Unspoken Sermons Series One
By George MacDonald.
Alexander Strahan, London
1867
The Child in the Midst
the Unspoken Sermons
THE CHILD IN THE MIDST.
And he came to Capernaum: and,
being in the house, he asked them, What was it that ye disputed
among yourselves by the way? But they held their peace: for by the
way they had disputed among themselves who should be the greatest.
And he sat down, and called the twelve, and saith unto them, If any
man desire to be first, the same shall be last of all, and servant
of all. And he took a child, and set him in the midst of them: and
when he had taken him in his arms, he said unto them, Whosoever
shall receive one of such children in my name, receiveth me; and
whosoever shall receive me, receiveth not me, but him that sent me. Mark ix. 33-37.
Of this passage in the life of our Lord,
the account given by St Mark is the more complete. But it may be
enriched and its lesson rendered yet more evident from the record of
St Matthew.
“Verily I say unto you, Except ye be converted, and
become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of
heaven. Whosoever shall humble himself as this little child, the
same is greatest in the kingdom of heaven. And whoso shall receive
one such little child in my name receiveth me. But whoso shall
offend one of these little ones that believe in me, it were better
for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he
were drowned in the depth of the sea.”
These passages record a lesson our Lord gave his
disciples against ambition, against emulation. It is not for the
sake of setting forth this lesson that I write about these words of
our Lord, but for the sake of a truth, a revelation about God, in
which his great argument reaches its height.
He took a little child—possibly a child of Peter; for
St Mark says that the incident fell at Capernaum, and “in the
house,”—a child therefore with some of the characteristics of Peter,
whose very faults were those of a childish nature. We might expect
the child of such a father to possess the childlike countenance and
bearing essential to the conveyance of the lesson which I now desire
to set forth as contained in the passage.
For it must be confessed that there are children who
are not childlike. One of the saddest and not least common sights in
the world is the face of a child whose mind is so brimful of worldly
wisdom that the human childishness has vanished from it, as well as
the divine childlikeness. For the childlike is the divine, and the
very word “marshals me the way that I was going.” But I must delay
my ascent to the final argument in order to remove a possible
difficulty, which, in turning us towards one of the grandest truths,
turns us away from the truth which the Lord had in view here.
The difficulty is this: Is it like the Son of man to
pick out the beautiful child, and leave the common child unnoticed?
What thank would he have in that? Do not even the publicans as much
as that? And do not our hearts revolt against the thought of it?
Shall the mother’s heart cleave closest to the deformed of her
little ones? and shall “Christ as we believe him” choose according
to the sight of the eye? Would he turn away from the child born in
sin and taught iniquity, on whose pinched face hunger and courage
and love of praise have combined to stamp the cunning of avaricious
age, and take to his arms the child of honest parents, such as Peter
and his wife, who could not help looking more good than the other?
That were not he who came to seek and to save that which was lost.
Let the man who loves his brother say which, in his highest moments
of love to God, which, when he is nearest to that ideal humanity
whereby a man shall be a hiding-place from the wind, he would clasp
to his bosom of refuge. Would it not be the evil-faced child,
because he needed it most? Yes; in God’s name, yes. For is not that
the divine way? Who that has read of the lost sheep, or the found
prodigal, even if he had no spirit bearing witness with his spirit,
will dare to say that it is not the divine way? Often, no doubt, it
will appear otherwise, for the childlike child is easier to save
than the other, and may come first. But the rejoicing in heaven is
greatest over the sheep that has wandered the farthest—perhaps was
born on the wild hill-side, and not in the fold at all. For such a
prodigal, the elder brother in heaven prays thus—“Lord, think about
my poor brother more than about me, for I know thee, and am at rest
in thee. I am with thee always.”
Why, then, do I think it necessary to say that this
child was probably Peter’s child, and certainly a child that looked
childlike because it was childlike? No amount of evil can be the
child. No amount of evil, not to say in the face, but in the habits,
or even in the heart of the child, can make it cease to be a child,
can annihilate the divine idea of childhood which moved in the heart
of God when he made that child after his own image. It is the
essential of which God speaks, the real by which he judges, the
undying of which he is the God.
