell him what the experience
which he was going through was for ; and then he went into an
experimental apostleship. He began as a little child. There is
unquestionable evidence that he came more and more to the dis-
closure of himself as God's grace was manifested in him. He was
no exception to the universal law.
If men who want to be Christians, instead of waitiug for some
great shock to come upon them, would begin to be .Christian at
once, how much better it would be ! We will suppose that a maiT
is a spendthrift, who has got money without much scruple, and
let it go with still less. After a time, hearing a discourse on the
folly of dishonesty and spendthriftness and the wisdom of honesty
and frugality, he says, " If it should please God to make me an up-
right, safe, snug, frugal man, I believe I would reform." What
would you say to such a man ? I would say to him, " Do not stand
waiting till God makes you a man of frugality and integrity. You
can make yourself one if you try.
There stands a dishonest man, a thief, (if in our day such a
man be considered dishonest) and at last some superstitious influ-
ence comes over him, and he wants to be an honest man ; and he
says, " Oh, that God's grace would only make me an honest man !"
The apostle says to him, " Let him that stole steal no more." That
is the way to get out of thiefdom into honestdom.
A worldly, selfish, proud man, a man who is anything but true
and right, says, " I think that if God would convert me I would be-
gin to live a Christian life." Well, why do you not begiu to live
such a life now ? Do you suppose a boy is ever suddenly converted
8PIBITUAL FB UIT- C ULTUBE. 393
into a carpenter ? He is apprenticed to a carpenter, and after he
has served a certain term, he is a carpenter himself. Do you sup-
pose a man is ever converted into a lawyer at once ? At first he is
a scrivener ; and by and by, when, by study and practice, he be-
comes acquainted with the principles of the law and the affairs of
the profession in which he is employed, he deserves to be called a
lawyer. Do not wait, therefore, for the fruits of a Christian life
before you begin to live like a Christian. Begin instantly. You
have capital enough to begin on.
No man should wait for conversion. That is conversion wh'
a man, having been wrong, wants to be right, and begins to be
right. That is as much as conversion amounts to anywhere. No
man, being converted, is anything else than a sinner trying to be-
come better. When persons are brought into the church as con-
verted persons, do you suppose we think they are perfect, or any-
thing like it? Do you suppose in the sight of God they are other
than poor, weak creatures who, having gone astray, are feebly striv-
ing to get into the right path ? They are scholars. They are
pupils. They are learners. " Follow me," said Christ, '■' and learn
of me." They are Christ's disciples, going to school, where they
can be taught and helped to make attainment in the Christian
course. They are like pupils who undertake to learn arithmetic,
or grammar, or history, or any other branch of instruction, and go
where they can obtain the needed assistance. The law which gov-
erns men in the attempt to achieve results in a Christian life is not
different from the law which governs them in the attempt to
achieve results in general intelligence. If your conscience is to be
made a spiritual conscience, it is to be made so in accordance with
the same analogies by which you are made wise in the application
of business in any direction. I proclaim the universal law of edu-
cation and development which runs through the whole scale of the
faculties, on the religious side of man as much as on the secular
side.
Men often hope, after they are converted and have a name to live
for, that in many respects they are better. But they tend to ask
God to wean them from their sins and faults, so that they need not
have the trouble of doing it themselves.
Here are men who are addicted to many sins of the flesh. Men's
fleshly sins come largely with their organization. Men who are
built long, lean, bloodless, and never know what temptation is, can
have very little pity upon men who are short, and chunky, and very
sanguineous, and have immense basilar appetites. Two such men
cannot understand each other. A man who is not organized so as
394 SPIRITUAL FEUIT-CULTUBE.
to be naturally greedy cannot understand how that man can make
such'a pig of himself. He never felt like a pig. And the man who
has these fleshly appetites says, " I may be a glutton, and I may drink
to excess, but I never was mean enough to pinch a penny till I
made it squeal, as that man does. I am a generous man." Every
man is conscious of his own temptations to sin, and that he
is not the victim of this and that besetting sin. Every man knows
that he cannot be guilty of two opposite sins at the same time. A
man cannot be a spendthrift and a miser during the same instant.
A man does not love fleshly enjoyments at the same time that he
is only addicted to the vice of selfishness.
But when men find themselves beset by these appetites they
pray against them. Sometimes they set a day apart in which to
pray. I do not ridicule prayer. Prayer is right. And if a man
eats too much, I think he does a very good thing to pray to God ;
but his praying will not benefit him if he does not do anything
else. It is perfectly right for a man to ask God to help him if he
drinks too much ; but he does not do enough if he only prays.
What would a man do if he was sick in his body? What
would a man do if he had the dropsy on him, or a fever beating in
him ? He would pray God to bless him ; but he would do more
than that : he would send for the doctor, and take medicine, or
take the necessary steps to get well.
If a man is organized so that he is subject to the lusts of ^lie
flesh, it is not enough for him to sit down and pray God to help
him. You must deal with yourself as one having a moral disease,
and apply the proper remedies. Do you suppose that if a man
gorges himself with flesh meats, and is feverish, he can be relieved
by simply praying? Is there any use in a man's praying for an-
gelic influences when he is feeding himself with hell-fire all the
time ?
Avoid those things which over-stimulate. Avoid the places
where you fall easily. Avoid all things which stand connected
with your ruin or danger. If a man's soil is swampy, and breeds
malaria every year, and needs draining, does he pray that God will
drain it? No, nothing of the sort. And God Avould not drain it
if he did. He does not put a premium on laziness for anybody's
sake.
Men have sins of temperament — anger or insensibility ; dullness
or quickness ; all manner of antithetical states. Some men think
they must be very wicked because they are so sensitive and so sub-
ject to anger. Anger is a bad thing where one has too much of it,
as fear is; and there are sins of excessive sensibility and of auger
SFIJRITUAL FBUIT-CULTUBE. 395
as growing out of it. On the other hand, there are sins of excessive
insensibility. There are men who never feel, of their own accord,
and cannot be made to feel; There are some men whose nerves lie
along near the surface of the skin, and there are those whose nerves
are buried deep beneath the skin ; and the former are quick and
sensitive, while the latter are slow and dull; and their temptations
and sins are on different sides of their natures. These tempera-
mental sins, though they are not to be dealt with without prayer,
and the influence of the Divine Spirit to urge us to something
higher, are to be overcome by training and by education. Pray
that God Avill restrain your wrong tendencies ; but take care, when
you pray, that you help yourself. Remember that the responsibility
is on you.
If I have bought a pair of fiery horses, and I sit behind them to
make my experimental ride, I do not think it unmanly to commit
my soul to God and ask him to protect me; but I do not throw
the reins down on the dashboard and trust to Providence alone. I
pray, to be sure; but I Avatch my horses all the time. I drive with
all the care that is possible ; driving for everybody on the road, as
every good driver does, as well as for myself— for that stupid boy
who has turned out the wrong way, and for that drunken man who
is taking both sides of the road, and so on.
When a man is going down into life, and he knows what his
weakness is, whether it be pride, or selfishness, or auger, or any
other of these besetting sins, he should, in prayer, ask for protec-
tion ; but prayer will not secure that blessing to him except through
his own exertions. He must be waked up to will and to do of God's
good pleasure. So, take care of the general results, praying for the
curing of this fault and that fault while you labor for that wliicli
you seek in prayer.
How absurd it is to see men going on and enjoying themselves
in sin as long as they are prosperous, and then beginning to pray
when they are whelmed in trouble ! Down into the family of a
man who has never known sorrow, swoops an angel, and takes a
little child. This man, full of feeling as a well is of water, is all
broken down, and he pours out a torrent of grief. You cannot
touch him without causing him to gush tears. He says, "I have
been a great sinner, and God has afflicted me; and I want to live a
better life, and I mean to be a different man." Oh, that this man
could know that, if this flood of feeling could be turned on the mill-
wheel of right endeavor, it would clear him ! But it is only a mo-
mentary swell ; and in the course of a fortnight or a montli, he is
about as he was before. In general, if left to chance, that is about
396 8FIBITUAL FBUIT-CULTUEE.
what men do. That is about the way with men when they leave
things to the Spirit of God.
Men pray for full Christian grace in the spirit in which the
woman of Samaria, impelled by the desire for indulgence, said,
" Give me that water, so that I shall not need to come here to
draw." " Deliver me from the labor and pains of developing in
myself that which I want," many would say.
No child, I suppose, when she is going to follow the notes,
and sees "^" and "pp,'' sv'er prays, "Now, Lord, make me
play according to those directions, 'piano' and 'pianissimo,'" and
then sits motionless in front of the instrument. What does she do ?
She not only prays, (if she does pray,) for God's help, but she tries to
follow the directions herself.
Persons pray that they may be humble. Here is a big strong
man who in the morning prays that he may be humble through the
day; and in order to make it more effectual, while kneeling
he puts his head clear down in his chair ; and in order to make
it still more effectual he talks in an official voice. When
his prayer is finished, he gets up, and straightens himself, and
goes to his store, and storms about his business. He is not going
to see things go to rack and ruin because nobody feels responsi-
ble. And the man quite forgets his prayer. He leaves that
for God to take care of. When he comes home at night he
has some mournful feelings about the way in which he has
conducted himself through the day. And the next morning he
prays for humility again. The experience of the previous day is
repeated. At night his feelings are mellowed down once more (for
men almost always have the grace of humility when they are
sleepy !) ; and so ho gets through another night.
Now, the fault did not lie in the fact that the man prayed God
to make him humble. The fault lay in this: that he thought the
prayer relieved him from the responsibility of training himself —
from the necessity of the yoke and the harness. Men pray for meek-
ness; and yet when they are brought into circumstances which call
for the exercise of meekness they forget their prayer.
A man is well-womaned, and he prays God to give him meek-
ness. The companion that it has pleased God to yoke him with
faults him about something in which he knows he is right, and is
perfectly sure she is wrong ; and there occurs one of those scenes
which may be called the chromatic periods of life. The prnyer in
which he prayed for meekness has hardly dried up on his lip before
he flies into a temper. He has just asked God to give him meek-
ness, and God sends him an opportunity to learn to be meek; and
when he sees the lesson he will not read it nor practice it.
SPIBITUAL FBVIT-OULTUBE. 307
A man prays that ho may have a heart to love God and his
fellow-men ; and when he opens the door to go ont, a miserable,
poverty-stricken boy stands on the steps, and asks him to help him ;
and he says, "Go away, you brat," and uses some otlier words which
are not necessary for eloquence, and drives the boy away. Where is
his prayer ?
You pray for one and another blessing, and God sends his angels
to answer your prayer, and they come in queer guises, and you do
not recognize them, so you reject the blessing. You pray for
strength and there is the anvil, and there is the hammer to beat out
that strength with ; but you do not like labor. You prefer to get
strength; by praying for it. You pray for gentleness; and when you
are provoked, instead of being gentle, you are resentful. The answer
to yom- prayer came in a way in which you did not want it to come.
So you are not benefited by it. You are like the woman who said,
" Draw for me. Get for me this living water, so that I shall not
have to come here to draw."
Nobody wants to draw. Everybody wants God to draw for
him. And all through our Christian experience we are perpetually
going wrong, not in the sense of our dependence on God, not in
the necessity of divine influence and help, but in the truth that
there is nothing that we attain by the Divine Spirit which we do
not attain by drill, by education, by self-help. It is through these
that the Divine Spirit stimulates and develops in us those things
which we need and pray for.
Men say, "Will not such teachings lower a man's sense of his
dependence upon the Holy Spirit ? Are you not encouraging a
kind of vain reliance upon an arm of flesh ? Are yoii not giving
men to suppose that they work out unaided all that they need ?"
No, I am not. It is not necessary for men to understand any such
thing. I teach you that you are to work out your own salvation,
(jrod working in you. I teach you that you are the disciples of
Him who was made perfect, perfecting himself through sufi'ering,
as your Captain. I teach you that God's laws under whieli you
live are uniform — the same in respect to the lower, the middle
and the higher faculties of your life. I teach you that way which
has been proved and tried by all who have made eminent attain-
ment in Christian experience. I teach yoii that which ought to
be simple as A, B, C, to you. Otherwise, you waste your life in
darkness. I teach you that which will make your Christian life
easier, and enable you to go on from strength to strengtli, every
one of you, till you shall stand in Zion and before God.
' Look not less to God ; but let not lookinfjr to God be a substi-
398 SPIEITUAL FBUIT-CULTUBE.
tute for your drill and enterprise ; and remember that what you
sow you shall also rcaj). Indolence, pride, arrogance, assumption,
presumption, — if you sow these, you shall reap results correspond-
ing to them. If, on the other hand, you sow diligence, intelligence,
perseverence, singleness of heart, faith, tru-^t, hope, you shall reap
the fruit of righteousness.
PRAYER BEFORE THE SERMOK
We are emboldened to draw near to thee, our Father, with supplicating
thought, from all the memory of thy goodness— especially from the memory
of thy goodness to us. Ever since we were born, thy ways have been ways
of mercy. From thy providence we have derived great bounty. Thy kind-
ness has attended our footsteps. Our chastisements have been fewer than
we deserved. Out of thy love have com e to us great blessi.ags. We look back
to behold how much we have been builded by the gifts of thy hand. Thou
hast given us strength by making it needful to us. Thou hast given us
patience by laying uijon us troubles that required it. Thou hast taught us
by the things which we lacked. Thou hast inspired us With a holy ardor and
zeal.
We rejoice in all that thou hast done by thine hand, working through
time, and the means thereof. We rejoice that thou hast also ministered of
thine own self unto us. We rejoice that thou hast imparted thy Spirit to
dwell in us, and to stir up within us every spring and fountain of things
right and good. We rejoice that thou hast ministered to us from out of the
invisible sphere — though not without our prayer and watching and activity,
and crowning our labor more abundantly than we asked or thought.
We rejoice in believing that thou art administering, not slenderly, not
penuriously, giving us as little as thou canst. We rejoice in believing that
thou art one that abounds in mercy. Overflowing is thine heart evermore.
We are not served by thee as we serve each other. There is no selfishness in
thy nature. Thou takest thy measure of mercy, not from our want even,
but from the greatness of thine own heart. So that thou art evermore doing
exceeding abundantly more than we ask or think — yea, more than we know.
For thy mercies are greater than now we discern. Hereafter we shall look
back to see how much broader were thy ways for us than we thought. When
we seek to walk in a narrow path, behold how it stretches invisibly out on
either side ! We pluck but few ckisters, though thousands wait for us. We
rejoice in the bounty of such a God. We worship such a nature. We mag-
nify the grandeur of such a goodness, endless, full of vicissitudes, and yet
adapting itself to our want all the way through life, and preparing us for an
entrance into that higher life where thou wilt disclose thyself yet more
radiantly.
We rejoice, O Lord, that we may believe that out of this sphere, and that
out of its experience thou art ministering for us a preparation for that
nobler and higher life to which we are aspiring. We commit ourselves still
to thy guidance. But we would not rely upon thee inertly. We desire to be
stirred up. We desire to wait with thee, and walk with thee, and work
together with thee.
Grant unto us, we beseech of thee, the influence of thy Spirit, that shaU
SPIIilTirAL FRVIT'CULTUEE. 899
stir up all the springs of hope in us, that shall minister to us things which are
higher than the senses. We pray that we may love and labor in a sphere of
divine activities, so that we shall be sure of success.
And now we commend to thee all those who are in thy presence — and
each one severally. Discern the hearts. Behold each one's need ; and grant
thy blessing to each one according to his necessity, and not according to his
wisdom in asking. There are those who struggle with poverty. There are
those who are in the midst of care, and are harassed day by day. There
are those who are burdened— heavily laden. Bring all of them within the
sphere of thy mercies. May they receive the loving nature of God. There
are those who are in deep affliction. There are those upon whom the waves
have rolled, overwhelming them. There are some who have sunk while
attempting to walk across the stormy sea to Jesus. O Lord, we pray that
thou wilt console those whom no earthly nature can comfort. Grant the
comfort of thine own royal nature to them. May those who sink in tribula-
tion be biwyed up as upon the ocean-heart of God. We pray that they may be
able to trust in thee, not alone when they lose sight of the way in which they
lack comfort, but above all when it is night, and they see no way, and have
no refuge but God. And we pray that thou wilt grant that out of afflictions
and bereavements and trials of eveiy kind may come forth the pure gold of
a richer Christian experience. We pray that the dross of tribulation may be
consumed, and that faith may abide, and that the strength of heart may
grow, and that as the; outward man perishes day by day, the inward man
may be renewed. And so may we be strong in holy thoughts— stronger in a
true and disinterested kindness — stronger in the faith of God's goodness;
stronger in the hope of immoi-tality ; stronger in that patience which awaits
every trial, and takes every needful and inevitable cup, however bitter;
stronger in the belief that death itself is the opening of the gate of heaven.
Grant that so by all our knowledge of God, by all that comes upon us
from without or from within, we may lind ourselves borne by the hand of
our Teacher toward those nobler virtues of a Christian manhood which thou
hast ordained for us.
We pray that thou wilt bless those who stand in the family relation, to
whom thou hast committed thy little ones, and who are rearing them in
affection, not for their own prosperity in this world only, but rather for God
and for immortjility. Grant that parents may never let go the thought of
their ownership in their children. In all their aberrations, in all their inex-
perience, in all their sufferings, in all their sickness, may they still feel that
they are God's little ones, and that he loves them more than the parent can,
and is caring for them, and will care for them.
We commit to thine holy care all those who are young; all those who are
emerging from control into self-control ; all those who are taking their first
steps upon the plane of manhood. We pray that they may be fortified.
May their hearts maintain the simplicity of virtue. May they still maintain
faith in God, and good will toward men, and walk uprightly and surely, and
aspire, not for the things of this world alone, but for that more glorious
inheritance which awaits them in the kingdom of their Father.
We pray that thou wilt bless our Sabbath Schools and our Bible Classes,
and all that are taught therein, and all who teach them. We pray that the
blessing of God which hath been with us so far in the year may still company
with us.
Bless all who have been gathered by the faithfulness of thy servants out
of the world and from their evil hal)its. Confirm them in good, and make
it easier for them to overcome the temptations of the dt-vil.
We pray that thou wilt grant thy blessing upou those who shall go forth
400 SFIBIl UAL FE UIT-CULTUEE.
ioto the streets, and into jails, and hospitals, and prisons, and every where,
that they may find the lost and save them. May they be led by thy divinest
Spirit. May they have the spirit of the gospel in themselves, and be able to
impart it to others.
We pray, O Lord, that all thy churches may shine as lights in the midst
of this great city. May all thy servants be strengthened to declare the coun-
sels of God among men. We pray for the spread of religion, pure and unde-
flled. We pray that thou wilt bring together more and more perfectly all
classes of men. Wilt thou bless all conditions of life.
We pray for intelligence and morality and piety. We pray for purity
and truth and justice.
We beseech of thee that thy kingdom may come, not in our land alone,
but in all nations. Hasten that day when wars shall no longer break out
between nations. May peace prevail.
And we beseech of thee that thou wilt guide the counsels of those who
are appointed to take charge of the things which pertain to the national
welfare. Remember the President of these United States, and all those who
are in authority with him. Remember legislators and magistrates. May
this great nation be blessed in those who are set to rule over it.
Remember those who govern in all nations. May they govern with mod-
eration, and in the fear of God, and 'for the welfare of this people.
And may that day hasten when there shall be no more ignorance and
superstition, but when knowledge and godliness shall rule in all the earth.
And to thy name shall be the praise. Father, Son and Spirit. Amen.
PEAYER AFTER THE SERMON.
Our Father, we pray that thou wilt bless the word of instruction, and
grant that every day we may be stimulated to a wiser life, and to better
attainments. May we not call upon thee to do our work, but wilt thou help
us by stirring us up mightily to do thy work. Work in us to will and to do.
Grant, when we desire, that we may feel that thou art moving upon our
desires. And so may we rouse ourselves up to more faithfulness, and more
continuity, and greater and wiser effort.
We pray that thou wilt bless the services of the morning. Go with us to
our several homes. May this be a day of blossoming with joy to all. May
we love one another more because it is the Lord's day, and be more and
more grateful because of it. May we think of all the favors of the week.
While we remember our sins and transgressions, and repent and mourn
over them, grant that higher than these may be the flame of gratitude
and holy trust. Grant that we may have hope in the future. May we not
live as children of God, like slaves ; may we walk as those who are heirs of
heaven, worthy of our vocation. And may men see that there is nobility in
us and upon us, not of outward things but of our interior nature. May we
have nobler thoughts, and take pride in that which is good. May we have a
nobler conception of things that are godlike. And so may we overcome our
easily besetting sins, and reach that line where there is no sin, but joy
forever.
And to thy name, Father, Son and Spirit, shall be the praise. Amen.
XXII.
The Aims and Methods of Christian
Life.
AIMS AND METHODS OF ClffilSTIAN
LIFE.
" Repent ye, therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted
out, when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord;
and he shall send Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto you." —
Acts III. 19, 20.
It is impossible for us to stand connected with religions truth
just as they did to whom the Gospel was first made known. We are
not of the Jews. We have no system to escape from such as controlled
them. We have no such doubts respecting Jesus Christ as they
had. We cannot, as they did, receive the Gospel as "tidings " or
" news" in any sense. It is not only not novel, but it is one of the
most familiar things possible, to our minds. The very things which
in that early day held their minds in suspense, and led to discus-
sion, are things which are as familiar to us as the alphabet. Xor
can we possibly be called to acknowledge the Lord Jesus Christ in
such a way as they were. For, it does not mean now what it meant
then, to say that we believe he was the Son of God. It involved
at that time such a breadth of commitment ; it implied such a re-
cession from current beliefs and courses, as cannot possibly occur
again.
And yet, men are continually called to come to Christ. One of
the most common expressions, and one which is perhaps as empty
and useless as almost any other, is that familiar saying, " Come
to Christ." Not that there is not a great mystery, a transcendent
truth, wrapped up in it; but it is a truth which very seldom shines
out. It has almost become language of cant. There are those avIio
listen in a pei'plexed way, and say, "Yes, I suppose I ought to come
to Christ ; but what do you mean by coming to Christ ? I cannot
go anywhere. I cannot see anybody. What can I do ?" They are
puzzled ; and not the less because they are told to lay doivn the
Sirs-DAY Evening, April 21. 1872. IiEsao.v : Eph. IV. 1—16. IlYMKS (Plymouth CoUoctlon),
Nos. 31, 818, 1257
40-1 AIMS AND METHODS OF CEBI8TIAN LIFE.
iLieapons of their rehellion. They have no weapons that they know
anything about; and they do not know how to lay any weapons
down. Figures, metaphors, and illustrations, which were very
powerful when they were new, by being used as if they were normal,
literal, and didactic truths, have come to perplex and puzzle men.
Instead of helping, they hinder them.
I propose, if I can, this evening, to lay before you some idea of
what I mean, and what I understand the Scriptures to mean, by the
beginning of a Christian life ; what the aim of it is, and what are
its methods; and to do it in such a way as to make it practicable
for all who desire and choose to live Christianly.
I remark, then, that while the Master sometimes, and after him
the disciples often, preached the doctrine of repentance or conver-
sion (these were substantially the same), they taught that it was
only the outlying preparation for that which was to be the real
thing. The annunciation of the truth came in this manner : " Pre-
pare ye the way of the Lord." Every man becomes a Christian for
himself; and the preparation consists in conversion or repentance.
To stop all known courses of evil is repentance. To cease what
you know to be wrong is conversion. It is the preparation for that
which is the essential thing. ■ Whatever the wrong or evil may be —
repent, turn away from it, that you may prepare yourself for the
Lord Jesus Christ.
What is coming to Christ, then ? What is the acceptance of
Christ ? It is not possible for us to come to Christ as they did who
could see him in the bodily form. We can come to him by our
thought, imagining him ; and by and by the image which we get
will, in a persistent Christian life, round itself out into great expe-
rience and great power ; but in the beginnings of coming to Christ,
all that any one can do is to undertake to have in himself the spirit,
the controlling disposition of Christ. What those dispositions are
which the Saviour expects us to have, is not left for one single mo-
ment in doubt. If you will turn to the twenty-second chapter of
Matthew, and read the twenty-fifth verse, and on, you will see what
they are :
" Master, which ia the great commandment in the law ? Jesus said unto
him, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy
soul, and with all thy mind. This is the first and great commandment. And
the second is like unto it : thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. On these
two commandments hang all the law and the prophets."
A disposition of love to God and of love to man, a disposition
of filial love and of benevolent love — that is what is required. The
declaration of Christ is what? That all the outvvorkings of Scrip-
ture— its services, its symbols, its ordinances, its commands, the
AIMS AND METHODS OF CHBISTIAN LIFE. 405
things which it forbids and the things to which it exhorts — spring
out of this vivific center of love to God and love to man. It is very
simple.
You will find that the apostle taught the same thing in the thir-
teenth chapter of Romans. Speaking of practical duties, he says :
"Owe no man anything, but to love one another; for he that loveth
another hath fulfilled the law. For this, Thou shalt not commit adultery,
Thou Shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not bear false witness
Thou shalt not covet ; -and if there be any other commandment, it is briefly
comprehended in this saying, namely. Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thy-
self. Love worketh no ill to his neighbor : therefore love is the fulfilling of
the law."
Here is precisely the disposition at which men are to aim;
namely, a state of mind in which their feelings toward God are
feelings of filial love and of trust, and in which their feelings toward
men are generically and specifically emotions of benevolence, of
well-wishing, and of kindness.
Now, let me take this as a standard, and apply it to you. Let
me, if I can, persuade you, for one moment, to consider what has
been the tendency of your life and of your disposition. Have you
been accustomed to love — not occasionally, not as a rare flash of
experience, but as the outgrowth of a disposition in you, working
day and night, and gathering as other dispositions have? Has
there been a steady current of your soul toward God, in any sense,
of love ? Has there been in your experience, continuously, any dis-
position of benevolence toward your fellow men ? 1 do not ask
whether you have been good-natured and kind when you were
pleased. I do not ask whether you have had an occasional flush of
gladness at the good fortune of others. I am speaking of that
which goes to make character. I am speaking of the building up
of a man in you. Are the elements with which you have been
building these two: love to God, and love to men? I appeal to
your conscience.
We come, then, to the very first step. In the application of
this aim to Christ, and in this method of accepting Christ and liis
spirit, wc find a foundation for that which is called "conviction of
■jin." When Christ preached the Gospel to men, tbcy were pro-
foundly convinced of their sinfulness; and the faithful preaching
df the Gospel in every generation since has had the eflect of pro-
ducing in men a sense of personal sinfulness.
Many men say, "■ We are not depraved; we are not corrupt."
if by that you mean that there is a love of truth in you, I am on
four side. There is a love of truth in you. If you mean that there
is a certain element of conscience in you, understanding "de-
406 AIMS AND METHODS OF GEBISTIAN LIFE.
pravity " to mean that men are absolutely without any points of
goodness, then I am with you again. But do you not believe if
true holiness consists in love to God, and in the- disposition of love
toward men, that in both of these respects you are deficient, if not
absolutely destitute? Have you had a constraining power of love
which ruled in you ? Has it been a thought of God, and a filial
desire to please him, that has absolutely fashioned and shaped the
purposes of your life and all the elements of your character? And,
bringing it on to still more familiar ground, do you believe that
from the time of your childhood up to this hour the main purpose
of your life has been to make men better and happier, and to use
all the power that is in you for that pui-pose ?
Men do not believe in depravity. They say, " I do not believe
everybody is so sinful as ministers claim." It is not my purpose to
discuss, to-night, what your ideas of sinfulness may be. Here is
the law : " Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart."
Have you ever done it ? This is one of the test questions. It is a
criterion of character. Have you experienced this love ? Has it
been more than a transient feeling with you ? Has it been a prim-
itive, regulative, abiding tendency, so that it has wrought your dis-
position in you ? Have you had this love to God ? If you have
not, is not that a law which you understand, which you approve,
and which you believe to be a noble thing ? If you measure your-
self by such a standard as that, you cannot but believe that you are
below it.
Take the other question — that of sinfulness. I will not say
that any of you have been stained with crime. I will not say that
you have been streaked with vice. I will not say that you have
broken out into sins which are against the well-being of society,
nor that you have been engaged in an active round of mischief;
but the foundations are in? you out of which all such tendencies
spring in other men. There has been an absence in you of a posi-
tive and absolute disposition toward men of well-wishing and well-
doing. You have never loved your neighbor as yourself. Not only
have you never done it, but you do not believe you can do it. You
do not believe anybody can do it. You think the doctrine that
any one can love his neighbor as himself is a poetic ideal. You
regard the thing as utterly impossible.
But look at your disposition. Are your plans of life, is youi
idea of manhood, is your conception of duty based upon this : "1
will cultivate in myself love, that I may diifuse love among men.
I will seek to develop moral beauty in myself, that I may instil
moral beauty into tliem, and elevate them. I will build myself up
AIMS AND METHODS OF CHEISTIAN LIFE. 407
in strength, tliat I may help the weak. I will make myself affluent
in goodness, that I may succor those who are needy" ? Is that the
aim with which you are living? Has it entered into your con-
ception that that should be the ideal of human life?
How is it with men — even the men that we call good ? It is,
every man for himself, mainly; and for his larger self, his family;
and for his still larger self, his set or clique. Men look out for
themselves first ; and then they look out for those around about
them who are in affinity with tliem; and then, if they have any
leisure and any means left, they think of mankind, perhaps. Who
is tliere that, in building up himself, has this radical conception :
" I am not my own ; I am bought with a price ; I am to look, not
alone on my own things, but also on the things of another. All
men are my brethren. He is my brother who is in any trouble or
suffering. That spirit should be in me which was in Jesus Christ,
who loved the Father, and said, ' It is my meat and drink to do
his will,' and showed how to do his will by going about and doing
good?" Has benevolence been the end and aim of your life?
Where a man is convicted of sin, oftentimes there is a drarAatic
experience. There is a sense of God's law. What that law is men
do not exactly know. Tliey have a sense that it is a vast power
.above. They feel that they are enemies of God, and enemies of
God's cause ; and they are seized with great terrors and pangs. And
I bring home to 3'ou this conviction of sin — this conviction that
you have never lived according to the law of kindness or benevo-
lence toward God and toward men. Such has not been the ten-
dency of your life or disposition in the past, and such is not the
tendency of your life or disposition noAV. If we measure by such
a rule as this, there is not one of us wlio is not obliged to say, " The
rule slays me. I cannot abide that test."
When, theicfore, you want to know whether you are convicted
of sin or not, it very likely may be that certain passages in your
past life will come up. If you have been a drunkard, if you have
been a sabbath-breaker, if you have been a profane man, if you
have been hard and usurious, these things will plague your
thoughts; but that is the truest conviction of sin wliich goes
to the center, and says, "My life and character are destitute
of godliness and of benevolence. I am wrongly built from the
very center outward. I lack and need tlnit which God has declared
to be the whole law. It is the commandment on which God himself
stands; for he demands nothing of us that he does not also demand
of himself While he commands us to love, he loves supremely.
So, then, conviction of sin is a thing very plain to be under-
408 AIMS AND METEOBS OF CHBISTIAN LIFE.
stood. It is the conviction of a man that he is not a lover of God,
that he is proud, that he is self-seeking, that he is hard, and that
he is indifferent, negligent, or even oppugnant to the welfare of
men.
To-morrow, when you go into the street, and meet people, test
yourself a little. See what your feeling is toward them as you meet
them man by man ; as you see them crowding the boat or the car.
Ask yourself, " How much have I of that large feeling of benevo-
lence which makes men yearn toward their fellow men ? What is
there in me which makes my heart go out in desire after those
around about me ? Look at little children — those that are ragged
and dirty ; those that need the most pity and help ; those that are
the least lovely. Look at men who have faults, among all classes
and dispositions. See if there is in your soul a breathing of benev-
olence toward all who exist near you. Consciousness of defect in
this regard is what I call the best conviction of sin. I like con-
victions of sin which are specific, which go down to the practical
life of men, and which are experienced, not in occasional moments
or hours, but during every hour and every moment.
What, then, is conversion ? A great many suppose it consists
in a purpose to serve God. Yes, but what is serving God ? It is
becoming like the Lord Jesus Christ. It is being transformed
into the spirit of true love to God and true love to man. He is not
converted that felt very bad yesterday and feels very good to-day.
A man is not converted merely because he can say, " I once did
not care anything about churcli. and did not like the Bible, and
did not love to pray ; but now I like to read the Bible, and go to
church, and pray." All that may be true of an unconverted per-
son as well as of a converted person.
When you come to the center of it, what is conversion ? A
man has been living a proud, selfish, self-aggrandizing life, and
has been indifferent to other men ; but he takes a new view,
and says, " My God is living for others. Jesus Christ gave himself
a ransom for many. I am called to that life which he lived. And,
by the grace of God, and the Spirit's help, I will be transformed,
and will see that all the ends of my life, from this day forth, are
benevolent."
If a man is changed so that he says, " I have, by God's help
sworn the irrevocable oath ; I have consecrated myself to the work
of benevolence," he is converted. By conversion, however, I do
not mean perfection, but enlistment.
Now we come to inquire what is meant by " the conflict ot
Christian life." It means that struggle Avhich takes place when the
AIMS AND METHODS OF CUBISTIAN LIFE. 409
attempt is made to bring every part of our nature into subjection
to this new principle of life, and to compel our whole mind to re-
ceive the perfume of love, and to breathe the spirit of love toAvard
our fellow men. There continues to be in us, after we are con-
verted, an indiffarence to men. But there must not be indifference
to men. Indifference to men is treason. There is the old feeling
of pride which leads us to take care of ourselves and demand atten-
tion from others. That feeling must bow down to love, and be
softened and sweetened, as it was in the apostle Paul. There is in
us the same desire for praise — the same tendency to vanity. That
must be baptized in love. All our seekings and yearnings and as-
pirations must be in this new channel.
If you are very happy in singing and praying, that is good, if
your happiness is accompanied by a change which makes you really
more benevolent, more gentle, more kind, more sympathetic, more
loving, more lovable. A man who is converted, and is not more
lovable, is not thoroughly converted. If after a man is converted,
he is not so agreeable or companionable ; if he has only strained
himself up so that he does not touch men ; .if he is less sympathetic
and Avarm, then he is mistaken about his being converted; or, it is
a bad kind of conversion that he has undergone. lie that is con-
verted has gone out of winter into summer. He that is converted
is full of generous sympathy. That is the reason "why a Christian
man is always social. The moment men enter the Christian life,
they become social. You cannot, in this world, fill up a religious
life without the social principle. Christianity is social in its very
central element.
If, therefore, men wish to know whether they are converted or
not, there is the test. They know as well as anybody else. If they
are in any doubt, let them ask those that are around about them.
A man has a brier growing in his flower-pot ; and not being
satisfied with it, he says, "I will have this grafted." So he grafts it
with tlie Marshal Neil rose. It takes, and he waits to see how it
will develop. By and by the buds begin to appear and open,
and the whole bush begins to glow ; and the man says, " I wish I
knew whether this .was really a grafted rose. I wish some one
would tell me whether it smells good or not." I think if it were
the Marshal Neil rose you would know it by its fragrance !
You have had that which was worse than a brier in your dis-
position ; and if you arc grafted with the spirit of the Lord Jesus
Christ, and that spirit is beginning to be developed in you, you will
not have to ask many persons, " Am I blossomed, and um I sweet
and fragrant, in gracious. dispositions?"
410 AIMS AND METHODS OF GHBISTIAN LIFE.
A man is proud and hard and obstinate, and wishes he knew
whether he is converted or not. Everybody else knows whether you
are or not. If your old granite disposition is as hard as ever, and if
when people fall against it they are ground to powder, then you are
not converted. " By their fruits shall ye know them."
Here is a man of the intensest avarice. All roads go to his
pocket, and none lead away from it. He loves money, and lives for
it, and will sacrifice all other interests for it; and he wants to know
whether he is converted or not. He sits down and studies his evi-
dences of conversion, and concludes, on the whole, that he is con-
verted. He really takes a little more interest in Sunday than he
used to. He enjoyed the music very much last Sunday, and he
never noticed it before. He had not been accustomed to go to
church, and being known to be a rich man he received a great deal
of attention, and he was put into a good pew, and a gentleman spoke
to him in flattering terms after the service ; and he felt quite happy,
and went home and said, " Who knows but I am converted ? Can
a man be converted and not know it ? Can he slip into it una-
wares when he is asleep ? I wish I knew whether I was converted
or not." The man who makes a bargain with you to-mori'ow will
know whether you are converted or not. When a man is converted
he is converted into benevolence. No man was ever converted into
stinginess. If you remain hard, and selfish, and proud, and vain ;
if there is no battle set up against your lower passions ; if there is
no evidence of the beginnings of a better life in you, then you need
not be in any doubt as to whether you are converted or not. I do
not care if you have a band of angels singing to yon day and night,
they are singing to a fool ! He that is called to the Lord Jesus
Christ is called on this charter : " If any man have not the Spirit of
Christ he is none of his." No rapture, no vision-seeing, nothing
that does not produce a sense of real sympathy for your fellow-men,
and make you feel, that their interests are as dear to you as youi
own, should be taken as evidence that you are converted. If you
have not love, you have nothing.
Eead the first few verses of the I3th chapter of 1st Corinthians,
and see what the apostle says. Even if you -give your money foi
benevolent purposes; even if you become so zealous in building up
some great and good cause that you would stand and burn at the
stake in its behalf, if you have not love, you are as sounding brass
and a tinkling cymbaL The center is left out if love is left out. If
a man is convicted, he is convicted that he is a selfish being, ^and
void of love to God and men. And if a man is converted, the evi-
dence of it is in this : that he is brought into a new disposition to-
AIMS AND METUODS OF CHRISTIAN LIFE. 41 1
■ward God and men — a disposition which requires no metaphysics to
exphxin, and which is Avithtn the compreliension of a small child.
" Grow in grace, and in the knowledge of the Lord and Savionr
Jesus Christ," Men can test their own evidences.
In what direction should you look to see whether, on the whole,
you are increasing in the Christian life ? There will be many col-
lateral evidences. A man, by studying God's word, may find that
he gives the truth greater breadth ; and by the practice of devo-
tional service he may find that he worships easier and to more pur-
pose. The evidence of growth is evidence of the amelioration of
the faculties, A growing Christian, for instance, is one who is be-
coming more kind and just toward his fellow-men,
I think that men's thoughts are, for the most part, largely like
sharks' mouths and teeth. There is nothing about which, as I grow
older, I seem to feel, I think, more like Christ, than about the in-
justice of men toward men in their thoughts — in their contempt-
uous feelings toward men. Oh, how men love to find fault I How
they love to pick at imperfections ! How they love to hunt evil
things ! How they carry suspicions in their minds ! How hastily
they judge ! How he seems bad that is not helping them nor giv-
ing them pleasure, but is hindering them and giving them pain!
How they set up a tribunal before which their neighbors are per-
petually tried and condemned ! How often do they disregard the
injunction of God, "Judge not thatt ye be not judged; for with
what judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged ; and with what meas-
ure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again" !
These harsh thoughts of men ; this carelessness of them ; this
want of respect to their need and their welfare ; this prying out
of their faults ; these conversations of men about men and of women
about women; this dolorous cannibalism of the tabic; these per-
petual insights into human nature with a kind of rejoicing in
iniquity — all these things mark a want of summer; a Avant of
Christ-likeness; a want of that spirit which led the Saviour to suf-
fer for men, rather than that men should suffer in consequence of
their sins and transgressions.
If you are growing in grace, you will find that the presiding
chief-justice in your soul is kindliness — kindliness of thought and
kindliness of feeling. If you are growing in grace, you will find
that the very tones of your voice will change to kindness. You
will find that that which was rough and abrupt, and which had a
tendency to provoke or annoy men, w'ill give way to that wliich is
smooth and gentle. If the spirit of youf life is Christ-like, if you
are developing in Christian life, you are growing in tenderness and
412 AIMS AND METHODS OF CEBISTIAN LIFE.
in meekness, and jou are growing lovely in the sight of men. You
are making yonr way brighter. You ig-e making other people's Avay
brighter. You are making happiness for yourself and others
"wherever you go. If you are not ; if you are unsocial ; if you arc
pugnacious; if you are critical, fault-finding, hard, penurious,
stingy, I do not care what your other experiences are, you are not
growing in grace. The spirit of Christ is a spirit of love.
Here, then, is the beginning of Christian life. It is the volun-
tary choice of Christ's example and disposition as that upon which
you will form your life and your character. That disposition is
love, both upward and outward. The beginnings of it are ceasing
from all evil, and commencing to live Christianly in this respect,
that you may live benevolently. Your conviction of sin will turn on
that point. If your conviction be salutary, your sense of conversion
will be the evidence that you really have begun to live on this prin-
ciple, and that this is the purpose of your life. Your Christian
progress will be marked by the progress and the triumphs of a liv-
ing disposition in you.
In the first place, in closing, I appeal to you whether there is not a
reality in Christianity as presented in this way. I ask you whether, if
men really did frame their minds and dispositions on this basis, there
would beany room for skepticism on the subject of Christianity. We
have so intellectualized the great truths of Christianity that men may
take either side, as they do, aad argue on it. But there is one ele-
ment of Christian life about which there is absolute unity of belief
to-day ; and that is where a man subordinates all his interests to
benevolence, where he does love God, and where he does love men.