Heartily I grant this. And if the object of our Lord
in taking the child in his arms had been to teach love to our
neighbour, love to humanity, the ugliest child he could have found,
would, perhaps, have served his purpose best. The man who receives
any, and more plainly he who receives the repulsive child, because
he is the offspring of God, because he is his own brother born, must
receive the Father in thus receiving the child. Whosoever gives a
cup of cold water to a little one, refreshes the heart of the
Father. To do as God does, is to receive God; to do a service to one
of his children is to receive the Father. Hence, any human being,
especially if wretched and woe-begone and outcast, would do as well
as a child for the purpose of setting forth this love of God to the
human being. Therefore something more is probably intended here. The
lesson will be found to lie not in the humanity, but in the
childhood of the child.
Again, if the disciples could have seen that the
essential childhood was meant, and not a blurred and
half-obliterated childhood, the most selfish child might have done
as well, but could have done no better than the one we have supposed
in whom the true childhood is more evident. But when the child was
employed as a manifestation, utterance, and sign of the truth that
lay in his childhood, in order that the eyes as well as the ears
should be channels to the heart, it was essential—not that the child
should be beautiful but—that the child should be childlike; that
those qualities which wake in our hearts, at sight, the love
peculiarly belonging to childhood, which is, indeed, but the
perception of the childhood, should at least glimmer out upon the
face of the chosen type. Would such an unchildlike child as we see
sometimes, now in a great house, clothed in purple and lace, now in
a squalid close, clothed in dirt and rags, have been fit for our
Lord’s purpose, when he had to say that his listeners must become
like this child? when the lesson he had to present to them was that
of the divine nature of the child, that of childlikeness? Would
there not have been a contrast between the child and our Lord’s
words, ludicrous except for its horror, especially seeing he set
forth the individuality of the child by saying, “this little child,”
“one of such children,” and “these little ones that believe in me?”
Even the feelings of pity and of love that would arise in a good
heart upon further contemplation of such a child, would have turned
it quite away from the lesson our Lord intended to give.
That this lesson did lie, not in the humanity, but in
the childhood of the child, let me now show more fully. The
disciples had been disputing who should be the greatest, and the
Lord wanted to show them that such a dispute had nothing whatever to
do with the way things went in his kingdom. Therefore, as a specimen
of his subjects, he took a child and set him before them. It was
not, it could not be, in virtue of his humanity, it was in virtue of
his childhood that this child was thus presented as representing a
subject of the kingdom. It was not to show the scope but the nature
of the kingdom. He told them they could not enter into the kingdom
save by becoming little children—by humbling themselves. For the
idea of ruling was excluded where childlikeness was the one
essential quality. It was to be no more who should rule, but who
should serve; no more who should look down upon his fellows from the
conquered heights of authority—even of sacred authority, but who
should look up honouring humanity, and ministering unto it, so that
humanity itself might at length be persuaded of its own honour as a
temple of the living God. It was to impress this lesson upon them
that he showed them the child. Therefore, I repeat, the lesson lay
in the childhood of the child.
But I now approach my especial object; for this
lesson led to the enunciation of a yet higher truth, upon which it
was founded, and from which indeed it sprung. Nothing is required of
man that is not first in God. It is because God is perfect that we
are required to be perfect. And it is for the revelation of God to
all the human souls, that they may be saved by knowing him, and so
becoming like him, that this child is thus chosen and set before
them in the gospel. He who, in giving the cup of water or the
embrace, comes into contact with the essential childhood of the
child—that is, embraces the childish humanity of it, (not he who
embraces it out of love to humanity, or even love to God as the
Father of it)—is partaker of the meaning, that is, the blessing, of
this passage. It is the recognition of the childhood as divine that
will show the disciple how vain the strife after relative place or
honour in the great kingdom.