Where a man. acts in the spirit of benevolence or love, all men agree
that he has religion. If a man lives symmetrically and fruitfully,
according to the law of God, that is a fact which no skepticism can
undermine, and which no skepticism wants to undermine. You
may talk about the inspiration of Scripture ; you may talk about
whether there is or is not a Trinity; you may talk about Avhether
there are three persons or one in the Godhead; you may discourse
on the nature of the atonement, and v/hat not; but there is one
great question or doctrine which no man debates; and that is, that
he who is living a consistent life of benevolence is a religious man.
Everybody believes it. If you could have a church gathered in
which the whole membership, old and young, really exemplified that
principle, there would be no dog to wag his tongue against it; no
man to find fault with it. There can be no heresy in love ; and
there can be no doubt or 'dispute among men where this large and
divine trait exists.
AIMS AND METHODS OF CUBISTIAN LIFE. 413
Men say, " What will become of the church ? Is it going to
stand the tests which are brought to bear upon it by discovery? Are
■w'e going to hold our theories against advancing science ?" Let
science advance. If it can show any better type of character than
is to be found in the New Testament I shall hail it. Where can
you find any nobler type? Where has science disclosed It higher
ideal than that of God manifested in Jesus Christ ? Can science
take away from me the conviction that the supremest conception of
manhood lies in the command, " Thou shalt love the Lord thy God
with all thy heart and mind and strength, and thy neighbor as thy-
self?" If that is the heart of religion, how is progress or change
going to talce it away ? It is not a question of speculation. If that
is the noblest and best element in the universe, as it is, it will
stand.
If, then, we are to labor for the progress of divine principle in
this world, while we are not to be unmindful of doctrines, and the
difference of views in regard to those doctrines, every one of us, in
his own sphere, can be making the triumph of Christian truth more
and more certain. Every man who rounds up his experience into
the blossoms and fragrance of Christian life, is laying a stone upon
the foundation which is not be shaken. And every man who is liv-
ing in a spirit contrary to this, is helping to build up the other
kingdom.
To live to sympathize with men and care for them is to be on the
side of God. To live to use them, and grind them up, and destroy
them, outwardly or inwardly, is to be of the party of the devil. Sel-
fishness is Satan. Satan is selfishness. He that wounds, grieves,
makes miserable his fellow men, is on the side of the devil. He
that seeks to build men up and help them is of the party of God.
I appeal to every person in this congregation, young or old, is not
this life of Christ — that life by which your whole soul is transformed
into love to God and men — worthy of your heed and of your strife ?
Do I call you to anything unreasonable or less than rational when
I appeal to you to take sides with the Lord and God? Is it not to
take sides with yourself? Self-interest of the higher kind dictates
that you should become Christian men.
I do not ask you to join this church, or any church. Take what
church you please. Taking one church or another is very much
like taking.a carriage or a car, according to your preference. Some
vehicles run swifter, and some not so swift; some are better and
some are worse in the matter of convenience. But that is not the
question. The question is, " Will you accept the Lord Jesus Christ
as the model of your life? "Will you enter into his life, that you
414 AIMS AND METHODS OF CHEISTIAN' LIFE.
may enter into sympatliy with all mankind ? Will you take his
cross, and crucify your selfishness ? Will you rise into newness of
life in Christ Jesus ?"
That life begun here is perpetual. Love never fails. Knowledge
shall perish, prophecy shall cease to speak, all th^ is beautiful shall
stop at*the mouth of the grave, wealth and power shall die, all
things bright shall grow dim ; but love, once begun, and having in
it the touch of God's spirit, shall go on waxing brighter and shining
stronger, and having more and more of the Divine Spirit in it, till
at last you shall be caught up ; and as flame mingles with flame
your renewed and blessed spirit shall be brought into the brightness
of the Divine love.
God grant that you may be born again, out of selfishness into
love to God and love to men.
AIMS AND METHODS OF CEEISTIAN LIFE. 415
PRAYER BEFORE THE SERMON.
We thank thee, our Heavenly Father, that we are permitterl to come
again into thy presence. Thou hast heard our prayer, and blessed the day.
We thank thee for all the joy of the sanctuary. We thank thee for the sanc-
tifying influence of the Spirit upon our homes. We rejoice in all the mercies
which are scattered thick in our way. We desire to be rendered more
worthy of thy favor. Grant unto us, not alone the thought of thee, and the
hope of salvation at death by thy grace and power. Grant us, day by day,
such union with thee, such growing likeness to thyself, that we shall taste
something of the joy of heaven before we are translated thither. We desire
strength from day to day to do the things that are right. We desire to have
our thought of that which is right made pure. Raise higher our thought of
things that are noble and just and good. May the things which we shall
seek be things for which we shall be willing to sacrifice whatever is mean
and ignoble and selfish. Grant that we may have an earnest inward longing
for righteousness— that hunger, that thirst, which thou hast said shall be
filled. May we behold thee in thy gentleness, in thy meekness, in thy lov-
ingness. May it be a Christ possessing these traits in their perfection that
we shall seek, and receive, and follow. We pray that we may take thee for
our Guide, so that our pride and envy and avarice and passion may be held
in subjection. May we submit ourselves to those things which must needs
come upon those who would seek to overrule their evil propensities. Grant,
we j)ray thee, that we may have such a presence near us and around us from
thee, that we may fitly call ourselves the children of God, not of an outward
pattern, but by reason of our inward spirit. May there be a Christian spirit
abounding in all our lives.
Are there those in thy presence, far from thee, who have been taught of
God and of duty, and have wistfully looked upon the way of religion, and
hesitated, and not turned in at the call of God? O Lord! we pray for
them. We beseech thee to open their understandings more clearly. Wilt
thou incite their hearts more earnestly to a fervent and true life in God.
We pray for those who stand afar off, unconcerned. We beseech of thee
that the truth of God may enlighten them. May their thought become
nobler and better. May they not propose to themselves the things that
perish alone. May their life be hid with thine, and may they seek a nobler
disclosure of their life in Jesus Christ.
We pray that thou wilt grant that those who are surrounded by tempta-
tions, and are not so much thinking of religion as of how to maintain their
morality, may find thee a present help in time of need. Succor the tempted.
Strengthen the weak. Bring back the wandering. Make the way into
transgression hard. Make the way back again easy. We pray that thou
wilt draw around about all those who seek to escape from sin, the sympathy
and the generous trust of those who have themselves been rescued and
brought to a knowledge of Jesus Christ.
Bless those in our midst who are preaching Christ. Bless parents who
are teaching their little children. Bless those who are instructing the young
in oiir schools. Bless those eveiywhere who go forth to make known the
unsearchable riches of Christ's love. We beseech of thee that thou wilt fill
their own souls with the spirit of the Saviour. And may they rejoice in their
work, and not be weary in well doing, knowing that in due time they shall
reap if they faint not. Raise up yet more laborers. Behold, how large is the
harvest ! How few are those who labor therein ! We pray that Ihou wilt
cause more and more to consecrate themselves to a life of self-denying
industry for others.
Wilt thou bless this city and all its churches, and the great city near to
416 AIMS AND METHODS OF CEEISTIAN LIFE,
us and its churclies, and all the institutions of benevolence, and all the
methods by which men are restrained from evil and incited to good.
Pour out thy Spirit upon our whole land. "We pray for revivals of reli-
gion, pure and undefiled. "We pray for justice, for truth, for conscience, for
love. "We pray that this whole land may be lifted, by the power of the
Spirit of God, to a higher experience than hath befallen any nation thus far.
Then may its light shine abroad, and may it guide the wandering peoples
that are seeking to go from darkness to light.
Let thy kingdom come everywhere, and thy will be done, in all the
earth, as it is in heaven. And may the whole globe be filled with thy glory.
"We ask it in the name of the Beloved, to whom, with the Father and the
the Spirit, shall be praises evermore. Amen.
PRAYEE AFTER THE SERMOK
Our Father, we pray that thou wilt help us to tmderstand thy counsels.
May we realize that thou art not far from us, but near to us, even within us.
May we heed thy speaking to us, in our conscience. We pray that we may
understand how simple is the life of a Christian, and yet how laborious.
May we know how few are the things which thou hast enjoined, and yet
that they are yokes and burdens. Grant, we pray thee, that we may take
thy burdens and yokes cheerfully. May all that in us which is wild, wMich
is passionate, and which seeks self-satisfaction, be harnessed and controlled,
utterly; and may we rise through self-control to liberty. May we learn
through loving that therein we have our greatest strength. Give to us
aspiration and hope, so that all things shall change in color before our sight;
so that those things which seem most barren shall seem fruitful ; so that
that which seems hard to our feet shall seem easy ; so that our example shall
become more and more fruitful of good to men.
Accept the services of this evening. Accept our thanks for the bless-
ings of the day. We commit ourselves to thy care, dear Father, for the
hours of the secular week. In our business, in our goings to and fro, at all
times and everywhere, may we have the convoy of our God. And when we
have gone through life here, may we find the gate there, and enter, to go no
more out forever. And to the Father, ttie Son and the Spirit, shall be the
praise. Amen.
XXIII.
The Spirit of God.
THE SPIEIT OF GOD.
"The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof,
Dut canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth ; so is every one
that is born of the spirit."— John III.8.
These words refer to the context, back in the fifth verse, where
the Saviour says to Nicoclemus,
"Except a man be bom of water and of the spirit, he cannot enter into the
kingdom of God."
This famous conversation of our Saviour with this educated
Jew, is one of transcendent interest on many accounts, both because
it gives an insight, even at so early a period of Christ's career,
into the effect of his ministration upon the intelligent and thought-
ful Jews, and because of the topics themselves which are involved.
Already, Nicodemus was a member of the Jewish Church. Al-
ready, whatever rites or services were requested by that church he
had performed. And he was, so far as he understood it, within the
spiritual realm. It is probable that he had been a listener to John.
Possibly he may have been among the number of those who re-
ceived John's baptism. It is probable that formal baptism had been
introduced into the economy of the Jews asearly as this, though that
is uncertain. John's baptism was certainly familiar to him. And
we may be sure that, in the state of mind possessed by a Pharisee, he
would come to Christ, saying, " I am a member of the Jewish
Church." Pcradventure he would say to him, also, "I have been
baptized by John to reformation and repentance. What lack I
yet?"
I apprehend that the force of our Saviour's reply was not this :
"Except a man be born of water, and except a man be born of the
spirit, he cannot see the kingdom of God." I do not understand
that he put emphasis upon baptism, as many do. I take it for grant-
ed that he saw that this was the ground on which Nicodemus stood,
namely, that he was initiated, and that whatever ordinances or
administrations were required he had observed. The Saviour said,
SUN-DAV EvE>aNO, Doc. 3, 1872. LESSON : JoHx HI. 1-13. HrMNS (Plymouth CoUecUon).
Nos. 21S, 206, 474.
420 TEE SPIBIT OF GOD.
in effect, " Except a mau, baptized with water, be likewise baptized
with the Holy Ghost, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God."
Christ brought into Yiew, distinctly, a conception of the Divine
Spirit which was not unfamiliar to the Jewish mind, and Avhich,
as we shall see in the sequel, was understood in a general way,
though not specially, by Nicodemus himself.
I suppose that from the beginning of time there has been a gen-
eral impression among men that this world was acted upon by
minds or spirits outside of itself: that, if I may so say, the waves
from other spiritual conditions have rolled in upon its shores; that
it is not isolated.
Among the modern discoveries, there is nothing more striking
than the fact that the unity of creation does not interfere with the
belief that there is a spiritual unity as well as a physical unity ;
that in the construction of the whole universe we are but a frag-
mentary part ; that there do come in upon this world influences,
mental and spiritual, from outside of it ; that upon the minds of
men there are influences which spring, not simply from the visible
creation, but also from invisible sources. This is certainly the doc-
trine of the New Testament.
The inspired and authoritative teaching of both the Saviour and
the apostles (though by the apostles not so much as by the Saviour)
was, that divine and demoniac influences did come in upon the
human soul in this world ; and in so far as divine influences are
concerned, such a truth is to be eminently desired.
It is a tliankless task to disprove that which is asserted. It is
the tendency of those who are pursuing physical science to repel
anything Avhich is not able to stand the test of the senses. There-
fore there is, on the whole, a disposition to repel any doctrine of
spiritualism. It is even treated with scorn by many, by most, who
neglect that great inchoate realm, that will not down, and yet will
not affirm ; that will not be still, and yet will not answer. The
questions that are put to-day, the vagrant and anomalous spiritual
theories of our time, are simply despised by science on grounds
which carry the feelings of the skeptical part of the scientific mind.
Now, I aver that there is nothing which men so much need,
nothing which men ought so much to desire to be true, nothing
that men ought to accept so willingly, as this doctrine that there is
wafted over into this sphere a divine power, a spiritual influence,
which wakes up the better part of man's nature. It is not to be de»
sired that there should be a demoniac influence, though it is not to
be denied that there is ; but certainly the transcendent doctrine of
the New Testament is that the Divine Spirit is given to men in this
THE SPIRIT OF GOJJ. 421
world, may be given to all, and is effectual upon veiy many. It fits
and harmonizes with our idea of the higher life toward which we
are groping our way.
We go forward in knowledge step by step. At the very best we
know but little. It doth not appear what we are, nor what we shall
be. We are conscious of aspirations and yearnings and longings ;
but we do not know how to locate them, nor how to proportion
them. Some of the most notable hours of our experience are hours
in which there is a wild concourse of feelings, formless and vague,
full of dissatisfactions. There are glorious fruitions which come to
us; but they are only for the moment; they are transient. That
which every thoughtful man of any depth of moral nature most de-
sires, is that there should be an influence, divinely directed, which
should teach us the meaning of our own thoughts and feelings, and
the reason of our aspirations, and that should guide us insensibly
and rationally along that line by which we are to reach from the ani-
mal to the angelic or the divine.
This truth of the divine influence exerted upon the heart of
man is not to sufler doubt from the fact that fantastic and false no-
tions have prevailed in all ages and in all religions on this subject
While men are going through periods of ignorance, they are super-
stitious ; but as they grow more and more intelligent, one by one
they drop these notions of formless spirits, of vague invisible influ-
ences which are supposed by the imagination of uncultured men
to fill the heaven. As men learn better how to use their minds
these notions are dropped, and they come to more stable views.
This is the reasoning of men, but I do not understand how they
can account for the fact that the universal tendency of the human
mind has been away from the physical q-nd toward the spiritual. It
is admitted that men existing in their natural states are but savage
and animal; that the senses arepre-emiuent; that the passions take
precedence in power above all other parts of the human mind. We
know that the earlier conditions of the human race have been ani-
mal. And tell me how it is that out of the low and animal condi-
tion which the race has been in has grown a strong sense of in-
visible and spiritual influences ? Where did it come from ? The
race, before its civilization and Christianization, being animal,
whence came there into it the conception of a free spirit and of the
illumination of it ? It is not natural to a lower state of the mind.
It is not natural to the lower faculties. It is a development of
the very highest form, as we learn; and yet, it began with the race.
It had its beginning as far back as we have records. This faith in
the influence of the Divine Spirit upon the hearts of men is one of
422 THE 8PIE1T OF GOD.
the struggling elements. And did it not touch a conscious need ?
Was not this universal feeling after some obscure truth the indica-
tion that that truth was working upon the hearts of men ? Was not
the Divine Spirit recovering from these lower conditions of humani-
ty the germs of things that were to eventuate in intelligence and
higher spirituality ?
The fact that men had rudely apprehended this truth does not
militate against its reality. Men sought chemistry through al-
chemy, which was loaded down with all manner of absurdities and
even superstitions ; and yet they were seeking after a verity, and
they found it at last. Men sought astronomy through astrology,
with all its superstitions and extravagances, and it is no presump-
tion against astronomy that it was preceded by such a system of
misconception and distortion. What if the notions of men in early
times respecting spiritual influences were crude ? What if many
of them have fallen to the ground ? What if to a great degree
they were fictitious ? The universal feeling after such a truth, the
universal belief in such a truth, and the universal consciousness of
the need of such a truth, are not to be ignored. On the other
hand, they constitute a very strong presumption that this truth is
real. The mere seeking of an object does not, to be sure, prove
that object to exist ; but when on other grounds strong evidence is
found of the existence of any truth, then the leaning of men toward
it corroborates, though it may not prove it.
In this discourse of our Master, you will obseiTe that while he
takes for granted this divine and spiritual influence, he declares
(and it is to me one of the evidences of divine wisdom) that it is
not possible for men to understand such things; that is, that the
truth of the higher sphere is so unlike anything that we know on
earth, that it cannot be made comprehensible to our faculties here.
" If I have told you of earthly things, and ye believe not, how shall ye
believe if I tell you of heavenly things ? And no man hath ascended up to
heaven, but he that came down from heaven, even the Son of man, which is
in heaven."
It is impossible to intei'pret a higher sphere to a lower sphere.
We can have some dawning iutelligenv^e in respect to the existence
and agency of the Divine Spirit; but a perfect comiarehension of it
we cannot have. Hence, this great truth cannot be unfolded in its
detail and in its philosophy as if it were an earthly truth. Nor can
all the questions Avhich may be asked concerning it be answered ;
nor can all the curiosity which may be excited with reference to it
be satisfied. But there are certain points in regard to the Divine
Spirit which I think Scripture does make plain, and experience
corroborates.
TnD SPIBIT OF GOD. 423
We are not to suppose, first, that it is a supersession of the
faculties of man. It i& not an attempt of the Divine Mind to put
its action in the place of our action. In so far as we can gather
from the words of sacred Writ, and in so far as we can gather from
the conduct of men, where they are expressly declared to be under
the divine influence, it would seem as though the Spirit of Grodi
stimulated development — -%rought into it a higher activity. l'
Now, this giving to the minds of men a higher action ; this
lifting them up into a sphere of activity which they have not
known before, and so changing all their feelings and experiences,
is called a " new-birth," where it dominates and becomes constant.
The activity of a mind under the divine influence is Avhat is meant.
The Spirit wakes up the dormant power of the mind in spiritual
things ; and, therefore, it is said : " The Spirit helpeth our infirm-
ities." All that wliich we need, so far as the senses are concerned,
is manifested to us. The eye has its provocations. The ear has its
stimulations. Every part is provided with the forces by which it
can be developed and sustained. Society ministers to the social
wants of men, and, to a limited degree, it ministers to their moral
wants; but Avhere shall you find anything which lifts a man above
and toward the unenibodied — toward the invisible — toward that
great realm of truth, in the direction of which manhood develops ?
In every age of the world those have been periods of growth in
whicli men have most believed in the invisible and the infinite;
and those have been shrinking and backward-going periods in
which men have been shut up, almost, to their senses.
There is provision made for the lower nature by the structure
of the physical globe, and by the structure of society ; but when
we rise to a higher thought of manhood, to something that is in-
visible and infinite, then it is that we need help. We need some-
thing that shall body forth our conceptions, and direct them.
That is the work of the Divine Spirit, which reaches out to our
spirit, and quickens it, and enlightens it, and guides it, and,more es-
pecially, arouses it. This is called " the kindling light in us." It
awakens the understanding. It stimulates the moral sense. It
gives vitality and force to all those elements which go with the
moral sentiment. It is called, therefore, the "enlightener of the
mind." It is declared to be a spirit of comfort, of consolation and
of cheer. Men who have all that their senses desire, and who are
living for the present, do not feel the need of it, and do not miss it
if it be absent; but the great mass of mankind are not living in
circumstances of comfort or of attainment. The race of man, for
the most part, are living in conscious imperfection. Their desiras
t'ty '
424 TEE SPIEIT OF GOD.
are being broken off every day. Men are living vpith a conscious-
ness of ill-desert and shortcoming and guilt, and thej know not
how to comfort themselves. Since the world began, men have been
turning every way, and seeking, by one means or another, to appease
and quiet their conscience. It is the ofiQce of the Divine Sj^irit to
comfort men, to console them, as well as to arouse and stimulate
and enlighten them. It keys the soul ilp to its highest activity in
its best parts.
You may ask me, " Is not this the very natural order of the
■^ mind itself? Are you not simply describing the functions of the
higher faculties? What need is there of any conception of things
over and above that which is inherent in the soul of man ?" But
we are often conscious that we are lifted up, not by our own auto-
matic activity. We are conscious, oftentimes, that we are influ-
enced by a spirit outside of our own, mysterious, acting not when
.. _ we should have expected it, according to the conditions of our minds.