For it is In my name. This means as representing me;
and, therefore, as being like me. Our Lord could not commission any
one to be received in his name who could not more or less represent
him; for there would be untruth and unreason. Moreover, he had just
been telling the disciples that they must become like this child;
and now, when he tells them to receive such a little child in his
name, it must surely imply something in common between them
all—something in which the child and Jesus meet—something in which
the child and the disciples meet. What else can that be than the
spiritual childhood? In my name does not mean because I will it. An
arbitrary utterance of the will of our Lord would certainly find ten
thousand to obey it, even to suffering, for one that will be able to
receive such a vital truth of his character as is contained in the
words; but it is not obedience alone that our Lord will have, but
obedience to the truth, that is, to the Light of the World, truth
beheld and known. In my name, if we take all we can find in it, the
full meaning which alone will harmonize and make the passage a
whole, involves a revelation from resemblance, from fitness to
represent and so reveal. He who receives a child, then, in the name
of Jesus, does so, perceiving wherein Jesus and the child are one,
what is common to them. He must not only see the ideal child in the
child he receives—that reality of loveliness which constitutes true
childhood, but must perceive that the child is like Jesus, or
rather, that the Lord is like the child, and may be embraced, yea,
is embraced, by every heart childlike enough to embrace a child for
the sake of his childness. I do not therefore say that none but
those who are thus conscious in the act partake of the blessing. But
a special sense, a lofty knowledge of blessedness, belongs to the
act of embracing a child as the visible likeness of the Lord
himself. For the blessedness is the perceiving of the truth—the
blessing is the truth itself—the God-known truth, that the Lord has
the heart of a child. The man who perceives this knows in himself
that he is blessed—blessed because that is true.
But the argument as to the meaning of our Lord’s
words, in my name, is incomplete, until we follow our Lord’s
enunciation to its second and higher stage: “He that receiveth me,
receiveth him that sent me.” It will be allowed that the connection
between the first and second link of the chain will probably be the
same as the connection between the second and third. I do not say it
is necessarily so; for I aim at no logical certainty. I aim at
showing, rather than at proving, to my reader, by means of my
sequences, the idea to which I am approaching. For if, once he
beholds it, he cannot receive it, if it does not shew itself to him
to be true, there would not only be little use in convincing him by
logic, but I allow that he can easily suggest other possible
connections in the chain, though, I assert, none so symmetrical.
What, then, is the connection between the second and third? How is
it that he who receives the Son receives the Father? Because the Son
is as the Father; and he whose heart can perceive the essential in
Christ, has the essence of the Father—that is, sees and holds to it
by that recognition, and is one therewith by recognition and
worship. What, then, next, is the connection between the first and
second? I think the same. “He that sees the essential in this child,
the pure childhood, sees that which is the essence of me,” grace and
truth—in a word, childlikeness. It follows not that the former is
perfect as the latter, but it is the same in kind, and therefore,
manifest in the child, reveals that which is in Jesus.
Then to receive a child in the name of Jesus is to
receive Jesus; to receive Jesus is to receive God; therefore to
receive the child is to receive God himself.
That such is the feeling of the words, and that such
was the feeling in the heart of our Lord when he spoke them, I may
show from another golden thread that may be traced through the
shining web of his golden words.
What is the kingdom of Christ? A rule of love, of
truth—a rule of service. The king is the chief servant in it. “The
kings of the earth have dominion: it shall not be so among you.”
“The Son of Man came to minister.” “My Father worketh hitherto, and
I work.” The great Workman is the great King, labouring for his own.
So he that would be greatest among them, and come nearest to the
King himself, must be the servant of all. It is like king like
subject in the kingdom of heaven. No rule of force, as of one kind
over another kind. It is the rule of kind, of nature, of deepest
nature—of God. If, then, to enter into this kingdom, we must become
children, the spirit of children must be its pervading spirit
throughout, from lowly subject to lowliest king. The lesson added by
St Luke to the presentation of the child is: “For he that is least
among you all, the same shall be great.” And St Matthew says:
“Whosoever shall humble himself as this little child, the same is
greatest in the kingdom of heaven.” Hence the sign that passes
between king and subject. The subject kneels in homage to the kings
of the earth: the heavenly king takes his subject in his arms. This
is the sign of the kingdom between them. This is the all-pervading
relation of the kingdom.