I. j^t*^t I While it doubtless is true that the activity of the Divhie Spirit,
/. ^^^"^ and the methods of that activity, transcend our notions, yet, in one
sense, it is understandable. We can prepare ourselves so that we
/ shall become consciously recipient of this divine influence. A man
may prepare himself for friendship, and may prepare himself for
society, according to the nature of the relations into which he is
going. If it be for pleasure that he is to prepare himself, he throws
off care and burden, and, as it were, raises into activity that part
of his mind by which he enjoys. If it is a company of artists into
which he is going, he prepares himself to be influenced by their
peculiar tendencies. If he is going among friends where his social
faculties are to be brought into play, he as it were rouses up those
faculties in him so that they shall be in the highest state of activity.
If he is going where there is to be music, it is for this that he pre-
y«,^-<j:il^^ pares himself. We are conscious that we receive influences from
le-fc,*-w-^e / each other by preparing the mind to be susceptible to those in-
, / ' / fluences.
So it is in the power of a man to prepare his soul to be acted
^ ; '? : upon by the Divine Spirit. Not that he is not acted upon at all
times; but he may prepare himself so that he shall be acted upon
the most favorably. There would be summer if there were not a
farmer ; but the farmer knows how to make summer work to ad-
vantage for him, as otherwise it would not have done. There would
be flowers if there were no florists ; but the florist knows hovf to
make the sun bring forth exquisite color and forms, as it never
would have done if it had not been for his interposition and prepa-
ration.
TEE SPIBIT OF GOB. 425
There would be the universal influeuce of the Spirit of God,
doubtless, if every humau being were swept off from the fiice of
the earth. There has been a universal Spirit of God which has
brooded over the race of man from the beginning, and that has
been bringing out, little by little, the nobler qualities of human
nature ; and this universal Divine Spirit will doubtless be still ac-
tive ; but by meeting the Divine Spirit, by preparing for it, by open-
ing the soul to its influence, and by co-operating with it, men have
made themselves recipient of greater blessings, a thousand-fold,
than they would have received from the unassisted divine influ-
ence.
" Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling; for it is God
that worketh ia you to will and to do of his good pleasure." U^ u-^<
This co-operative labor is just as necessary in spiritual as in
material things. In extracting wealth from the earth, or hidden
treasures from the air, all natural influences conspiring, a man
specializes these influences by the application of them to the object
which he has in view ; and in securing spiritual blessings, a man
specializes the generic influences of the Divine Mind.
Not only can we prepare ourselves to make the soul fructify un-
der the divine light and warmth, but we can also resist these influ-
ences. The divine influence is cogent, but it is not irresistible in
any proper sense of the word. Where men set their will against
it ; where they put themselves under the influence of feelings which
are antagonistic to it ; where they resist the tendencies that would
be developed if they were to yield to it, they certainly can set it aside.
I do not say that, if it pleased God, he might not press his influence
irresistibly upon men ; but experience shows that such is not the
ordinary procedure of Divine Providence. We are to be made wil-
ling in the day of his power. The strivings of God's Spirit have
proved futile in the thousands and thousands of mournful instances
where persons did not know the day of their welfare. That day "UJ^t
has dawned upon them ; they have felt strange movements within i, ^
them, and they have set over against them antagonistic feelings. *-^
How many men are roused up and have yearnings for something
better than they have, who do not understand the influence that is
operating upon them, and sweep it away Ijy social jollity ! How
many times do they make nature stand as a culprit before their
higher nature ! How often do they feel discontented with things
which before pleased them ! How frequently do they empty the
cup and find that it n© longer has in it any pleasure for them !
How common it is for men to go over the statistics of their past
experience, and find that life has not fulfilled all that it promised!
426 THE SPIBIT OF GOD.
Doubtless these feelings are awakened by the power of the Spirit
They are the results of the action of the divine influence on the
.^ soul. If I may say so, they are the waves of the heavenly life
beating on the shores of this life.
Men set themselves at work to put out these unpleasant feelings,
or to push them to one side. They involve the relinquishment of states
which they are not willing to part with, or the performance of
duties which they are not willing to fulfill. And so they do not
come into concord with the soul of God.
I suppose every man has been the subject of divine importun-
ity. I can scarcely conceive of one who has not in some way been
reached by the Spirit of God. Certainly no man who has been
reared under Christian institutions, who has been surrounded by
Christian friends, and who has learned in the sanctuary the higher
truths of the Christian religion, has been left free from the divine
influence. It may not be recognized as such. I do not suppose it
is recognizable. I do not suppose any man can tell what is simply
the action of his own mind, and what is the action of the Divine
Mind, for the reason that the Divine Mind stirs ours to act.
If you ask the flower, " How can you tell that which the sun
_> does in you, and that which you yourself do ?" the flower cannot
tell. The sun wakes it up to do that which it does. Otherwise it
would not be done.
;uc<^ The Divine Spirit wakes up a man to do that which is higher
than the ordinary level of his experience or endeavor. And you
cannot discriminate between the man's own action and the action
of the Divine Spirit manifested through him.
Many men sit in judgment upon pleasure and other outward
influences because they are followed by the opposite qualities — sad-
ness, etc. — which are called •'* reactions" ; but very likely these are
just the ways in which we might suppose the divine influence
would come in upon men. For, although hours of fullness and
power are better for some things, for other things these reactionary
hours are better.
There is scarcely a man who has not had hours of longing and
yearning for better things. They may have been vague ; they may
have taken on strange and unexpected and inexplicable forms ; they
may have been closely allied to secular elements; but even in the
poorest of them there has been a divine influence which has been
working to draw the man upward. Inferiority never strives to rise
higher without that toucli of divinity which makes the best part of
a man desire to enlarge ; to go up ; to augment in excellence. And
there are very few who have not felt this touch. I should be sorry
THE SPIEIT OF GOD. 427
to think that there were any who had been reared under Christian,
influences who had not many and many a time had yearnings for
higher and better things, and shed tears because they had gained so
little.
Men begin the battle of life with high courage. They are heroes
very soon. For the most part they mean to live a life of untainted
honor. They mean to carry sentiment and enthusiasm into all
their ways ; and they do for a time. But the battle proves too hard
for them; and they yield here and there. They lower their tone in,
one direction and another. And by and by, when years begin to
touch their hair with frost, and they look at what they meant to bo
and what they are, there is a sadness that spreds over their heart.
There is a great disparity between that which they aimed at and
that which they have attained. The sense not only of inferiority,
but of sinfulness and of remorse under the inspiration of guilt, fills r
many and many a heart. Is there not the striving of the Spirit with '^
such a one ? Does nature do these things ?
The greatest boon conceivable is the presence of this quickening
influence. The loss of it is the greatest misfortune which is possi-
ble to any human being. It is the life of the soul in its highest
regions. It is because these influences are vincible, it is because
men are likely to overslaugh them, it is because worldly tides rise and
sweep out this blessed current from the heavenly land, that we are
exhorted not to grieve the Spirit of God whereby we are sanctified.
There is no other business in this world that is half so important
as character-building. He that is building his soul is building to
good purpose. He that is only building his property is building
for the worm and the dust. He that is making the manhood in
him tower high, and broaden, and is nourishing it, is a wise master-
builder. He that is heaping up outward things alone, is working
for an hour.
If there come to you, my friends, those influences which make
yoii hate evil as you did not hate it before, believe that they are
from God. If you find that there are influences which inspire no-
bler anticipations of virtue, and a nobler ideal of heroism in life; if
there comes to you a light which makes living Christianly seem
more real and more earnest than ever before, believe that this light
and these influences come from the battlements above, guiding and
inspiring you. If there comes to you at times the consciousness of
communion ; if that of which at other times you long for even a .
momentary gleam comes to you as an experience of hours or days,
and it seems to you as though there was a God, and as though he
were very jiear to you, believe that there is a God, and that he has
428 THE SPIRIT OF GOD.
found you, and that there i^ moving upon your soul a divine influ-
ence vrhich is not of this world, but of the heavenly land.
Oh, do we not all of us want,, more than everything else, to be
better than we are ? Do we not all of us, more than everything else,
want to separate ourselves from mere physical circumstances and
become men ? Is there a man that has the consciousness of char-
acter and of being, is there one that respects himself, is there one
that knows the worth that is in him, who can endure the thought
of sfoing down into the grave to annihilation ? Is there a man who
can bear to look into the future and say, " When forty years have
gone, what shall I be ? Well, a prosperous man. When fifty years
have gone, what then ? A prosperous man still. Eich. When
sixty years have gone, what then ? Still prosperous, still rich, and
respected. When seventy years have gone, what then ? Eiches no
longer enjoyable. Life quivering. The old man looking out upon
that dark valley which is not far before him, says, ' Who will
guide me across ? Where is the bridge ? who is the pilot ? where is
the ford ?' " When a man looks out on the valley and shadow of
death, is there anything that he can desire with his soul, and with
the deepest feelings of his soul, more than a light to shine upon the
road which leads him to the heavenly land ?
It is the blessed function of the Divine Spirit to give inspiration
in life; to give light along the path of duty; to create yearning in
men ; to lead them up to the new life of the love of God in the soul;
and then to point out the way in which the spirit is to tread, and
to point upward where the spirit is to dwell with the spirits of just
men made pei'fect, and in the presence of the throne of God.
I know there are many in my hearing who have often been called
by the Spirit away from evil and toward good. Many of you have
heeded the call ; you have accepted the divine influences ; you have
been recreated; you have been put upon higiier ground; songs of
rejoicing have been put in your mouth where once were Avords of
sorrow ; your faith is fixed, and you are living in a heavenly mood,
in expectation of the heavenly land. There are others who have
been again and again striven with by this divine influence. This
quickening Spirit, the soul's Schoolmaster and Guide, has been near
you, and you have refused utterly to give heed to it. You have
turned back from it again and again. It has impressed you often
and often, and as often pleasure or business has turned you away
from the sacred drawing. And to-night, while I speak, there are
some hearts that palpitate.
The Spirit works chiefly through the channel of revealed truth,
through God's Word; and if there be those who listen to-night with
TJJE SFIIilT OF GOD. 429
tender heart, with a longing conscience, with an earnest desiie for
a better life, let them take heed. Again to them comes the offer of
God's forgiveness, recreation, guidance, love, victory, and eternal
salvation.
PEAYER BEFORE THE SERMON.
We rejoice, our Father, that we have found our way unto thee, not by
the seeing of the eye, nor by the hearing of the ear, nor by the reaching out
of the hand, but by thiae influence shed abroad upon our hearts. We have
been made to know thee, whom to know aright is life eternal. We thank
thee for the commiuiication of thy Spirit. We thank thee for its cleansing
influence, its enlightening power, its comforting effect. We thank thee that
thou art indeed the light of the world, so that those who sit in darkness may
see a great light arising vipon them. We rejoice, O Lord, that thou dost not
withhold the measures of thy grace. Thou dost pour forth from thine own
being, upon all thy creatures, the energy of thine own nature, and thou
givest them life from out of thine own life, and they are conserved by thy
thought and power and care. We rejoice that there is no such care as
thine. If we could see behind the mystery of providence, if we could see the
ends as well as the beginnings, if we could see the processes, we should know
that all things are working together for good to them that love thee. We
know that all things in this life are working for good to those who love thee.
To be stayed upon thy love is itself sufficient, in the midst of trouble, to
lighten burdens, and lift upon the heart the cheer of hope. We rejoice that
there are so many who are witnesses of the power of God, not only to for-
give sin, but to sanctify that providence which comes from forgiveness of sin
and from reconciliation with God through the Lord Jesus Christ. We rejoice
that there are so many who have been made patient by their faith in thee ;
80 many who have been made enduring; so many who have been made
strong ; so many who have been made faithful. And we beseech of thee that
thou wilt increiise the number of those who shall follow after thee, being
called •f thee, and shall possess thy spirit. We pray that the truth spoken
in this place from day to day may be blessed of God to the awakening of
men, and to their conversion, and to their edilication in the Christian life.
May those of thy servants who carry the Gospel to those around about them
call men by their speech, and more by their influence; and to this end may
thy Spirit dwell with them. May there be such light and warmth and cheer
in ever}' one who is named of thee as shall make men draw near to him, and
to the Saviour, by whom they are called, and by whom they are re-
deemed.
If any that are here are loolcing wistfully tov^'ard the Christian life, not
knowing its meaning, nor how to compass it, Lord, wilt thou guide their
unsteady step. If there are those who are uncertain and wavering, upon
whom doubts rest as the darkness of the night, we pray that thou wilt re-
move all the questionings which envelop them, and give them the clear
light of experience. If there are those who have backslidden, and who
remem])er the times of light and joy, and fain would return, Lord, draw
430 TEE SPIRIT OF GOD.
them to thee. And draw others, by them, to thee. We pray for those who
long since ceased to pray. We pray for those for whom parents, now gone,
once prayed — the children of faith and of consecration. If there be those who
have for a long time forgotten their fathers' God, may that time at last cease,
and may they return to the Shepherd and Bishop of their souls.
We pray for all manners and conditions of men — for those within and
those without; for those who listen to the word of truth and those who are
scattered as sheep without a shepherd. May the Gospel be sent out, and
everywhere may it accomplish its work. We pray that thy kingdom in
which dwelleth righteousness may come more and more, and the earth be
filled with thy glory. And to the Father, the Son and the Spirit shall be
praises evermore. Araen.
PEAYER AFTER THE SERMOK
Our Father, we pray that thou wilt grant that the light of truth may
shine upon every heart. Thou that dost release the day from the night, and
that drivest the darkness quite away, canst thou not, by thine infinite
power, bring light to the souls that are in darkness. Are not these thy
children, borne by thee through the realms of time? Are they specks that
are meant to perish ? Hast thou not stamped every soul with immortal life ?
Draw every soul toward thee, O thou great Center of love, and wisdom, and
goodness, and joy; and grant that every one may be sensitive, and may
recognize the day of privilege — the opportunity which is brought near to
him by the striving of thy Spirit.
We pray, O Lord, that thou wilt comfort those who are not comf oi-ted.
Confirm those who are beginning the Christian life. We pray that thou wilt
cause those who have walked therein to let their light shine, and let their
joys be borne to those around about them. And so may thy kingdom come
in many hearts, and thy will be done therein, as in heaven.
We ask it through Christ, the Beloved, to whom, with the Father and
the Spirit, shall be praises evermore. Amen,
XXIV.
Spiritual Hunger.
INVOCATION.
stoop down, O Lord, from out of thy silence — from thy hiding-place.
Make manifest thyself unto us this morning. By thy thoughts, search ours.
By thy heart, arouse ours. Grant that we may worship thee this day in the
beauty of holiness. May there spring up in us ail those yearnings which
betoken thy presence. Arise upon us with healing in thy beams. Wilt thou
direct the service of the sanctuary, that it may honor thee in our profit.
May the instruction be as of God. May our fellowship be the fellowship of
those who are heirs of the same immortality. Grant, we pray thee, that in
our songs we may praise thee. Lead us in the way of prayer, and bless us in
every service. We ask it for Christ's sake. Amen.
21.
SPIRITUAL HUNGER.
" Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they
fihtiil be tilled."— Matt. V. 6.
Hunger and thirst indicate ihe want of the body, the sup-
port of life from day to day, in the building up of every part
of the system. In the creation of man, it was not safe to leave
this to his intelligent inspection, and to his judgment. There-
fore the safety-valve was infixed in the body itself; and, as it
were, the alarm-bell rings when the body needs either food
or liquid. Hunger is the sign that the material body is wasted,
and that more is Avanted to build it again. Thirst is the sign
that the fluids of the body are drained away, and that more
are needed to take their place. Although hunger, under cer-,
tain circumstances, may become a pain, rising in intensity to a
certain extent, according to the urgency of the demand, or acting
unhealthily in the abnormal conditions of the body, yet, in its
normal state it is not disagreeable. It is a kind of semi-pleasant ex-
perience. It begins in a very remote suggestion. It quickens the
impulses. It is only when it is denied, and denied for long periods,
that it becomes j)ainful. It is not itself discriminating. Hunger
never says to us, " The bones need lime." It never says, " This or
that organ needs building up." It is simply a sensation ; and yet
by experience and imagination it becomes something very different
from a mere sensation. It has the power of exciting in the mind
memories, pictures, ideals. One sleeps, and there is a vague, wan-
dering feeling of hunger in the system ; and from that dreams be-
gin to rise ; and they are dreams of banquets, dreams of fountains
in the wilderness, dreams of luscious fruit, almost — not quite — v/itL-
iu reach. Sometimes they are dreams of actual eating and drink-
ing— insijiid drinking and tasteless eating ; for we have memory of
things, but not of sensations.
That which is true of dreams, is equally true of life. The im-
agination, coming with this blind sensation, creates before the mind
all manner of attractive pictures; so that when men hunger, it is
SUXDAT MORNINO, Fcb. 11, 1811. LESSON : MATT. V. HT5INS (Plymouth Collection). No*.
VSi, 005, 907. ^
(
434 SPIRITUAL EUNGJSB.
not so much hunger that they are thinking of, as it is that supply
which the sense of hunger in imagination creates before the mind.
In all persons, directly or remotely, it inspires life. It is true that
many of us are so far lifted up, and the conditions of our life have
become so complex and organized, that we never study immediately
for the supply of hunger. But if you look at human life in the
origin, and if you look at the progress of the human race, I think
it Avill be seen that hunger has been among the earliest of the stim-
ulants which have developed industry. And, although now it is
low; although. its position relatively is very humble a& a motive
force, it has acted, and it has had no unimportant sphere of action,
in the life of the world.
In the savage state hunger is still, probably, the pi-ime law of
life. Indolent, torpid almost, when gorged, savages become active,
for the most part, only when hunger stimulates them. The lowest
condition of humanity is indicated by that state in which men act
so long as hunger is on them, and cease to act or lay up provision for
the time to come the moment hunger ceases.
Now, the same law prevails in the mind. That is to say, out-
ward activity grows from some sort of inward uneasiuess or impulse.
Hunger existing in the body works outwardly, first, into that in-
dustry Avhicli supplies it, and then enlarges gradually, and inspires
a more complex industry. And so almost all of life in its upper
sphere proceeds from a kind of hunger which exists in the soul.
Some yearning, or longing, or action, or some faculty developing
itself and working to produce its appropriate gratification — this is
the analogue ; and the character, as formed by the faculties, answers
to the industrial creations produced by sensations of hunger and
thirst in the body.
The inward hunger may be a hunger for simple activity. Crea-
tures of all kinds have a sort of muscular buoyancy or physical ac-
tivity inspired by their physical systems. There Avould be no ac-
cumulation of property, no continuity of exertion, if there w^jre not
an appetite for property in the mind. It is hunger for possession
that raises the ideals of it, and stimulates the pursuit of it. No
man would shape his life assiduously to make it comely in the sight
of other men, if it were not that there is a hunger of praise lying
deep in him and perpetually inciting him to win praise, by putting
forth exertions which shall make him seem j)raiseworthy to others.
The combativeness of men springs from a dispositional irrita-
tion ; from a tendency to continunl contest, by the outward mani-
festations of self-esteem or pride. It comes from an appetite which
inh^'cs in the original constitution.
/
SFIBITUAL EVNGEB. " 435
The yearnings of men for society, and for all its enjoyments and
developments, likewise proceed from some inward preparation for it.
This is the law, then, which we recognize familiarly in society
with regard to all the lower forms of mental activity. The hunger
of the body produces prosperity ; and the hunger of the understand-
ing, of the active disposition, and of the lower forms of emotion,
stirs men up to create in society those conditions which shall satis-
fy the cravings of the iuAvard want.
This is the law of moral and spiritual life, just as much as of
physical and intellectual life. There is not one law for a spiritual
fetate, and another for an emotive and social and dispositional state.
The law is the same throughout. The law for moral excellence,
whether generic or specific, lies at the root of all true sjjiritual
growth.
The text, therefore, strikes at a creative and organic truth.
" Blessed are tliey that hunger and thirst after righteousness." In
that word "righteousness" is included the heart-excellence of men.
The lowest conditions of human life are those in which men live
for mere physical sensations. The highest are those in which men
live for moral excellence. And all the way between are gradations
partaking, more or less, of one extreme or the other — gradations in
which men seek to better their conditions, their circumstances, their
reputations, and to a certain extent their characters, as distin-
guished from their reputations.
So that men are acting in life all the way through on the de-
grees of a long scale ; and they are acting upon the principle of an
inward longing as the cause of outward endeavor, fulfilling, in
some partial way, the promise that they shall be satisfied.
It is, then, the ideal which determines men's real moral position.
It is the ideal which is created by the co-operation of some inward
organic want with the imagination. It is the ideal which springs
up partly from experience, and partly from the imagination. And
it is the use which men make of their ideals that will gauge and
characterize their whole lives. )
Let us analyze and study it rather 'Inore particularly. Men
without an ideal, or without an impulse toward something higher /
and better than they have in the present, must be regarded as be-
longing to the lowest class. Aspiration, by Avhich m'^n tend to
grow in right directions, is one of the characteristic features of
real, vital, true manhood.