To give one glance backward, then:
To receive the child because God receives it, or for
its humanity, is one thing; to receive it because it is like God, or
for its childhood, is another. The former will do little to destroy
ambition. Alone it might argue only a wider scope to it, because it
admits all men to the arena of the strife. But the latter strikes at
the very root of emulation. As soon as even service is done for the
honour and not for the service-sake, the doer is that moment outside
the kingdom. But when we receive the child in the name of Christ,
the very childhood that we receive to our arms is humanity. We love
its humanity in its childhood, for childhood is the deepest heart of
humanity—its divine heart; and so in the name of the child we
receive all humanity. Therefore, although the lesson is not about
humanity, but about childhood, it returns upon our race, and we
receive our race with wider arms and deeper heart. There is, then,
no other lesson lost by receiving this; no heartlessness shown in
insisting that the child was a lovable—a childlike child.
If there is in heaven a picture of that wonderful
teaching, doubtless we shall see represented in it a dim childhood
shining from the faces of all that group of disciples of which the
centre is the Son of God with a child in his arms. The childhood,
dim in the faces of the men, must be shining trustfully clear in the
face of the child. But in the face of the Lord himself, the
childhood will be triumphant—all his wisdom, all his truth upholding
that radiant serenity of faith in his father. Verily, O Lord, this
childhood is life. Verily, O Lord, when thy tenderness shall have
made the world great, then, children like thee, will all men smile
in the face of the great God.
But to advance now to the highest point of this
teaching of our Lord: “He that receiveth me receiveth him that sent
me.” To receive a child in the name of God is to receive God
himself. How to receive him? As alone he can be received,—by knowing
him as he is. To know him is to have him in us. And that we may know
him, let us now receive this revelation of him, in the words of our
Lord himself. Here is the argument of highest import founded upon
the teaching of our master in the utterance before us.
God is represented in Jesus, for that God is like
Jesus: Jesus is represented in the child, for that Jesus is like the
child. Therefore God is represented in the child, for that he is
like the child. God is child-like. In the true vision of this fact
lies the receiving of God in the child.
Having reached this point, I have nothing more to do
with the argument; for if the Lord meant this—that is, if this be a
truth, he that is able to receive it will receive it: he that hath
ears to hear it will hear it. For our Lord’s arguments are for the
presentation of the truth, and the truth carries its own conviction
to him who is able to receive it.
But the word of one who has seen this truth may help
the dawn of a like perception in those who keep their faces turned
towards the east and its aurora; for men may have eyes, and, seeing
dimly, want to see more. Therefore let us brood a little over the
idea itself, and see whether it will not come forth so as to commend
itself to that spirit, which, one with the human spirit where it
dwells, searches the deep things of God. For, although the true
heart may at first be shocked at the truth, as Peter was shocked
when he said, “That be far from thee, Lord,” yet will it, after a
season, receive it and rejoice in it.
Let me then ask, do you believe in the Incarnation?
And if you do, let me ask further, Was Jesus ever less divine than
God? I answer for you, Never. He was lower, but never less divine.
Was he not a child then? You answer, “Yes, but not like other
children.” I ask, “Did he not look like other children?” If he
looked like them and was not like them, the whole was a deception, a
masquerade at best. I say he was a child, whatever more he might be.
God is man, and infinitely more. Our Lord became flesh, but did not
become man. He took on him the form of man: he was man already. And
he was, is, and ever shall be divinely childlike. He could never
have been a child if he would ever have ceased to be a child, for in
him the transient found nothing. Childhood belongs to the divine
nature. Obedience, then, is as divine as Will, Service as divine as
Rule. How? Because they are one in their nature; they are both a
doing of the truth. The love in them is the same. The Fatherhood and
the Sonship are one, save that the Fatherhood looks down lovingly,
and the Sonship looks up lovingly. Love is all. And God is all in
all. He is ever seeking to get down to us—to be the divine man to
us. And we are ever saying, “That be far from thee, Lord!” We are
careful, in our unbelief, over the divine dignity, of which he is
too grand to think. Better pleasing to God, it needs little daring
to say, is the audacity of Job, who, rushing into his presence, and
flinging the door of his presence—chamber to the wall, like a
troubled, it may be angry, but yet faithful child, calls aloud in
the ear of him whose perfect Fatherhood he has yet to learn: “Am I a
sea or a whale, that thou settest a watch over me?”