There are a great many in the human ftimily who are by birth
so weak, so feeble, so ill-endowed, that they seem to be almost
pulseless in the matter of aspiration. Creepers they are. Having
(
436 SPIBITUAL HUNGEB.
no power to fly, they creep ; and they creep without the thought
of wings, apparently. There seems to be a great nnder-class who
are to be borne with, to be pitied, and sometimes to be blamed,
thoiT^h not in any such measure as that in which we blame or
dinary faults. They provoke us too frequently, because we do not
take into consideration the inherent weakness of their whole
nature.
But there are those who are living in a state in which they have
no tendency to grow or aspire, by a voluntary addiction to vulgar
tastes and pleasures. They think either along the level of their
original position, or upon a declining plane. There seems to be
aroused in them as yet no ideal of anything that is better than that
which the senses can bring to them, or can enjoy when it is
brought. These are bad men. Not that there may not be in them
transient gleams of things good; but the average tendency of such
men is animal. They infest society. They are constantly liable
to be made enemies of society. Their whole status will be deter-
mined, not so much by their own inward voluntary condition as
by outward circumstances. They may be merely complying with
what they think to be necessary to their welfare. They may be
kept, by the fear of the law, by the surrounding public sentiment,
and by various .other influences, within bounds, so that they do not
break over into vices and crimes. They are, however, the stuff
out of which criminals and vicious men are made. They have
tendencies which have caused many strong men to break down,
and go into places where wickedness resorts, and crime is esteemed.
One can hardly think of such men and not be discouraged, un-
less he thinks of God, too. One hardly knows what to do with
this great under-class — especially when he takes statistics, and
runs out along the line of life into other nations and other times,
and sees how large a section of the human family have lived very
near to this condition ; and how great a number of them came into
it by the force of organic, hereditary influences; and came into it,
also, under circumstances which afforded them very little external
help. To be sure, there is a glimmer of light thrown on such men,
where the apostle says, that those who are under the law shall be
judged by it, and that those who are without the law, or outside
of any illumination, shall be judged without the law, having the
law written in their hearts; that is, all men shall be judged accord-
ing to what they have, and not according to what they have not ;
and the judgment shall be very lenient upon infelicitous disposi-
tions, and dispositions left with so little culture. But even the
lowest form of judgment, under such circumstances, becomes op-
SPIBITUAL nUNGEB. 437
prcssive to the imagination and to the thought. Where shall it
stop ? Where shall it he executed ? What is the character of that
realm which has such a criminal population in excess, and with so
little institutional or other force to redeem it? What shall we do
with the truths that glitter on the very top of the Gospel — the
truth of the Fatherhood of God ? What shall we do with the
thought of God in the Gospel, which is interjpreted to us by that
very experience \o which the whole soul of man is brought ? Tak-
ing those inspirations that we derive from the revelations which
are made to us in Scripture, and then taking our experiences, what
shall Ave infer ? I do not undertake to say what the inferences
shall be. I say simply this — that there is a reason for sadness and
for profound melancholy in the contemplation of the facts of
human life, which exists nowhere else.
But where men are born with potency ; where they are not
dragged down by the deficiencies of their nature; where they go
voluntarily into that state in which hunger and thirst are phy-
sical, and in which their soul has no hunger nor thirst — under
such circumstances we find less difficulty in fashioning judgments.
Above this lower form of human life, m which men's ideals are
mostly physical, we come to the development of society-life, where
men's ideas are largely those of business; where they are much
higher and more wholesome; and where, if they be conjoined to
certain others, they incline to the production of virtuous states. I
suppose that if we were to examine the lives of great multitudes
who are well-to-do and respectable, it would be found that their
more active ideas were centered on objects outside of themselves.
They go out into life to build up their households. Of the good
and deserving who are seeking property, very few are seeking to
build up themselves interiorly, except so far as they do it in
building up their complex selves — their wives and children and
friends, and others who are around about them. They are striving
to amass a fortune for other than selfish reasons. Their business
zeal has a higher element in it than the simple desire of acquisition.
It has- the touch of social virtue in it.
But still, a man who lives to better his condition, to better his
property, to build his house better, to furnish it better, to surround
himself with material for refined enjoyment, and to plant himself in
the midst of social influences that shall minister to present happi-
ness— although such a man is not ignoble, his nobleness is not of
the highest type. It is of the earth, and earthy.
Hidier than this are the social ideals. If voii examine them for a
moment, you sliall find, first, the romantic. If you regard tlie ro-
438 SPIBITUAL EUNGEB.
mautic as that which is unreal and impossible, your view is cen-
surable, or may be criticised. For there is a sense in which
romance signifies a nobler conception ; and that is to be encouraged.
It is a generous symptom where the young propose to themselves a
way of life which is transcendently higher than that which prevails
around about them. A young man who comes into life without
any thought of a nobler life than is required by the average virtue
around him, can scarcely flatter himself that her has a trait of
nobility in him. It is a wrong thing to dash the hopes of the young,
and say to them, " It is all romance. When you have gone as fiir
in life as I have, you will lay aside all these visions, and confine
yourself to matters of fact. The world is showing itself to you in
delusive colors." They will find that out fast enough. Ill-omened
prophet, leave them to discover that their ideals are unfounded if
they must. Their struggle will be to reduce their ideals of man-
hood to practical results. Do nothing to lead them to lay aside a
truly heroic conception of life. Woe be to that man who has laid
aside his ideals. Woe.be to that man who has quenched the light
which was shining afar to beckon and cheer him on, toward which
he was directing his steps, and for the sake of attaining Avhich he
^ was making the vulgar and the common serve nobler uses !
( There are also the sentimental ideals of social life, or those in
which the afiections are accustomed to draw the picture. These,
too, are very ennobling, if one has fiiith in his ideals. Before the
battle we all think, " How brave we shall be !" Many a young sol-
dier, on all the march, has been stimulating himself with the
thought of his heroism ; but when the conflict rages, his courage
falters. It is when men are under fire that they slink down and
begin to feel the vulgarity of their nature overcoming their hero-
ism. So long as life is all smooth with men, it is not difficult for
them to maintain their sentimental thought and spiritual inspira-
tions. It is only when they have to contend with facts ; when they
have to deal with things that are disagreeable ; when they have to
bear things which lead to suffering — it is only then that they find
it hard to keep up their heroism. It is when sentiment becomes a
thing which must be cultivated by moral endeavor, that men fail.
The experience of many persons who in girlhood and boyhood are
full of the choicest aspirations, hungering and thirsting after higher
things, is, alas! in later life, like a house the morning after an il-
lumination and a feast. Every pane of glasff had its candle ; but
long before midnight every candle has burned into its socket, and
run down into darkness; and in the moniing there is but the un-
turned tallow and the remnant of wick. Thousands there be whc
SFIBITUAL HUN GEE. 439
look out triumphing over the glory of their home, thinking whufc
ft life shall be kindled up by the heavenly luster of their affection ;
but when they tread the way of life, and selfishness, and envy, and
jealousy, and disappointment, and poverty, and afflictive sorrow,
blight their affection, and they feel the yoke and the burden, and
cry out day and night, " Who shall deliver me from the body of
this death ?" then how they change their social ideals !
Ah I the histories which are written are all artificial histories.
Those histories which Aveigh with God are down so deep in the
secret recesses of souls that no writing can bring them up. And I
may say that the heroisms of life for the most part never flash out.
[ The ideals of spiritual excellence, as I have said, develop accord-
ing to the same line. But they are latest. They have, apparentl^^,
less force in this world. They are most dependent upon influences.
They seem to be from above. As one's outward life follows
certain tendencies which, combining with imagination, produce
ideals ; so one is to have his moral and religious life following cer-
tain ideals, which have sprung from certain inward hungerings and
thirstings of the soul. There is to be a longing for purity in the
inward man ; a longing for truth, ardent and unquenched ; a
longing for all that is godlike ; for perfect manhood ; for that
vigor and valor which Avork with the gentleness, the sweetness,
the meekness and the humility which inhere in true love ;
for wealth of character; for all that goes to make the angelic
conceptions of men ; a longing for symmetry and harmony
and intensity and continuity in the inward life ; above all, the
outreachiug of the soul, along the line of its ideals, for what
I may call the unreal or imaginary ; for those after-states and
after-companionships which hang hovering over life to many
of us. As to summer the clouds that are in the heaven shape
themselves into cities, into castles, with battlements and gorgeous
thrones, and yet are but clouds; so over the imagination hang
these pictures cf the glory, and grandeur, and purity, and joy oi
the other state ; and the heart hungers and thirsts for them. And
the declaration is, "Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after
righteousness ; for they shall be filled." They will not be entirely
satisfied. Our hunger does not die because we ate this morning.
It comes again this noou. And the supply of yesterday is not the
supply of to-day. And in regard to spiritual elements the general
law is that those who hunger and thirst for things pure and noble,
and put forth the same exertion to obtain them which we do to
obtain temporal things, shall day by day find a supply. "They
shall be filled." Not, however, so that they shall be conscious of
440 SPIRITUAL EUNGEE.
carrying about with them an experience like a diamond, never-
changing. The soul will still go on yearning to be supplied. It
will still hunger to be fed. It will still go on through periods of
oscillation, with variations of experience. But the general fact will
remain, that those who have such sensibility in their moral nature
that they hunger for things higher than social life, higher than civil
life, higher than physical attainments, who hunger for moral excel-
lence— for God and for the heavenly land — have worked out in
them by that very hunger, its supply. It is an incitement to medi-
tation, to faith, to prayer, and to noble actions out of which come
both instruction and fruit. They shall be supplied even here; and
more gloriously shall they be filled hereafter, when the present shall
pass away, and they shall see God as he is, and shall be like him,
and shall be satisfied.
In view of this exposition, I remark, first, that there are a great
many who live under the influence of mixed and irregular ideals.
There are a great many whose aspiration is .very transient. There
is just enough of it to rebuke their way of living.
Have you never traveled, of a summer's night, belated, after
darkness had fallen, and the storm had made the blackness more
intense ? Your road is hidden from you. Every now and then
there comes flaming througli the air the illumination of the light-
ning ; and for an instant you see the mountain, the hill, the valley,
the road, everything ; but after the flash, deeper darkness settles
down upon you. By and by the flash comes again, and then again
the darkness shuts you in.
The ideals of others are intermittent and partial. They are
easily excited and easily guided. There are whole days in which
the souls of men seem to soar above the bewilderments of life.
There are even weeks of harmony in some men's experience, I
know not why it is that there should go on fermentations within,
and that another side of the soul should seem to come into ascen-
dency. We know how it is with morbid appetites for intoxicating
drinks. I have seen men who have lived for weeks, and even
for months, without these stimulants, but who, by and by, they
knew not whence nor why nor how, came into a state in which
they could not resist the impulse to indulge in them again. Their
nervous organism seemed to run in periods ; and the time would
come around when their power of abstinence would give way — as
when the clock has brought the pointer round you hear the click,
and the machinery lets go the ratchet. There is a distemperature
going on in the soul, such that, if it cannot be overruled and gov-
erned, the good n solutions that have been formed, and the oppo-
SPIEITUAL HUNGEB. 441
sition that has been set up will be swept away as by a flood. And
that which we discern iu this form of disease, is discernible to a
certain extent through the action of the whole system in life. We
run through periods. If we have gone for weeks and weeks in
spiritual directions, it would seem almost as though backsliding
was necessary. As the activity of the whole day culminates in
sleep, and out of night we gather strength again ; so it would seem
as though our spiritual nature slept at times that it might gather
strength. Because to-day we were lifted up on the wings of an-
gels, as it were, we seek the same condition to-morrow; but we find
it not. To-day our Avhole way of life seems fair and easy ; and on
either side of our path are fragrant blossoms and luscious fruit;
and yet, before the week rolls round we are shut up, and harassed
by a blind dread, and discontented. To-day there is a wondrous
overflow of sympathetic love in our feelings, and all mankind are
dear to us, and we are inspired to pray for men, and to live for
them, and our Christian life seems a glorious reality, and w^e won-
der that men should ever doubt religion, or think that there is
nothing in it; and yet tliere comes upon this experience a distem-
perature which eclipses the fair orb that shone so brightly ; and we
find that we are nuzzling with the vulgar doubters and unbelievers,
and are scarcely able to cry, and much less able to instruct. Where
is our hope ? Where is our faith ? How helpless are we !
This intermittency is more clearly distinguishable in intensely
organized natures; but it prevails more or less in all. There are
very few who can carry their ideals all the time. Our ideals are ^
sometimes like a candle. While we leave it in the house, it burns
with a straight wick and flame; but the moment that we attempt
to carry it out of doors, the wind blows the wick and the flame
about, and the candle becomes almost useless; we are obliged
to hide it in a lantern if we would derive any benefit from it in
the open air.
How few men who have a noble ideal of interest in their fellow
men that are struggling around about, and of sympathy for
them, can go through a single day and keep that ideal I We take
our ideal out with us in the morning as soldiers when they are going
into battle take their resplendent uniforms; and at night it is like
those same uniforms when the soldiers have come back from the
battle, rolled in the mud and grimed, or burnt with jiowder. How
far we are from the realization of our ideals of purity and good-
ness, although we constantly have the stimulations of truth in the
church, and amoiig Christians, and are lifted up to a higher level !
What noble influences and inspirations surround our path from
44'^ 8PIBITUAL EVNGEB,
day to day ; and yet what a crooked course is that which we take !
And how apt we are to become discouraged, and to say, " Why,
these are all imaginations. There is nothing for us to do but to
be about as honest as we can, and behave about as well as we can,
God is too good to punish us very severely for those infirmities
which the flesh is heir to!" That is not the question. The ques-
tion is one which comes nearer to our own manhood than that.
Can you afieord to destroy your manhood by lowering your ideals ?
Let God be true, though every man be a liar. It is better for you
to condemn yourself through and through, and stick to your ideal,
than to lower your ideal to gain some quiet and self-complacency.
It is not pleasant for a man to be filled with the throbs of self-
reproach, to feel the measurement of the golden reed of God's
sanctuary; it is not pleasant for a man to see how poor his life is
here when laid on the back-ground of the other life as the imagina-
tion presents it to us ; nevertheless, it is better that we should at-
ternj)t to lift up our ideals, and make them more stringent than
they can be if we seek relief by humbling and vulgarizing them.
He who, though thorns are bound upon his brow, though his
hands be pierced with nails, though he be slain, still maintains his
ardent faith in things the noblest, and the best, and the highest,
and the purest, and the truest, and does it in spite of himself, and
though it keeps him in a purgatory of self-condemnation, is a real
man ; and he who brings himself out of purgatory, and into a con-
dition of self-complacency, and contentment with himself, because
he requires so little of himself, is a vulgarized man.
Human life, I think, has as many discontents and frets from an
unwise use of subtle ideas as from any qnartei'. In this land,
where we have such abundance around us, where opportunities open
to every one, and where social life is keyed so high, Ave are not, I
think, in the main a happy people. I do not know that the house-
hold is as happy as it was some hundred years ago, when men lived
nearer the rock and the flint than they do now. I see on every side
men who are rendering themselves discontented with what they
have, by a kind of subtle, undertone ideal of what they wish they
had. If one has enough of raiment for the purposes of the body,
he is not thankful, because he has a vision of superfine raiment, not
jis something for which he will patiently Avait or work, but as
something which others have and he has not. And so he grumbles.
If the table is spread frugally, but Avith sufficient plain food for the
body's Avants, it is not a grateful meal that he makes ; for he im-
agines a more bounteous table, such as others bavc, but he has not.
And so he grumj^les agam. Men and Avomen are thinking, in the
SPIRITUAL EUNGEE. 443
household, every day, aud every hour of the day, not so much of
what they have, as of what they have uot. They are sitting in
judgment on their mercies by the thought of other better things
which they might have had; and, instead of using this ideal con-
ception of better things as a spur to urge them on "to higher
industry and attainment, they use it as a whip of scorpions to
minister discontent to themselves all the time, by comparing
somebody else's life with the life which they are actually passing.
Aud so they have what is called a fictitious experience.
There are not so many joys in the world that we need turn our
joys to sorrow. We need not turn our sweet to bitter. We need
not live on so low a plane, and measure our life by such a low stand-
ard, as to waste our happiness by a crumbling discontent. We need
not be made nliserable by holding up before ourselves the vision of a
better future. If we believe in such a future, let us by patience
wait for it until it is developed in us. Meantime, let every man be
content, every hour, and be thankful for the mercies of that hour,
whatever his circumstances may be.
We must, in order to make this ideal other than a scourge and
torment, join to it more than human strength. To those secret
ideals which range over the outward life, and the inward life, and
the life which is to come, there must be joined, it seems to me, a
childlike faith in Christ, and a child-like faith in the great compen-
sations of the future, or else we shall have, not happiness, but pining,
discontent, self-condemnation and fear. We are never to be made
happy by the reality of what we are. I lay it down as a universal
canon, that no form of true, rich, noble, spiritual enjoyment can
ever be founded on the consciousness of contentment. " By the
grace of God we are what we are." We are beggars, and are clothed
by him. We are blind, and we see only through his vision. We
are what we are by the sustaining, restraining and inspiring power
of him who loved us. We are, however, after all, absolutely con-
sidered, most imperfect, rude, in the best things. As judged by the
eye of God we are full of gaps. There are long rests where there
should be only breaks. We are full of concussions and causes of
misery. And our joy is to spring largely from the thought that
we arc beloved by God, that he is preparing us for the beauty of
the perfected state, thaC he is waiting patiently for us as we are for
our children. It is not the perfection of our children that leads us
to love them. It is the necessity of our nature to love them. And
lor twice a score of years we wait for them to come up to their full
. beauty and strength. God waits for us. He loves us. And his love
for us is not on account of what we are, but on account of what ho
444 8FIBITUAL HUNGER.
is himself. It is the necessity of God to love. He would not bo
God if he did not love. He waits for us, and it is in the conscious-
ness of this fact that we are to find our rest and satisfaction.
Do you not suppose that your best friend knows what your
weaknesses are ? And do you not suppose that he is delighted to see
you filling your hours with music, and glad of all that which tends
to make you strong and wise ? Do you suppose that friendship is
blind ? No eye sees so keenly. The acutest ear is that of the best
musician. Kowhere is discord so jarring as to the soul that has
the most relish for concords. Parents see their children's faults,
and cover them down. And does not friendship wait upon
friendship ? Do we not lift each other up, and carry each other
forward toward the ideals which beckon us on ? And do we not
rejoice in the present indications of that which is to' be ?
Man in this world is only something like a chart — not the
thing itself. He is but a kind of map — not the country, the
hills, the valleys, and the water. He is merely a symbol of those
things. We are a hint of what we are to be. And we love each
other continually, notwithstanding our imperfections and undevel-
oped condition. That is not friendship which has this world for a
background. That only is friendship which has immortahty be-
hind it. We love and joy in those to whom we are true friends.
And does not God do the same thing ? Do we not do it because we
are taught of God ? And is not this about the secret of that rest
which we have in the Lord Jesus Christ ?
We are pictures unpainted. We are statues unshaped. God
is working out in us his own ideal. He is forming us accord-
ing to his own good pleasure. And it is in the consciousness
of the love of God ; it is in our faith in the Divine purity ;
it is in our belief in the reality of the divine inspiration, that
we find peace, We cannot find peace in ourselves. We need
to live under the influence of the other life. We must live by our
higher conceptions, or by our imagination quickened by an inward
hunger. We must ever more keep before us the fruitions of the ra-
diant future. We must take refuge in the lesson of the Saviour. It
is the grace of God which saves us — that grace which has its root
and center in love. In the consciousness of God's love our imper-
fections are swallowed up and lost.
I care not for the rude leaves which break the ground in early
spring, and which have verj little form, and no comeliness ; for ev-
ery one of these basilar, seminal leaves is a prophecy of that Avhich
is to come forth wheja the warm summer has nourished the plant
and taught it how to blossom, or how to bring forth fruit. The
SPIBITUAL HUNGER. 445
crude and imperfect blossoms and fruit which we see here are but
hints of what they shall be by and by under a diviner sky and in a
diviner presence.
"We must have faith in the thought of God, and the love of God,
and rest in these ; and though every day we are conscious of being
far from the perfection which God requires, and which our own
ideals require, and though we are filled with self-reproaches and
self-condemnations ; yet supereminent above all other feelings should
be the sense that we are children of God, and that we are rising to-
ward the joy of perfected manhood and of spirituality in the heav-
enly land.
PEAYER BEFORE THE SERMON.