Let us dare, then, to climb the height of divine
truth to which this utterance of our Lord would lead us.
Does it not lead us up hither: that the devotion of
God to his creatures is perfect? that he does not think about
himself but about them? that he wants nothing for himself, but finds
his blessedness in the outgoing of blessedness.
Ah! it is a terrible—shall it be a lonely glory this?
We will draw near with our human response, our abandonment of self
in the faith of Jesus. He gives himself to us—shall not we give
ourselves to him? Shall we not give ourselves to each other whom he
loves?
For when is the child the ideal child in our eyes and
to our hearts? Is it not when with gentle hand he takes his father
by the beard, and turns that father’s face up to his brothers and
sisters to kiss? when even the lovely selfishness of love-seeking
has vanished, and the heart is absorbed in loving?
In this, then, is God like the child: that he is
simply and altogether our friend, our father—our more than friend,
father, and mother—our infinite love-perfect God. Grand and strong
beyond all that human imagination can conceive of poet-thinking and
kingly action, he is delicate beyond all that human tenderness can
conceive of husband or wife, homely beyond all that human heart can
conceive of father or mother. He has not two thoughts about us. With
him all is simplicity of purpose and meaning and effort and
end—namely, that we should be as he is, think the same thoughts,
mean the same things, possess the same blessedness. It is so plain
that any one may see it, every one ought to see it, every one shall
see it. It must be so. He is utterly true and good to us, nor shall
anything withstand his will.
How terribly, then, have the theologians
misrepresented God in the measures of the low and showy, not the
lofty and simple humanities! Nearly all of them represent him as a
great King on a grand throne, thinking how grand he is, and making
it the business of his being and the end of his universe to keep up
his glory, wielding the bolts of a Jupiter against them that take
his name in vain. They would not allow this, but follow out what
they say, and it comes much to this. Brothers, have you found our
king? There he is, kissing little children and saying they are like
God. There he is at table with the head of a fisherman lying on his
bosom, and somewhat heavy at heart that even he, the beloved
disciple, cannot yet understand him well. The simplest peasant who
loves his children and his sheep were—no, not a truer, for the other
is false, but—a true type of our God beside that monstrosity of a
monarch.
The God who is ever uttering himself in the changeful
profusions of nature; who takes millions of years to form a soul
that shall understand him and be blessed; who never needs to be, and
never is, in haste; who welcomes the simplest thought of truth or
beauty as the return for seed he has sown upon the old fallows of
eternity; who rejoices in the response of a faltering moment to the
age-long cry of his wisdom in the streets; the God of music, of
painting, of building, the Lord of Hosts, the God of mountains and
oceans; whose laws go forth from one unseen point of wisdom, and
thither return without an atom of loss; the God of history working
in time unto christianity; this God is the God of little children,
and he alone can be perfectly, abandonedly simple and devoted. The
deepest, purest love of a woman has its well-spring in him. Our
longing desires can no more exhaust the fulness of the treasures of
the Godhead, than our imagination can touch their measure. Of him
not a thought, not a joy, not a hope of one of his creatures can
pass unseen; and while one of them remains unsatisfied, he is not
Lord over all.
Therefore, with angels and with archangels, with the
spirits of the just made perfect, with the little children of the
kingdom, yea, with the Lord himself, and for all them that know him
not, we praise and magnify and laud his name in itself, saying Our
Father. We do not draw back for that we are unworthy, nor even for
that we are hard-hearted and care not for the good. For it is his
childlikeness that makes him our God and Father. The perfection of
his relation to us swallows up all our imperfections, all our
defects, all our evils; for our childhood is born of his fatherhood.
That man is perfect in faith who can come to God in the utter dearth
of his feelings and his desires, without a glow or an aspiration,
with the weight of low thoughts, failures, neglects, and wandering
forgetfulness, and say to him, “Thou art my refuge, because thou art
my home.”