We rejoice, our Father, that thy providenoe is above us all. In this
great world we wander not forlorn, because thou hast cared for us, and dost
multiply the comforts of life from day to day on every side. And yet, with
outward bread we are not satisfied. Nor is it enough that our bodies are
clothed. It is not enough that we dwell together in an earthly friendship
and peace. There lies beyond an unapproached shore. Though there be
signals from thence, we know not what they mean and can discern but im-
perfectly. We see as through a glass darkly. We believe that thou art
there, and that there are gathered together the pure and the just, and that
in a jiobler commonwealth life goes on without the disfigurements of
this experiment. With outspread wings we forever fly, joyfully, in that
land, who are here but callow and unable to go. We believe that there thou
art thyself the teacher, and that we shall be in such conditions that we can
approach unto thee, and no longer discern thee through symbols and imag-
inations—no longer see thee under human forms and imitations. We shall
see thee as thou art. We shall be like thee. We shall be satisfied.
How imperfect is the way that leads to thee! The fear of the Lord is
the beginning of wisdom ; and the love of God is the end of wisdom. And
yet how we shall minister them ; how they shall lead us ; how, in all the
infinite applications of daily life we shall hold ourselves in a tnie fear and
iu a true love — this has been our trouble, our anxiety, and our failure.
We need thee to show us what we are, and to give us some thought of
that shape which we ought to wear, and of how we may rise by our inward
nature and prepare it for the heritage of the blest. We have groped at
mid-day. Wc have sought thee, and no voice has answered to our outcry.
Yet, we believe that wo are livmg and moving under the cope of thy kind
thought and thy providence, and that all things are working together for
good to them that love thee.
Grant that we may have this charter and title, that we love God. May
we know it by the love which is reflected from us upon each other. May
we know it by the whole disposition of our souls. And in the certitude of
thy divine love, may we rise, at last, believing that what is tinknown now
446 SPIEJTUAL EUNGEB.
shall be revealed ; that what is unreached shall he attained ; and that what
is yet undeveloped and crude shall ripen into blessed fruitions of the heav-
enly land.
Draw near, this morning, to all that are waiting before thee, and help
them according to their several needs. Grant that those who are troubled
in heart, and mind, and state, may find consolation, this morning, in waiting
before God. May they be able to cast their care upon thee. Why should we
bear our burdens when there is infinite strength to bear them for us? Why
should we in anxiety wait, and look, and long, when thy wisdom has rtm
before ours, and appointed our paths, and is guiding us in them? May we
know how to trust in God— yet not with such a trust as shall lead us to slug-
gishness. May we '•ojoice, rather, to work out our own salvation with fear
and trembling, since it is God working in us to will and to do cf his good
pleasm'e.
Grant, we pray thee, that those in thy presence, this morning, who have
come up hither from places of sorrow, and who wear the garments of mourn-
ing, may find that they have come indeed to the friendship of the living
Qod — the Comforter; and may they find the distemperature of their grief
healed. May they know how to behold thee in thine afiiictive providence
as still full of encouragement and of love, and of the tenderest sympathy,
for them. We pray that thou wilt grant to those who have been bereaved,
and who look back upon the sorrow, and upon the brightness of the past,
through the dimness and gloom of present suffering, the light of thy
countenance and the joy of thy spirit.
Grant, we pray thee, that to those who are burdened with cares, and who
have difficulties in life, and who find every day and every hour, as it were
hewn among stones, hard, ascending lines— grant to them that as their day
is they may have strength also. May they feel themselves refreshed every
day by thee. May they have that bread which cometh down from heaven
and whose strength is indeed immortal.
We pray for those who bear the care of others upon their hearts. We
pray for parents in behalf of their children, and for friends in behalf of their
friends.
Grant, we pray thee, that this divine solicitude one for another, not only
may nourish, but may minister gladness. May it be filled with hope and with
cheer. May there be wisdom granted to all those who stand for others to do
the things that are best.
We pray for thy blessiog to rest upon those who are advancing into life,
and who have an inexperienced way before them. May the young grow up in
truth and honor, and have stability therein. May they have that knowledge
from thee which shall guide them unerringly.
We pray, O God, that thou wilt grant thy blessing to rest upon those
who stand in the midst of life, and are trying to carry out the truth as it is, in
human affairs. May they have wisdom given them by which they shall be
able to bear into the midst of human life healing influences. May themselves
not be beaten down and made decrepit by the assaults that are heaped upon
their faith. May they by their faith be able to carry men with more hope
and light through difficult ways.
We pray for those who are teaching in our Sabbath-schools and our
Bible-classes. We pray that they themselves may be taught of God, and
filled with the divine Spirit. May their hearts be evermore warmed, as by
the summer, with sympathy for their fellow men; and may they go forth to
labor with meekness and patience and fidelity.
We pray that thou wilt bless this church in all its interests. May its
members, whether gathered together here or scattered abroad, still be under
thy paternal care ; and may they join in sympathy with us to-day who ire
SPIRITUAL EVNGEB. 447
far from us bodily. And aa they think of the songs of Zion, as mey remem-
ber praises and prayers and joys here, may they partake again, somewhat,
in their solitude, of these various divine refuges of the heart.
We pray, O God, that thou wilt bless our whole land. Be pleased to
remember the President of these United States, and those who are associated
with him in authority. Grant that they may be indued with wisdom, and
that they may be able to lead this nation, being themselves led by the hand
of God.
We pray for the governments and the legislatures of the States, and for
those who execute laws, and for all the institutions of learning, and for all
those who are teaching in them, and in schools everywhere, and for the
whole people, that they may grow in knowledge and in grace, and that
this nation may be redeemed from evil, and purified, and become a nation
zealous of good works.
Bless all the nations of the earth. Unite them more and more by sympa-
thy. May repulsions and animosities and hatreds die away. May the day
of darkness pass quickly. Bring in that light which is to be the cheer and the
salvation of the whole world. Let him that is the Light shine forth. May
all the nations flock to the banner of Jesus Christ, and may no other banner
be lifted up ; and may no other weapons but those which are welded by the
baud of love, be cast. May wars cease, with all their desolations and evil
works ; and may the whole world be filled with thy glory.
We ask it for Christ's sake. Amen.
PRAYEE AFTEK THE SERMON.
Our Father, we beseech of thee that thou wilt grant tmto us more
clearly to see the way from ourselves imto thee ; more clearly to see the rela-
tions between thy great soul and ours ; more perfectly to believe in that
stream of divine beneficence which is the source of our life, and which
causes our life from day to day to break out into things right and good.
Grant that we may not shut our eyes to right and duty. Grant that we may
not, in our discouragement in attempting to realize our ideas, throw thine
away. May we, rather, be willing to pass every day under the sharp con-
demnation of our consciences, and begin again. May we never forsake the
path of rectitude because it is steep and narrow. We pray that thou wilt
deliver us from unbelief, and from all sin, and bring us, at last, through the
unspeakable love of him who gave himself for us, into thine own immediate
presence, where forever we shall be schooled by thee, and forever shall re-
joice in thee. And to the Father, the Son, and the Spirit shall be praises
everlasting. Amen.
XXV.
Trustwokthiness.
TRUSTWORTHINESS.
" Help, Lord ; for the godly mau ceaseth ; for the faithful fail from among
the children of men."— Psalms. XII,, 1.
He is a faithful man who keeps faith. Faith is the equivalent
of fidelity ; and fidelity is what we mean by trustworthiness. He
who has an assured character of fidelity, may be said to be a trust-
worthy man. It is on the subject of Trusttuorthiness that I shall
speak to you to-night.
Although we are not living in such a time as that which led to
the mournful complaint of the Psalmist ; although we are not left
to fear that goodness is failing, and that men are becoming uni-
versally unfaithful; yet it is true that the bands of obligation are
becoming slack, and that men are becoming less conscientious.
Nevertheless, we are growing. Modern civilization is not a fail-
ure. Our participation in it is not without eminent advantage. It
becomes, however, a matter of more than curiosity — a matter of
self-interest, and of Christian, earnest desire — to know whether
we are keeping pace by moral growth, with our intellectual and
physical development.
Our people are becoming more generally intelligent ; more apt
in industrial avocations; more widely enterprising; more generally
successful. They are establishing individual power and liberty.
They are grouping themselves successfully in households. They
are rising to a higher level, on an average, than has characterized
the households of former ages, or other nations. We are amassing
wealth. There is a tendency to distribute culture ; and, conse-
quently, we behold refinement of manners.
All these things are well. They would follow in the footsteps
of the Gospel of Christ. But tliey are all of them of little account
if the ethical power of the Gospel is left out. If the sense of
obligation whicli holds a man together, and gives him unity and
universality in goodness, shrinks; if the sense of conscience
between man and man grows feeble, then all our collateral
advantages will ])e but delusions and deceits. There is no growth
on- ll^^£i^^' ^^EX'NG, Juno 0, 1872. Lesson. Psa. ill. Uymns (Plymouth Collection); Nos.
vUUi o47, ool.
452 TEUSTWOBTHINESS.
worth having which does not crystallize around about a center of
substantial, sturdy, moral goodness.
Without fidelity to all the duties of a true man in society there
can be no religion which is of any value. It is quite possible for
men to be religious and wicked. It is quite possible for men to
have an ardor of devotion toward God with very little sense of
obligation toward their fellow men. It is quite possible for men
to make religious sensibilities and religious experiences a substitute
for ethical integrity.
My belief is that among those who are mingling in life, who are
bearing its burdens and necessary cares, and who are called to the
transaction of business, there is the growing impression that men
are becoming more and more untrustworthy. I will admit that
there may be some illusion in the matter — that is, that in the great
expanse of business, and in the augmentation of affairs generally, so
many more men are called to responsible and trustworthy positions,
that the supply is relatively less on the increase than tlae demands
which are created for trustworthy men, and that the tendency is to
suppose that the number of trustworthy men is gradually decreas-
ing-; while in fact the necessity for trustworthy men is increasing
out of proportion to the supply.
But Avith every just allowance, with every prudent and proper
qualification, we still feel that relatively we are losing ground in the
matter of trustworthiness. A great many are honest, a great many
are comparatively truthful, a great many are sturdy in a conscien-
tious fidelity; but, after all, looking at the tendencies, at the general
drift, at the common impression of men who are competent to form
a judgment on the subject, I cannot but fear that one of the
features of our times is a growing looseness in fidelity.
Let us look at it in a few points in Avhich we may be able to
judge. Let us consider it, in the first place, in regard to truth,
which is the central trunk of trustworthiness. It seems to me that
there is a growing want of sensibility to honor and religious
fidelity, in the matter of simple truth. I perceive that in ordinary
conversation men are not as careful of truth as they sliould be. I
am not speaking of wilful falsehoods, or of the propagation and
circulation of untruths. I am not speaking" of the invention of
lies, nor of the currency given to them by scandalous conversation.
I refer to carelessness of truth. I refer to heedless and rash state-
ments. I refer to practices which indicate, perhaps, not any intent
of wrong, but rather the want of a love for the exact truth, or the
want of sense and sensibility in particular. I do not mean exag-
gerations, tliough I think them to be very mischievous; or to blun-
TBUSTWOBTIIINESS. 453
dering aberrations from truth, which may or may not be mis-
chievous: I refer to a low sense or tone of conscience in regard
to accuracy and fidelity on the subject of truth-speaking ; the habit
of tiilking of things which people know nothing about, as if they
knew all about them ; the way of giving personal seal and stamp
to statements which one has taken no pains to ascertain the truth of
We arc universally a reading people. We have spread before us
an immense lagoon of knowledge every day. All things which
pertain to governmeut, and to business, and to household, and,
unhappily, to individuals and private affairs, are exposed to the
13ublic view. And there is a want of judicial honesty in speaking
of these things. We catch up things hastily. We do not care to
examine them. We affirm them positively. There is the want of
consideration. There is the want of a manly love of things just as
they are, rigidly true, nothing more and nothing less. Carelessness
of truth indicates a low state of conscience. There is a sad lack
of fidelity where men do not care what they say.
Truth is the backbone of honor. It is the backbone of trust-
worthiness. It is the backbone of manhood itself A man who
does not care for the truth is no betttvr than a jelly-fish. He has no
stability; no firmness; no integrity; no organizing substance.
I apprehend, too, that over and above this carelessness, there is,
in the rivalries and pressures of affairs, a growing tendency to mis-
represent the truth. This is not the less dangerous because it is
becoming so exquisitely artistic. We regard him as vulgar who is
obliged to tell a lie outright. We' think the thing should be done
by implication. He is considered a blunderer, nowadays, who
tells a lie. He ought to tell the truth so that it shall tell the lie.
It is a matter of dexterity. The throwing of a shadow is enough.
Men throw shadows on people's paths, and produce certain impres-
sions on their minds ; and then when they are arraigned for having
made this or that misstatement, they say, " I did not say so. I
never said any such thing. If you understood me so, that is your
look out." Men really trap each other by half-truths. Half-
truths are the devil's whole lies.
More and more, it seems to me, in the complicated afiairs of
life, in the heated rivalries of business, in their attempts to over-
master each other, in their conflicts, men allow themselves to use
truth simply as an instrument of interest and convenience. They
degrade it from its high function as a ruling principle, and as a
thing to be revered in the name of God, and, being willing to use
it as a mere currency, they soon debase it.
More than that, it does not seem to me that promises are kept
454 TBUSTW0BTHINE8S.
as they ought to be. The tendency is not in the right direction
in that regard. There are some men whose word is as good aa
their bond, it is said. May their posterity be as the sands of the
seashore ! And yet, the number of men whose Word is as good as
tkeir bond is not great.
More than that ; unless men put their word into legal form, so
that they can be coerced, it is not generally considered that their
promises are worth much. I am not saying that there are not
many honest men in every walk of life who, when they promise,
perform ; but I mean to say that the tendency is not in that di-
rection. It is the other way. Men make more promises and keep
less, every single ten years. They are more and more inclined to
look at things sanguinely. They promise in one mood, and change
their mind in another. They are disposed to make promises when
things look favorable, and to draw back, under one and another
excuse, when things turn against them. They swear to their own
hurt, and do not keep their oath when they find that they can get
away from it.
In this and other ways, it seems to me, tlie tendency of our
times is not in the direction of the cleansing power of spuitual
religion in the matter of truth-speaking, which is the fountain
from which almost all efforts spring in a true manhood.
Trustworthiness, also, under assumed obligations, seems to me
to be relaxing. I refer now to the things which men undertake to
do ; to the functions which they assume ; to the positions which
they accept. We have an army of agents, of clerks, of subordi-
nates in various degi'ees, in offices and stores and manufactories, to
whom we are obliged to commit portions of our affairs ; and there
should exist between the two parties in every case — the employer
and the employed — a sentiment of honor. There should be a feel-
ing of kindly good-will on the part of the superior, and a feeling
of affectionate respect on the part of the inferior. But I think
iOaese things are being disintegrated by the spirit of the times.
There is a kind of spurious individual liberty. There is a sense in
every man that he is under obligation to nobody ; that he has only
to hew his own way ; that he simply has his own fortune to make;
that he has no one but himself to serve ; that he is to consider the
question of his own selfish advantage, and not the question of
honor and obligation. It seems to me that the sentiment of ser-
vice is becoming very much enfeebled.
Now, human society cannot cohere where a man cannot trust
his fellow man. As soon as selfishness teaches the young how to
interpret their duties, and how to discharge them, so soon that de-
TBUSTWOETHIN£;SS. 455
cay will have begun which will, like dry rot in timber, bring down
the whole fabric of society itself. You cannot discharge your du-
ties to humanity without being in subordination one to another.
Society organizes itself by relative superiorities or inferiorities.
We cannot escape, by any theories, from this inevitable necessity.
It is as much a law of nature as any material coercing law.
It is full of benignity. It is full of mutual obligation. The
superior is servant in love to the inferior ; and the inierior is ser-
vant in conscience to the superior. So they are relatively knitted
together, and are necessary one to the other. And it is here that
fidelity is required, and that men should discharge as in the fear of
God the obligations which they owe to men.
But it is the complaint on all hands — I hear it every day — that
it is the hardest thing in the world to find competent young men
who can be trusted. It is a shame. To a patriot in heart it is a
sorrow and a grief to hear such things said. I would that they
were not in any measure true. I hope it is not as true as many
represent it to be. But that it should be true at all is a shame.
And that religion, and Christian associations, and Christian
churches, and Christian households, do not bring out more young
men who are faithful in their obligations to their employers is a
shame. They fail, all of them, to perform the duty that is specially
incumbent upon them. For a young manhood that is only
smart and brilliant and capable, but is not faithful, is rotten
at the core. I hear the same complaint in respect to the obliga-
tioBS of men with regard to promised work among the vast mul-
titude of laborers who throng the continent. Far be it from me to
say that there is among them in any greater degree than among
any other class, the disposition to shirk obligations, or to bring less
conscience or more selfishness to the discharge of their daily duties;
nevertheless, it is true (I hope the tendency in that direction Is
only temporary, and that a better condition of things will yet pre-
vail) that work is not performed as faithfully as it should be, nor
as faithfully as the understanding is that it shall be.
It is very hard, too, for men who are moderate. They say that
their employers are immoderate, and that they must defend them-
selves. Because their employers afe selfish and grasping toward
them, they are selfish and graspiug back again. Eye-service is be-
coming too common ; and a faithful and conscientious perform-
ance of work, not for the sake of one's own self-interest, but in the
love of fidelit}^ is not increasing. I think the contrary tendency
'S growing.
Work is not well done. It is more extravagantly paid, and
456 TBUSTW0BTEINES8.
there is less and less time given to it. The price demanded is
greater and greater, and the work is more and more unsatisfactory.
I am in this matter very sensitive. I' sprang from workmen. Al-
most all my ancestors were mechanics ; and I am not ashamed of
work. Since Christ was the sou of a carpenter, and was himself a
working man ; since work has had so noble a pilgrimage and func-
tion in life, I count it no small honor that I sprang from the loins of
men who swung the hammer on anvil, and drew the wax-end in
the harness-shop. I am proud that I know how to work, and that I
could gain a living by my hands if I should fail to get it by my
head. And I feel an intense and growing sympathy, not simply
for those who are Avorkmen, but for those who are by work strug-
gling to so manage their affairs as to gain more means and more ,
power. But he who coins his conscience to buy prosperity, has lost
his manhood for the sake of decorating his corpse with a more
sightly shroud. It is a thing to be mourned over when working
men have lost the sentiment of manly fidelity, and when they are
men-pleasers and eye-servers, and not workers who work in the
fear of God and in the love of fidelity.
I am afraid that those who reproach them most cannot always
cast the first stone with propriety. When I look beyond the work-
men to those who are in the ranks above them, I am sorry to say I
do not find the same trustworthiness, or the trustworthiness that
one might expect. Are grocers trustworthy? Are market-men
trustworthy ? Are merchants trustworthy ? Are manufacturers
trustworthy ? Can any man, unless he is armed with all the skill
of a chemist, unless his eyes are microscopic and his hand laborato-
rial, go into the market and buy fabrics that are not a cheat ? Is
cloth cloth ? Is silk silk ? Are colors real colors ? Can a man
nrocure the medicine that is to save his own life, or his child's life,
and not have it adulterated ? Does not the loom lie ? Do not the
scale and steelyards lie ? Is not the whole traffic of society resting on
a false basis ? Is there not an element of imitation which is sub-
stantial counterfeiting ? Is there not an element of infidelity that
runs through all the commerce between men and men, honeycomb-
ing it ? Men know it, and talk about it, and say, " Oh, it is the
custom. It is the way of the world."
So, then, when you drink milk, you do not drink milk. When
you eat bread, you do not cat bread. When you drink coffee, it is
not coffee. When you take medicine, it is no longer medicine. We
are fighting a battle of dishonesty which is running through every
element that is produced by the industries of society. Men thrive
on deception ; and it scarcely enters into their conception that it is
inconsistent with manhood, or with their relations in society.
TBUSTWOETEINESS. 457
f like to hoar of eminent Cliristian experiences. I like to hear
mwa tell me Avhat a flood of grace they have had, and what a fire of
the Holy Ghost has descended upon them, and how it has swept
out their hearts. I would to God it had swept out their stores !
Change of heart is good, but change of life is better. It would at
least be more agreeable to one's neighbors.
How is it in this matter ? Is there anything in religious doc-
trine that is an equivalent for ethical Christianity ? Is there any-
thing that is a substitute for fidelity between man and man ? "No,"
men say; "but you can't live if you do not do as others do." "Well,
it is not necessary that you should live. Wlien a man cannot live
consistently with manliness, it is time for him to die. But that is
false. A man can live right, although he may have to fight for it.
Christian manhood is the thing for which we are called to fight the
battle of life.
How is it in respect to offices of trust ? I would not (for I think
it would be immoral) spread the impression that there is no such
thing as public honesty and public honor. I believe there are a
great many men who are faithful in office, both in the higher and
lower spheres of public service. I would fain hope that the dishon-
est men are the exceptions. I have no means of stating accurately
the proportion of those that are honest, and those that are dishon-
est. I merely say, it seems to me that during the last twenty years
defalcations, embezzlements, all manner of official dishonesties, have
relatively increased out of pi'oportion to the increase of the offices
themselves. It seems to me there is less conscience and a larger
temptation to betray trust than there used to be. It seems to me
there are more persons who fall under the steady pressure of temp-
tation than formerly there were.
We have had most solemn lessons given to us in this respect;
but / tell you tliat they upon lohom the tower of Siloam fell are not
more guilty than all they that are at Jerusalem. We are all of us
at fault. And yet I do not think that men are bad altogether,
according to the magnitude of their operations. I regard the
great outbreaks — the peculations, the combinations, the official
dishonesties — which we see in society, as the carbuncles. Where
does the carbuncle get its food ? It draws it out of the blood,
so that the system dries up. And so it is in the matter of
public honesty. There is a low sense of honor and obligation un-
der trust throughout the community, or men would not adventure
«uch things. The immediate perpetrators of these crimes are not
the less guilty; but they are not alone guilty. And no man should
feel that his duty to the community is done when he has damned
458" TBUSTWOETHINESS.
these culprits. There is something back of them of which I shall
speak by and by.
In the higher places of responsibility there is, it seems to me, a
corrupt standard. Men in office are oftentimes faithful to their
political party ; in fulfilling their pledges to their friends they have
a special and partial fidelity ; but their larger obligation to patriot-
ism, to God, and to their fellow-men, they do not feel. We need
to have an intoned conscience in the administration of public and
civil trusts.
Our courts need to be tuned up, and tuned again. They have
fallen below "' concert pitch." Our legislatures need a higher sense
of what is true and manly. Our gubernatorial chair will bear more
of the old oak of freedom which was in vogue when patriotism and
self-denial went with honors and trusts. Our representatives all
through the land betray their trust, and are guilty of the grossest
infidelity — infidelity, not to the Book or to orthodoxy, but to
honesty.
These things being so, how shall we meet this tendency to
untrustworthiness ?
I remark, in the first place, that it is impossible to legislate
iniquity out of the Avorld. The object of law is to give a standing-
place from which men can operate, where the public conscience has
been instructed, and where that public conscience is on the side of
purity and justice and truth. But law alone is inoperative. You
may make law upon law; your law's may be divided and sub-
divided, but you never can so multiply laws as by them to overcome
dishonesty. The moment you make a law to stop dishonesty, dis-
honesty will undermine it. Law is overleaped and evaded in a
multitude of ways, and depravity works on. You cannot by laws
correct the evils of society. But law enables honest men and
public sentiment to daunt and restrain men who are at all restrain -
able. You cannot correct any great public evil in any other way
than by teaching the public. If men are unfaithful, the fault lies
m the public sentiment of the whole community. Fidelity is to
be the result of a better education ; of a higher Christianity; of a
new and a nobler application of ethical principles to every part of
society.
We must have a higher sense of manhood taught in the house-
hold, my brethren. It is not enough for a man to succeed in being
considered a man. It is not enough for a man to teach his children
that they are to prosper by an accumulation of Avealth, or by a
larilliant reputation in a profession.
It is not enough, either, to teach our children that the chief end
TBUSTWOBTEINESS. 459
of life is to get out of it safely. It is not enough to teach ihem
that if they have a hope, and avoid anything like reproach for
inconsistent Christian living, when they die they will be very well
oflf, as that hope will take care of them at the other end. It is
necessary to teach our children essential manliness, for the sake of
manliness; truth, for the sake of truth; right, because right is
better intrinsically; nobleness, because tliat is an attribute of man-
hood. We must inspire our children with higher conceptions of
the dignity of right-living, and of the nobility of real manhood.
And it cannot be done by a word dropped here and there. It cannot
be done by a little instruction imparted now and then. It must be
done when you are kneading the batch. There is many a dish that
you cannot put pepper and salt into after it is cooked. They must
be put in while it is hot. And so it is in bringing up children.
All the essential instincts of a nobler manhood are to be melted
and worked into them while they are growing up. It is not
enough to teach them that they must learn hymns, and write texts
of Scripture, and be pious and good on Sunday, and be respectable,
and get through life with a good reputation. They must have a
sense instilled into tliem that there is something higher than reputa-
tion— namely, character. The reality that is in them must be more
and more held up before their youthful minds.
Fathers and mothers, with you lie the beginnings of the cor-
rection of the evils with which we have to contend in society.
Start men better; lay the keel better; put up the ribs better; run
the lines better ; and the result will be better by and by.
Then there is a point in which our schools can teach religion, I
think, with the consent of the churches. There are many churches
that do not believe in the introduction of the Bible into schools.
The Jew will let you introduce the Old Testament, but not the
New. The Roman Catholic will let you introduce the Old and
New Testaments if you will take his version, in the hands of his
teachers. The Protestant will let you introduce the Protestant
interpretation of the Scripture. But there are men who will not
let you introduce it at all.
Wherever it can be done without dissent, I am decidedly in
favor of having the Bibl • in our common schools ; but wherever
any part of the constituents of our common scliools conscientiously
resist it, I say you have no right to introduce technical religion and
the instruments thereof, into those schools. You cannot do it
without a violation of our American principles.
But there are some things that you can introduce into
schools with perfect propriety — not theology;, not " fore-ordiua-
460 TEUSTW0BTEINE88.
tion ; " not " election ; " not " effectual calling ; " not " regenera-
tion;" not " the trinity;" not any of the great doctrinal forms and
instruments of religion*; but truth, purity, integrity, honesty,
fidelity, benevolence, good-will, patriotism. These elements are not
sectarian. They are universal. If you may not bring the tree
into the school, you may bring some of the fruits which the tree
bears into the school. And you must. There is no period when
the mind takes on the heroic faster than the earlier periods of
instruction.
Oh ! what an intense hater of the British I became when I was
a school-boy! Did I not go with Paul Jones on his cruising
voyages ? Did I not glory in the battles that he fought against our
father's oppressors ? I have got bravely over it now ; but I remem-
ber how fired my young views were with the combative patriotism
which the school-books taught us at that time. I knew every vessel
that went out o'f the harbor in 1812. I knew every incident of
every battle. I knew almost every soldier, I was going to say, tha<
tramped the revolutionary fields, and gloried in every one of them.
And it was not until ripe and middle life, and after the church-
feeling of brotherhood had quite rubbed out the old prejudice, that
I ceased to cherish a spirit of animosity toward old England, the
old mother-country, the grand old parent of us all ; a noble nation.
Like oaks, it has some gall-nuts, some vast knots, gnarling roots.
She has many faults, as such a nation must have, that has such
brawn and bone and muscle; but I^ thank God for England. And
I am proud that I have blood that came out of her veins, and that
she is mother, not alone of our bodies, but of our ideas, and of our
liberties, and of our institutions ; but it took me years to get over
the efiects of primary education in regard to the British.
Now, if our children are so sensitive ; if, when their characters
are being formed, the pictures which are painted on their minds re-
main, how much would be gained if all our children in the common
schools were inspired with ideas of trustworthy, honest, truth-speak-
ing, conscientious manhood I
Then, there has been a great foult of neglect in the pulpit.
These things ought ye to have preached — the doctrines of Christi-
anity, and tlie experimental elements of Christianity ; but these
other things ought ye not to have neglected. Religion ought to be
brought home to men in such a way that every one who goes for a
montli to a church, shall feel that he has been accepted if he has
been made to feel the application of religion in those very places in
himself where he is most liable to break down ; where most he needs
stimulus and up-building. Unless our pulpits have a higher and
TBU8TW0BTH1NESS. 461
more discerning, discriminating teaching ; unless they advocate uni-
versal benevolence and justice in human affairs, as they are in the
day in which we live, we shall not be able to hold the conscience of
this great nation steadfast in this time of its unfolding and outward
prosperity.
"VVe are living in an age when the temptations to untrustworthi-
ness will not diminish. They will increase. Never was there such
a people spread over a territory. Never was there a territory with
such a population. We are not drawing to us the old and infirm
of other lands. The ships that bring armies of emigrants hither,
are bringing the young, the capable, the hopeful. They are all
striving, with lusty hearts and stalwart arms, for a better future.
And in this vast and mingling mass of aspiring men, Avith different
constitutions, and different natures, and different religions, it is
extremely hard to have a common sentiment, and to have that com-
mon sentiment an ethical one. The spirit of the day in which we
live is physical. The impulse toward enterprise and development
is material.
Under such circumstances, in the midst of rivalries, and compe-
titions, and unregulated and over-stimulated ambitions, we shall be
likely to see less and less of sturdy trastworthineiSS and old-fash-
ioned virtue. When a man's least word is as good as his bond
— when, if a^man promise, though he promise rashly and hastil)', he
stands to his promise, even if it takes half of his fortune — then we
may look for the speedy ushering in of the millenium; but simple,
indomitable trustworthiness I am afraid is to be hung up as Ave
hang up the short breeches, the knee-buckles, the three-cornered hats,
the old garments, the memorials of days gone by, Avhen other cos-
tumes were worn, and other customs prevailed.
God forbid that human nature should unfold by its weaknesses
rather than by its strong sides or elements. God forbid that the
fruit of the Gospel should be, not righteousness and purity and
love, carrying justice, but self-indulgence, and self-seeking, and
selfishness, and grasping injustice, leading to inequalities, in which
the strong tread down the Aveak, society itself becoming an engine
of mischief, and laws making iniquity safe. •
Let every parent take heed. Let every school-teacher take heed.
Let every minister of the Gospel take heed. Let every editor, or-
dained for modern civilization, take heed. He Avho to-day sits in
the editorial chair, sits second to none. In all the world of influ-
ence, it is for liim to discriminate botAvcen rigkt and Avrong, and to
be always on the side of truth, and justice, and pui'ity, and manli-
ness. And if the school, and the household, and the church, and
462 TEUSTWOBTHINESS.
the editorial chair, co-operate with all the good men in the great
professions and trades in the land; if we take hold of hands for a
better sentiment and for a uoble purity, we shall be able to resist
the devil to the degree that though he may not flee from us,
be will let us alone for a time ; and I believe we shall raise the
standard character of young men, so that we shall be proud of their
honor, and their honor shall be in their truth, and in their honesty ;
and it shall be said, not only, " The fear of God is the beginning of
wisdom," but " The love of God is the end of wisdom."
XXVI.
The Significance and Effect of
Christ's Birth.
THE SIGIIFICANCE AID EFFECT OF
CHRIST'S BIRTH.
" For unto you is bom, this day, in the city of David, a Saviour, which is
Christ the Lord."— Luke II :11.
The thought of the birth of the Saviour into the world is spirit-
ualized by the apostle. Christ formed in you the hope of glory was
a favorite style of thought with him. It is, as it were, a mystic
allusion to the peculiar birth of our Saviour out of the oixlinary
course of human affairs. The unfolding of Christ in the New Tes-
tament history, is worthy of our tliought, if for no other reason, for
the parallelism which it gives to the experience which men have in
Christ Jesus as a personal Saviour. The historical development
answers, in a greater or less degree, to that Avhich takes place per-
sonally in those who come to have a saving and rejoicing knowledge
of Christ.
First in the order of events, but recounted by only one of the
Evangelists — Luke — is this beautiful scene. I know it has given
rise to much critical speculation, and to much skeptical remark; but
it seems to me as thougli without this peculiar history by Luke, all
the overture, all the music, in the life of Christ, would be taken out
of the way. Nothing more ethereal, nothing purer, nothing more
beautiful, can be conceived of tlian this whole angelic appearance
and annunciation. Yet it was made to rude sheijhcrds. It Avas
made to the few and not to the many. It seems as though it was
an overflow of heavenly joy meant for their own enjoying, rather
than as a composite message sent by the hands of many angels to
the earth. The shepherds heard what was going on above. It was
going on there for higher spectators, and for souls rejoicing among
the blessed ; but, as it Avere, it broke forth, and some of the strains
fell upon the earth, not like an anthem or chorus ; but as here and
there music is heard on a summer night, afar off, snatches being
wafted to us, and then being hushed again by intervening noises or
SUJTDAY EVTE.vixo, Doc, 24, ISTL LESSON: Luke II. Hyuins (Plymouth Collection)
N08. 215, 249, 247.
468 THE SIGNIFICANCE AND
"winds, so there seem to have been snatches of this celestial music —
the annunciation. These snatches did not constitute the whole
song of heavenly joy, but were a part of it.
The shepherds passed away. Nothing more is known of them.
Their ministry Avas to be spectators and annunciators ; and having
fulfilled their mission they sank out of view. And now for a long
time there was no Christ of history. We behold the babe lying
in a manger. His being in a manger was not a hardship so very
great according to the manners and customs of the lower popula-
tions of Palestine. Born under circumstances of great obscurity,
he lived in profound solitude. And among the marvels of historic
lore is the fact that after his return from Egypt, after he went with
his mother to Nazareth, almost nothing more was heard of him for
a period of nearly thirty years, except in one single instance. At
twelve years of age he appeared at the temple ; but besides that, for
this whole period, there was hardly a word or syllable heard of
him.
To those who think that Christ was but a man this may not
seem strange ; but to us who hold that he was God manifest in the
flesh ; to us who hold that he bore divinity from the throne to the
footstool, for the illumination of the race, this long eclipse seems,
or may seem, strange. It may seem strange that he should pass
through those stages of development which belong to men. But
if we judge, not by theory but by facts, as they occurred, was it not
the purpose of God that he should become a man, not merely
standing in man's lot, but through that long process of evolution
and self-consecration which belongs to the race ; that he should
taste childhood and youth and early manhood; that he should go
through the various steps of intellectual development which are
common to men ; that his soul should be opened up by the same
method that man's is ?
So it is not until many and many years have rolled by ; it is not
until childhood and early youth are passed, that Clirist appears
again upon the stage ; and then it is as receiving the initiating
services and consecrations which should prepare him to be recog-
nized by his countrymen as a legitimate teacher.
This presents us to the third stage of our Saviour's life upon
earth, and the beginning of his ministry — his remarkable appear-
ing first in Judea. He seems to have hid himself after baptism
for many months — some four or five — which we have no account
of; but he Avas engaged in preaching a largo portion of the time
during the last years of liis life. And his time seems to have been
precious. We follow him as he emerges from obscurity, and goea
UFF^CT OF CEBISrS BIBTK 469
into Judea, and back to Galilee, wliere the greatest part of his
teaching took place. Almost all his miracles were performed
among his own people, in the midst of the mixed population of
Galilee. There the people were more largely cosmopolitan than in
any other part of the Eastern country. What he was to them, we
well know. He was a wonder, a marvel to them. If they had been
called upon to interpret precisely their thoughts of him, they would
have said, *' He is a Rabbi." What was a Eabbi ? An eminent
Jewish teacher. He was justly held in reverence by them. And
as he waxed in power, they began to feel that he was more than a
Rabbi — a Brophet.
During all this time he was consorting with his own disciples
in private discourse as well as in public ministration. What was
he to them ? We cannot discern exactly. It is impossible, with
the material we have, to analyze the feelings of the disciples. There
is no record as to how they felt. They seem to have changed in
their feelings. Sometimes they mounted up to an enthusiasm
which answered somewhat to our modern idea of fidelity. At
other times they seem to have been no better than the common
men around about them. They marveled at things which seem
familiar to us. They were dull. They were laggards. He was not
yet interpreted to them except as an extraordinary Jew upon whom
tlie Spirit of God rested in eminent measure. He was fitted of
God to be their teacher and their leader.
After his Galilean ministry was in the main completed, he set
his face southward toward Judea and Jerusalem again; and for the
last time the records of the Gospel are burdened with the fruitful-
ness of his teaching. Almost all that lore of the New Testament
•which respects the divinity of Christ ; almost all those spiritual
insights which never yet have been interpreted perfectly, and
which never can be perfectly interpreted excej)t by conscious ex-
perience ; all those profounder views of Christ which made him
very God, were presented in comparatively the last few days of his
ministry, when he was looking upon his passion and drawing near
to it. It is in the shadow of the great gr^ef, and on the eve of the
great sacrifice, that he poured out the fullness of the inspir.tion
of the New Testament on the subject.
Bitt even then his. disciples did not undei'stand hun. And
when he was seized, and seemed to have no power to defend him-
self; when they beheld him, like any other mortal, called before
the courts, and treated with contumely, they all forsook him and
fled. And there was nothing left by which they could hold fast
to their integrity but their imagination and their love. But as yet
470 TEE SIGNIFICANCE AND
their love had not been fired by their imagination, nor had their
faith been truly developed. Around about the judgment-seat there
still lingered the influence of the Mount of Transfiguration. They
who beheld Christ in his wondrous glory there, had the impression
of his divinity so wrought upon them that not even their senses
could dispel it.
Then came the mighty day of darkne s. There was the sepul-
cher, the silence, and the sweet rest. Then came the memorable
morning, and the opening of the grave, and the coming forth of
the Saviour, and his disclosure to the women, and afterwards, in
succession, to' different groups. And then there were t|^e few high
and strange days in which he appeared to his disciples before his
ascension. And then Avas the matchless beauty of his ascending
glory; and he was in heaven.
The disciples tarried. They waited. Their time had not yet
come. Eor, although they had companied with Christ from the
first, and had been made familiar Avith his lessons of instruction,
and had strong personal attraction for him, he was not yet born in
them. He had been born into life, and had passed through it, and
had gone up again to the glory which he had before the world was,
with his Father ; and yet, to them he had not yet been disclosed
except at intervals, with here and there some elements of his in-
terior and true spiritual force. No such Christ had they as after
the day of Pentecost burst upon their understanding and upon
their experience. For, when the appointed time came, there did
descend upon them the bright influence and sweet inspiration of
the Holy Ghost. Then they waked up to a thought of Christ
which they seem never to have had before. Then there blazed out
of their hearts a love for Christ which they had never before mani-
fested. And these men who previously had been timid and hesi-
tant, and had interpreted spiritual things carnally, and, being
cowardly, had forsaken Christ — these men were now endoAved Avith
a royal courage, and Avith a glorious fidelity. They set their faces
against kings. They went before councils to bear witness, and
feared not the wrath of man. They took imprisonments cheer-
fully. They went everywhere preaching the Gospel, and suffering
per ecutions. Everywhere they exhibited the intensest faith in
Christ Jesus as the Saviour of the world. EveryAvhere a love that
surpassed all other loves filled their souls. Everywhere they be-
came witnesses of God in Christ Jesus, who Avas the sinner's Friend,
the soul's Hope, the Way of life. This was their experience.
Now, as I have intimated, there is a general analogy to thi^ his-
tory in the experience of men, and in the steps by which they pro-
gress to a true and saving knowlege of the Lord Jesus Christ.
' , EFFECT OF CEEISTS BIBTH. 471
I liardly know what Christ is to little children. He hovers
upon the rim of their imagination as the stars at evening hover
upon the horizon. He awakens in them wondrous thoughts which
melt back into their souls almost as fast as they think them.
A little child's imagination is a tremulous emotion of the chords
of the soul. They vibrate, and cease, and vibrate, and cease,
scarcely working themselves up to ideas ; or, if they attain to ideas,
they never do to memories.
When I look back and think of what I thought of Christ when
I was four or five years of age, he seems to have been something
bright. I had some idea of him which seems to have been derived
from, or to have been a kind of reflection of, my father and my
mother : nothing as of myself, and nothing as from above, but a
kind of vague feeling that there was somewhere a wondrous Being,
with glorious attributes. Christ is, for the most part, hidden from
little children. He is a legend, a sweet story, to them. He is a
luminous thought. He is a mere suggestion of some vague influ-
ence of rare excellence.
But as children grow into young manhood, more and more
Christ begins to be taught to them in the form of historic facts and
of theological ideas. The Christ of whom we learn in the schools
and in the systems of theology is not the Christ who is introduced
to us by the Spirit of God afterward.
I know not whether it was owing simply to the accident of my
position ; but all my early thought of Christ was a thought of him
as a historic personage. I framed him myself out of history ; and
he was to me the Paragon of morality, and the Lesson of practical
life. He was the great Model of perfection. And there was some-
thing more than this ; but that more I could not fathom nor feel,
for the most part. For I was taught that sinfulness had shut me
out from God.
Now I know that nothing brings God so quick and so near as
9t sinking ; but the impression which was left on my mind by the
teaching that I received then, was, that if I grew up into goodness,
at last I could come to that state in which I might see Jesus and
be loved by him. As a child is told, " Father and mother will not
love you unless you are good," which is a lie, so I was impressed
with the thought that if I was good enough God would love me,
and if I was not good enough he would not love me. It was as if
I should say, at midnight, to the flowers that slept in the field, '' 0
flowers! awake; array yourselves in your beauteous colors; and
then you Avill see the sun." "Would not every mute root say, "How
shall I live if the sun does not shed its light and warmth upon
472 THE SIGNIFICANCE AND
me ?" As if there could be any life except that which God breathes
into the soul !