Such a faith will not lead to presumption. The man
who can pray such a prayer will know better than another, that God
is not mocked; that he is not a man that he should repent; that
tears and entreaties will not work on him to the breach of one of
his laws; that for God to give a man because he asked for it that
which was not in harmony with his laws of truth and right, would be
to damn him—to cast him into the outer darkness. And he knows that
out of that prison the childlike, imperturbable God will let no man
come till he has paid the uttermost farthing.
And if he should forget this, the God to whom he
belongs does not forget it, does not forget him. Life is no series
of chances with a few providences sprinkled between to keep up a
justly failing belief, but one providence of God; and the man shall
not live long before life itself shall remind him, it may be in
agony of soul, of that which he has forgotten. When he prays for
comfort, the answer may come in dismay and terror and the turning
aside of the Father’s countenance; for love itself will, for love’s
sake, turn the countenance away from that which is not lovely; and
he will have to read, written upon the dark wall of his imprisoned
conscience, the words, awful and glorious, Our God is a consuming
fire.
The Consuming Fire
the Unspoken Sermons
THE CONSUMING FIRE.
Our God is a consuming fire.—Hebrews xii. 29.
Nothing is inexorable but love. Love
which will yield to prayer is imperfect and poor. Nor is it then the
love that yields, but its alloy. For if at the voice of entreaty
love conquers displeasure, it is love asserting itself, not love
yielding its claims. It is not love that grants a boon unwillingly;
still less is it love that answers a prayer to the wrong and hurt of
him who prays. Love is one, and love is changeless.
For love loves unto purity. Love has ever in view the
absolute loveliness of that which it beholds. Where loveliness is
incomplete, and love cannot love its fill of loving, it spends
itself to make more lovely, that it may love more; it strives for
perfection, even that itself may be perfected—not in itself, but in
the object. As it was love that first created humanity, so even
human love, in proportion to its divinity, will go on creating the
beautiful for its own outpouring. There is nothing eternal but that
which loves and can be loved, and love is ever climbing towards the
consummation when such shall be the universe, imperishable, divine.
Therefore all that is not beautiful in the beloved,
all that comes between and is not of love’s kind, must be destroyed.
And our God is a consuming fire.
If this be hard to understand, it is as the simple,
absolute truth is hard to understand. It may be centuries of ages
before a man comes to see a truth—ages of strife, of effort, of
aspiration. But when once he does see it, it is so plain that he
wonders he could have lived without seeing it. That he did not
understand it sooner was simply and only that he did not see it. To
see a truth, to know what it is, to understand it, and to love it,
are all one. There is many a motion towards it, many a misery for
want of it, many a cry of the conscience against the neglect of it,
many a dim longing for it as an unknown need before at length the
eyes come awake, and the darkness of the dreamful night yields to
the light of the sun of truth. But once beheld it is for ever. To
see one divine fact is to stand face to face with essential eternal
life.
For this vision of truth God has been working for
ages of ages. For this simple condition, this apex of life, upon
which a man wonders like a child that he cannot make other men see
as he sees, the whole labour of God’s science, history, poetry—from
the time when the earth gathered itself into a lonely drop of fire
from the red rim of the driving sun-wheel to the time when Alexander
John Scott worshipped him from its face—was evolving truth upon
truth in lovely vision, in torturing law, never lying, never
repenting; and for this will the patience of God labour while there
is yet a human soul whose eyes have not been opened, whose
child-heart has not yet been born in him. For this one condition of
humanity, this simple beholding, has all the outthinking of God
flowed in forms innumerable and changeful from the foundation of the
world; and for this, too, has the divine destruction been going
forth; that his life might be our life, that in us, too, might dwell
that same consuming fire which is essential love.
Let us look at the utterance of the apostle which is
crowned with this lovely terror: “Our God is a consuming fire.”
“Wherefore, we receiving a kingdom which cannot be
moved, let us have grace, whereby we may serve God acceptably with
reverence and godly fear, for our God is a consuming fire.”—We have
received a kingdom that cannot be moved—whose nature is immovable:
let us have grace to serve the Consuming Fire, our God, with divine
fear; not with the fear that cringes and craves, but with the bowing
down of all thoughts, all delights, all loves before him who is the
life of them all, and will have them all pure. The kingdom he has
given us cannot be moved, because it has nothing weak in it: it is
of the eternal world, the world of being, of truth. We, therefore,
must worship him with a fear pure as the kingdom is unshakeable. He
will shake heaven and earth, that only the unshakeable may remain,
(verse 27): he is a consuming fire, that only that which cannot be
consumed may stand forth eternal. It is the nature of God, so
terribly pure that it destroys all that is not pure as fire, which
demands like purity in our worship. He will have purity. It is not
that the fire will burn us if we do not worship thus; but that the
fire will burn us until we worship thus; yea, will go on burning
within us after all that is foreign to it has yielded to its force,
no longer with pain and consuming, but as the highest consciousness
of life, the presence of God. When evil, which alone is consumable,
shall have passed away in his fire from the dwellers in the
immovable kingdom, the nature of man shall look the nature of God in
the face, and his fear shall then be pure; for an eternal, that is a
holy fear, must spring from a knowledge of the nature, not from a
sense of the power. But that which cannot be consumed must be one
within itself, a simple existence; therefore in such a soul the fear
towards God will be one with the homeliest love. Yea, the fear of
God will cause a man to flee, not from him, but from himself; not
from him, but to him, the Father of himself, in terror lest he
should do Him wrong or his neighbour wrong. And the first words
which follow for the setting forth of that grace whereby we may
serve God acceptably are these—“Let brotherly love continue.” To
love our brother is to worship the Consuming Fire.
The symbol of the consuming fire would seem to have
been suggested to the writer by the fire that burned on the mountain
of the old law. That fire was part of the revelation of God there
made to the Israelites. Nor was it the first instance of such a
revelation. The symbol of God’s presence, before which Moses had to
put off his shoes, and to which it was not safe for him to draw
near, was a fire that did not consume the bush in which it burned.
Both revelations were of terror. But the same symbol employed by a
writer of the New Testament should mean more, not than it meant
before, but than it was before employed to express; for it could not
have been employed to express more than it was possible for them to
perceive. What else than terror could a nation of slaves, into whose
very souls the rust of their chains had eaten, in whose memory
lingered the smoke of the flesh-pots of Egypt, who, rather than not
eat of the food they liked best, would have gone back to the house
of their bondage—what else could such a nation see in that fire than
terror and destruction? How should they think of purification by
fire? They had yet no such condition of mind as could generate such
a thought. And if they had had the thought, the notion of the
suffering involved would soon have overwhelmed the notion of
purification. Nor would such a nation have listened to any teaching
that was not supported by terror. Fear was that for which they were
fit. They had no worship for any being of whom they had not to be
afraid.
Was then this show upon Mount Sinai a device to move
obedience, such as bad nurses employ with children? a hint of vague
and false horror? Was it not a true revelation of God?
If it was not a true revelation, it was none at all,
and the story is either false, or the whole display was a political
trick of Moses. Those who can read the mind of Moses will not easily
believe the latter, and those who understand the scope of the
pretended revelation, will see no reason for supposing the former.
That which would be politic, were it a deception, is not therefore
excluded from the possibility of another source. Some people believe
so little in a cosmos or ordered world, that the very argument of
fitness is a reason for unbelief.
At all events, if God showed them these things, God
showed them what was true. It was a revelation of himself. He will
not put on a mask. He puts on a face. He will not speak out of
flaming fire if that flaming fire is alien to him, if there is
nothing in him for that flaming fire to reveal. Be his children ever
so brutish, he will not terrify them with a lie.
It was a revelation, but a partial one; a true
symbol, not a final vision.
No revelation can be other than partial. If for true
revelation a man must be told all the truth, then farewell to
revelation; yea, farewell to the sonship. For what revelation, other
than a partial, can the highest spiritual condition receive of the
infinite God? But it is not therefore untrue because it is partial.
Relatively to a lower condition of the receiver, a more partial
revelation might be truer than that would be which constituted a
fuller revelation to one in a higher condition; for the former might
reveal much to him, the latter might reveal nothing. Only, whatever
it might reveal, if its nature were such as to preclude development
and growth, thus chaining the man to its incompleteness, it would be
but a false revelation fighting against all the divine laws of human
existence. The true revelation rouses the desire to know more by the
truth of its incompleteness.