The Christ of my childhood was the Christ of duty, and the
Christ of historic facts. So far as the heavenly Christ was con-
cerned, it was him that I should earn by living right. But it gave
me very little comfort to be told that on that blessed day when,
with prayers, and strivings, and evolutions of thought and feeling,
and changes 'of conduct, specific and generic, I should rise up to a
true manhood, Christ would break upon me in all the beauty and
grandeur of his character as the Saviour of my soul. Alas! if
there is no Christ for men until they are competent to take care of
themselves, what will become of them ? Where is the help for hu-
man weakness to come from ? How is this want that is universal
to be supplied ? Is there to be no Christ that was born to seek
and to save sinning and sinful men in the early conceptions of
childhood ?
At last, out of these obscure and loose notions of Chdst, men
begin to have a conception of Christ as a Divine Being : not merely
as the Author of right conduct and right dispositions upon earth,
but as One who inspires, and then answers in some degree the
higher aspirations of the soul, so that it becomes conscious of its
own divinity and immortality.
Then come on periods of struggle — such days as the apostles
went through in the last few weeks of the life of Christ ; days with
hope and darkness alternating; days in which men's sense of spir-
itual need is profound, various, universal ; days in which they at-
tempt to supply their, spiritual want, and do not invoke the Divine
Presence, and so do not by the power of faith in Christ overcome the
evil that is in them, and bring every thought into subjection to the
mind and will of Christ; days in which Christ is to them an in-
spiration, but not a victory; days in which Christ is to them the
Forerunner, but not a present companion ; days in which Christ
sits oftentimes as a schoolmaster, and stern and severe at that in
the lessons that he gives ; days in which Christ sits as the Leader
to guide men through rough and thorny paths, but not as a bosom
Friend, and as the soul's rest.
At last there comes a Christ such as the apostles knew — Christ after
his resurrection, and after the descent of the Holy Ghost, at the Pen-
tecost, when they broke out into a personal experience in which their
Bouls came into an intimate union with their Lord. There is in
the experience of Christians a day in which from all these longing
and hesitant views, from all these partial and limiting notions of
Christ, they come into a personal adhesipn to him. They obtain a
EFFJSCT OF CHEISTS JBIETH. 473
view of hiin as the expression of divine love and mercy. Tlicy
obtain a sense of the power of God to lielp them to overcome evil in
themselves and in those around about them. They obtain a personal
and sympathetic faith in the Lord Jesus Christ by which they can
say, " The life which I now live in tlie flesli I live by faith of the
Son of God." There is a Christ that comes to men's imagination
sweeter than music ever came to the ear of the musician, or than
poetry ever came to the mind of the poet. There is an experience of
men who are truly Christians, such that, when Christ is transfigured
to them, he is no longer a Christ of the Book, though primarily he was
derived from the Book ; he is no longer the Christ of their instruc-
tion : he is the Christ that has been born in them, and that supplies
their special and personal needs. If we had the power of limning
our spiritual states as true Christians, we should give forth, in some
feeble form, the Christ that seems to us most joyful, most beautiful,
most divine ; the Christ that dwells with us in darkness; the Christ
that triumphs with us in light; the Christ with whom we weep;
the Christ who bends over us to forgive; the Christ who in the
midst of our vulgar earthly enjoyments is inspiring evermore holy
aspirations and desires and longings; the Christ who helps our
weakness ; the Christ who sets our dislocated joints so that our feet
shall walk, yea, run, in the royal way ; the Christ who begins to
come home to us so that he abides in our thoughts and imagina-
tions, and is with us in our prayer and converse.
If men should consort with Christ, how would the Christ of
every one of them have much of that one's own thoughts and
features and personality ! How would there be in every one a com-
mon element of joy and hope and victory ! How would there be a
feeling of victory derived largely from the personality of one Avho
had thus had Christ formed in him, taking something of the mold
of one's own self; bearing, as we may hope, something of ourselves
in such a way tliat when we rise to glory we shall recognize Christ
by seeing in him something that is in us, so that our identity and
his identity shall be the same.
To many this thought of Christ comes early. To many it comes
almost in the beginning. To many, let us hope, who are happily
organized or happily taught, it comes with the first dawning of the
understanding. Alas ! that so much of our life should be spent iu
getting rid of misteaching; in untwisting bad habits ; in throwing
out formations that had better not have been allowed to come in
at all.
How blessed are they who, not educated in scholastic distinc-
tions, are from the morning of their life taught to hold on to Christ
474 THE SIGNIFICANCE AND
as their dearest, sweetest Friend and Head, so that they grow np
into him' in all things! Blessed and fortunate are tbey. The
angels sing to such.
But many come to this thought of God in Christ Jesus, later,
not because they do not arrive at a state of susceptibility to spirit-
ual impressions until later years, but because they come to it
through very many struggles. There are many sins to be laid aside.
There are many evil habits to be overcome. There are many fro-
ward dispositions to be transformed. There is to be the subduing
of the will by the Divine Spirit. There is to be the effectual minis-
tration of providence. There is to be brought to bear the mellow-
ing influence of sorrow, the humbling influence of misfortunes, and
the influence which comes from breaking away from idolatrous
affections, and cleaving to those things which draw the soul God-
ward. The church ; its meetings; its ordinances; the winds that
blow; the clouds that float in the heavens; the music that cheers
the heart; objects of beauty that please the eye — all these things are
appointed of God as instruments and influences to raise the human
soul toward the divine. The affections of the household, all right
processes of social life, are God's ordinances. The ordinances of
the sanctuary are not more sacred or more effectual than those
providences of God in nature and society by Avhich he is perpetually
instructing and molding and preparing men's minds for the in-
dwelling of the Holy Ghost.
I profoundly believe that by the varied influences of the Spirit
of God, through instructions and inspirations, and experiences and
providences, one is at last brought into a state in which he can
open his soul and see Christ as a Being of love and mercy, and that
Christ consciously does enter into their thought, and form a sweet
partnership with them. Men look with unbelieving eyes upon any
such possibility ; but is there not an hour in which two noble souls
that hav(3'been coming up side by side through life find their feel-
ings changed toward each other ? Is there not an hour in which,
by some strange providence one word unlocks them each to the
other, and again locks them each in the other ? Is there not a
look that is a revelation ? Is there not a silence that is an inspira-
tion? And from that hour and moment do not their lives inspire
each other all the way onward to the gate of heaven ? And is it
strange that there should be an hour in which the greater friend-
ship and the greater love of God should be disclosed to us ? If we
are sons of Xjrod ; if we are away from home, and at school ; if we
are being prepared for the glorious vacation of death ; and the glo-
rious upmounting through it to our Father's house in heaven, is it
EFFECT OF CHBI8T8 BIETH. 475
strange that there comes an hour in which God meets the sou], and
the soul recognizes its Saviour, and rejoices in him ? Is it strange,
when we see the analogies and parallels of this experience among
men, that we recognize Avith inexpressible delight the greater power
and grandeur and nobleness of divine love ?
At last, when men come to this Saviour that is personal to
them, they come to the condition which the apostles were in after
the Pentecost. It is no longer the Christ of the New Testament —
that is, of the letter; it is no longer the Christ of the Catechism ;
it is no longer the Christ of men's conversation ; it is the Christ
of our own souls; it is the Christ of our own experiences ; it is that
which we feel to be our need supplied by our God.
Blessed are they of whom it may be said, "Their Christ at last
is born, and is formed in them." Blessed are you when men,
addressing you, can say, " To you a Saviour is born this day." For
men have traveled their two score years, yea their three score years,
often, before the Spirit of Christ to their knowledge is really born
in them, or is being born in them, the hope of glory.
Now let me ask you, have you ever been made to feel the need
of a divine Saviour ? Have your aspirations been so low that
nature could do for you all that you Avanted ? Has your sense of
character been so limited that you have felt no need of supernatural
help ? Has there been no immortality beckoning you from the fair
horizon ? Or, have all your hopes been within the bounds of the
horizon ? Is Christ to you anything but a great and disagreeable
duty whom you ought to know, and whom you ought to serve ?
Have you any life, any hope, any cheer in him ? You bear his
name. Christian brethren, to what purpose ? What i^ he to you ?
Are you merely followers of morality ? Are you merely ethical dis-
ciples ? Are you simply versed in theological questions ? Or, are
you really a believer in Christ's divinity ? Are you a sincere fol-
lower of him ? Are you willing to die for him ? Are you willing
to live for him ? Is Christ to you a personal Friend ? Is he a forgiv-
ing Saviour? Is he One from whom you receive an inspiration
that lifts you above the flesh and above the world into true and
spiritual commerce with invisit)le things and the invisible world ?
Is he One who makes you feel that you are a son of God, and an
heir of eternal glory? Have you had that experience which
quenches doubt ? Have you had that experience which burns up
infidelity in the soul ? Has Christ been with you ? Has God shar-
ken your soul with divine fervor and divine power? Or, are you
simply on the way toward your Christ ? Are you yet struggling
with thoughts and feehngs?
476" THE SIONIFIGANGH AND
There is for every one a Christ that shall bring peace. There
is a Christ of love that brings rest. There is a Christ that brings
victory to the soul. How rich are they who can look upon riches,
and say, " I am richer than they are"! How joyful are they who
can look upon joys, and say, "My joys are a whole octave higher
than those " ! How blessed are they who can look upon misfor-
tunes, and say, " I am set free from your power " ! How blessed
are they Avho can say to everything in this world, " I am glad to
have you go with me as far as you can help me upward ; but
further than that I can get along without you ! I have food, and
raiment, and inspiration, and joy unspeakable and full of glory,
and these are enough to caiTy me through " !
Is the Christ that I have described the Christ of your house-
hold ? Is this the Christ whom your children see that you lovo ^
Are there not those present who have been taught that religion
was gloomy and sad-faced ? Are there not those here who have
hoped yet one day to be religious, because they thought it was
hard to die without insurance ? Are there not those who, rather
than die and run a risk, are willing to be religious ? Are there
not those who look upon Christ's service as literally a yoke and a
burden, forgetting that Christ has declared that his yoke is easy,
and that his burden is light ? Are there not those who have no
sense of the glorified Christ ? Is your Christ dead in the letter and
buried in the Scripture? I call to you, and say. There is a love of
God, expressed by the Lord Jesus Christ, that Avaits for you, to
help your growth, and give inspiration to all that is noble in you,
that it may dominate, and pei'fectly conquer all that which is
carnal and base. ■ The nobler pui^poses of this life will be better ac-
complished through the help of God than through any other help;
and tliere is a Christ that waits at the door of every soul, and
knocks, saying, "I knock; open unto me." You do not have to
go far to find sweet experiences. Beyond and above earthly things
is a love which brings rest and peace — peace in life, and peace in
death ; and it brings joy and victory in heaven.
Eemcmber your father's God, remember your mother's God, re-
member the God of the Christian, ye wanderers ; ye that are un-
settled from your faith; ye that are reaping handfiils and not
bosomfuls of joy from natural fields, and are going further and
further away from a personal reliance upon God in Christ Jesus.
Remember, I beseech of you, all those early scenes and early hours
and early associations which so tended to bring you back to your
father's God and to the hope of your childhood.
Are there not tliose who have almost given up their Bible ?
EFFECT OF CHRIST S BIBTU. 477
Are there not many to whom every street in the city is more fa-
miliar than the ways of this old Book, this old Eden, where grow
every tree, and every fruit, and every flower of sweet and pure de-
light ? Have you forsaken your father's counsel ? Have you
forgotten your mother's comfort ? I call upon those who
have long been seeking to turn again to this old Book, to ask
God who in?,pired that to inspire them, that they may under-
stand its sacred truths, and that, catching from the letter the
outlines of these truths, they may become alive inwardly ; and
that Christ may come to them, not interpreted through the mere
text, but interpreted through the Spirit of God. And may that
Divine Spirit Avhicii has never forsaken the earthly church of God,
that Spirit which still keeps the truth alive in the earth, draw nea,r
to every one of j^ou.
If there be those among you who have sought Christ ; who
through fear or remorse have called upon him, or through trust
and love have leaned upon him; or if there be those who have re-
jected Christ, and would have none of him, I ask not that you take
the dogmas of the Church ; I ask not that you subscribe to auy
particular form of belief or confession of faith ; but I beseech of
yon to help yourselves by taking hold of that manifestation of God
in Christ Jesus which you need to cleanse 3-ou, and strengthen
you, and inspire you, and save you.
For, wlien at last the hour shall come — as certainly it will to us
all — in which that least obvious but greatest of conquerors, Death,
draws near to us, then all those things for which we have spent our
lives will be powerless. In the hour of death our money will be
forgotten. Pain will quench avarice. All honors and all plea:-
ures will fly away, and will scarcely abide as the figments of
an evanishing memory. In that hour of departing, when heart
and fle^h fail, then it is that that which to men is like an imagina-
tion, that that invisible, impalpable hope whieli tlie hand cannot
handle nor the eye see, but which dwells as a spirit in the soul,
begins, as all other things grow weak, to gather to itself ommpoteut
power. And as no thing on earth can cany you one single step
into the darkness, nor bridge for you the mighty abyss, this is that
power which, as it were, throws the brightest rainbow of life aci'oss
this world to tlie other, and oji which your footstei)s are planted ;
and you rise from glory to glory, until you stand in Zion and before
God, and are children of blessedness.
I call upon you, then, on this Sabbath day, to review your
thought of Christ, and to review your condition in reference to
him. Accept this Ijlessed Saviour as your inward life> your
478 TEE SIGNIFICANCE AND
strcngtli, your joy. Live Avith him. Live in liim. Let him live
in yon. , Die by his power, and rise by his power, and be with him
forever in glory.
And when that day shall come which cannot be long kept from
any of us, may I see you in heaven. May you behold me there.
And may these imperfect friendships, and this staggering walk of
life be zo gloriously transformed that then we shall behold each
other ripened in beauty and in perfect symmetry, where every tone
shall be as a note of music, and every joy shall have for its expres-
fcion the hio-hest anthems of the blessed.
PRAYER BEFORE THE SERMOK.
We draw near to thee, our Father, to thank thee for the mere ies we have
received through Jesus Christ our Lord— for the redemption of his blood ;
for the inspiration of his word; for the example of his life; for all the
revelation of thyself which he hath brought forth, living, or dyinj?, or living
again. If v.'e have knowledge of thee so that thou art near and dear to us,
we have received that knowledge through Jesus, who hath taught us what
divine life is, and from whom we have learned what is divine mercy and
pity. We have beheld his life, and known that it interpreted thine. His
heart hath taught us, better than words, what is the divine heart. And new
we come unto God through him. We behold God in him. We rejoice in him
as our Saviour. Standing for the iucompreheusible and the invisible, and
bringing near to us the things which were too high for our reach, we rejoice
in him, and live by faith of him. Through the love of Christ we purify our
souls. Dying we trust in him ; and we hope through his power to rise again
at the last day, and hope l)y him to be presented at the throne of his Father
T7ithout blemish or spot.
And now, O God, what thanks shall we give to thee for thy remembrance
of us, and for that sweet influence which is reached down to us from heaven
day by day ; for all the comfort which thou hast promised and hast sent ; for
the consolation which tliou hast ministered unto us through this long year,
and through the many weary years of life during which thou hast been
faithful to us? Thy words have been Yea and Amen. They have borne our
weight when we have leaned upon them. They have been a staff that did
not breafe. Thou hast been our way, and we have walked therein. And it
has been an ascending road, growing brighter and brighter, as leading toward
the perfect day.
And now, we desire to carry our hearts' affections to thee. We desire to
love thee more i)erfectly. We desire that thy love may work in us all purity
and nobility. We desire to follow thee, and, loving thee, to walk in thy
Spirit. We desire to practice the lesson of self-denial which thou hast
taught us. We rejoice when joy is the gift of God, and when its light cheers
£vnd comforts. We desire to take all that is vv^ithin us of reason, of taste,
of affection, our whole moral being, and to consecrate it to thy service and
to the welfai'c of men. Accept our consecration. Teach us from day to day
how more ijorfectly to find thee. Be thou, O Lord, in us, and dwell in us
imLil every faculty, every thought, every germ of thought, every part of
EFFECT OF CUIilSrS BIBTn. 479
our nature, shall be sanctified, so that Christ shall be formed in us ; so that
Jl'Sus shall be born in us the hope of glory. And we pray, O Lord our God,
that thou wilt make the knowledge of his blessed name more and more
sweet to the ears of those who do not now know him.
Grant, if there be any who are burdened with a sense of their inflrmity
and of their sinfulness, that they may behold in Jesus the Pardoner— the
Lamb of God that takes away the sin of the world. If there be those who
are walking in darkness and without light, arise upon their vision, O thou
Prince of ISalvation, and lead them in the royal way. If there be any who
have gone away from their tirst lovo, who have long ago ceased to have the
experience of faith and the blessedness of joy in Christ, restore them, thou
Shepherd. Bring them again into the fold, and into the sweet experience of
thy love.
We pray that thou wilt bless, to-night, those who are gathered together
here. May all the sacred associations of this hour be full of blessedness to
every one of our souls. Comfort those who need consolation. Cheer those
who are in darkness. Encourage those who are desponding. Forgive those
who are filled with sorrow for their sins. Succor those whose remorse
drives them toward the night, and who are in despair. O Lord, be thou a
Saviour ; and to-night, in the midst of this congregation, manifest thy power
of saving men from all evil in thought or in feeling, and of inspiring in
them every noble thought, and every worthy desire, and every upward aim,
and every purpose which thou dost approve.
We pray that thou wilt grant thy blessing to rest upon the aged, who
have well nigh fulfilled thy will, and who pause a little before they go
hence to be no more on earth. Wilt thou prepare them, like thy servant of
old, to say, from day to day, "Now, Lord, let thy servant depart in peace."
Draw near to those who are bearing the heat and burden of the day.
May they see how better to fulfill the law of love in their affairs; how to
disohargti all their duties in the true spirit of Christ. And we pray that as
their day is, their strength may be also.
Grant that the young may grow up in truth and purity and fidelity.
May they become of a stature surpassing that of their fathers. May they
more and more l)e filled with the spirit of Christ.
We pray that thou wilt grant thy blessing to rest on all the churches of
evei'y name. Be with all thy servants who are making known the truth as
it is in Jesus. Grant, we pray thee, that evil and error may be purged away ;
that men may see the brotherhood that is in man more and more perfc^ctly,
and that growing sympathy may draw together those who have been widely
sepai'ated. We pray that thy people may become one in sympathy. May
all those who love thee love one another, and have the unity of the Spirit.
May thy kingdom come in all the earth, and thy will be done throughout
the world, as it is in heaven.
And to the Father, the Son, and the Spirit, shall be the praise, forever
more. Amen.
PRAYER AFTER THE SERMON.
Our Father, we thank thee for all that thou hast thought and done for
niir sinful race. We cannot probe nor imderstand the mysteries of Christ,
nor of human life, nor of providence. We only kitow our need. We are as
children cast out upon the midnight ocean, who know neither' the depths,
nor tlie wimls, nor the storms; but who know that they are out on the
peiHous sea. And we cry out. Tempest-tossed and not comforted, at timea
480 EFFECT OF CHRIST'S BIRTH.
all that is in lis cries out for God. "We eat, and are biin^y again. We
drink, and are thirsty again. We laugh, and then forget to laugh. Sadness
is arovind about us and within us, and alternates uutil thou, O blesseel
Saviour, dost take up thine abode in the soul. Those who have thee for a
constant guest have joy and peace forever.
Now, we pray thee, draw near to all those who need thee. Teach those
who, needing thee, do not know it. Grant, we beseech of thee, that those
who are parching for thee may find thee. Help them. Speak comf oi tably
to them. May they not wait till they have something to bring to Christ
besides their wretchedness and their unhappiness. May they go to him as
they would go to their physician for the healing of their body. We beseech
of thee that there may be many who shall break through their sins, and
remove the distance which intervenes between them and Chi'ist. May ther(:;
1)6 some who to-night shall go out into the light and liberty of the sons of
God, and whose hearts from this time forth shall be able to cry out, Abba,
Father.
Be with us while we live. Mark out for us the path which we are to
walk. Give us willing feet and submissive hearts when the time shall come
that heaven wants us, and sends for us. And may we not misunderstand
death nor its beckonings, but rejoice in it as the messenger of God come to
rail us home— for we are homesick. And grant, at last, that as children
brought home, O Father, we may see thee as thou art, and be like unto thee.
And to thy name shall be all the praise and the glory, forever aiid over.
Amen.
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