Here was a nation at its lowest: could it receive
anything but a partial revelation, a revelation of fear? How should
the Hebrews be other than terrified at that which was opposed to all
they knew of themselves, beings judging it good to honour a golden
calf? Such as they were, they did well to be afraid. They were in a
better condition, acknowledging if only a terror above them, flaming
on that unknown mountain height, than stooping to worship the idol
below them. Fear is nobler than sensuality. Fear is better than no
God, better than a god made with hands. In that fear lay deep hidden
the sense of the infinite. The worship of fear is true, although
very low; and though not acceptable to God in itself, for only the
worship of spirit and of truth is acceptable to him, yet even in his
sight it is precious. For he regards men not as they are merely, but
as they shall be; not as they shall be merely, but as they are now
growing, or capable of growing, towards that image after which he
made them that they might grow to it. Therefore a thousand stages,
each in itself all but valueless, are of inestimable worth as the
necessary and connected gradations of an infinite progress. A
condition which of declension would indicate a devil, may of growth
indicate a saint. So far then the revelation, not being final any
more than complete, and calling forth the best of which they were
now capable, so making future and higher revelation possible, may
have been a true one.
But we shall find that this very revelation of fire
is itself, in a higher sense, true to the mind of the rejoicing
saint as to the mind of the trembling sinner. For the former sees
farther into the meaning of the fire, and knows better what it will
do to him. It is a symbol which needed not to be superseded, only
unfolded. While men take part with their sins, while they feel as
if, separated from their sins, they would be no longer themselves,
how can they understand that the lightning word is a Saviour—that
word which pierces to the dividing between the man and the evil,
which will slay the sin and give life to the sinner? Can it be any
comfort to them to be told that God loves them so that he will burn
them clean. Can the cleansing of the fire appear to them anything
beyond what it must always, more or less, be—a process of torture?
They do not want to be clean, and they cannot bear to be tortured.
Can they then do other, or can we desire that they should do other,
than fear God, even with the fear of the wicked, until they learn to
love him with the love of the holy. To them Mount Sinai is crowned
with the signs of vengeance. And is not God ready to do unto them
even as they fear, though with another feeling and a different end
from any which they are capable of supposing? He is against sin: in
so far as, and while, they and sin are one, he is against
them—against their desires, their aims, their fears, and their
hopes; and thus he is altogether and always for them. That thunder
and lightning and tempest, that blackness torn with the sound of a
trumpet, that visible horror billowed with the voice of words, was
all but a faint image to the senses of the slaves of what God thinks
and feels against vileness and selfishness, of the unrest of
unassuageable repulsion with which he regards such conditions; that
so the stupid people, fearing somewhat to do as they would, might
leave a little room for that grace to grow in them, which would at
length make them see that evil, and not fire, is the fearful thing;
yea, so transform them that they would gladly rush up into the
trumpet-blast of Sinai to escape the flutes around the golden calf.
Could they have understood this, they would have needed no Mount
Sinai. It was a true, and of necessity a partial revelation—partial
in order to be true.
Even Moses, the man of God, was not ready to receive
the revelation in store; not ready, although from love to his people
he prayed that God would even blot him out of his book of life. If
this means that he offered to give himself as a sacrifice instead of
them, it would show reason enough why he could not be glorified with
the vision of the Redeemer. For so he would think to appease God,
not seeing that God was as tender as himself, not seeing that God is
the Reconciler, the Redeemer, not seeing that the sacrifice of the
heart is the atonement for which alone he cares. He would be blotted
out, that their names might be kept in. Certainly when God told him
that he that had sinned should suffer for it, Moses could not see
that this was the kindest thing that God could do. But I doubt if
that was what Moses meant. It seems rather the utterance of a divine
despair:—he would not survive the children of his people. He did not
care for a love that would save him alone, and send to the dust
those thousands of calf-worshipping brothers and sisters. But in
either case, how much could Moses have understood, if he had seen
the face instead of the back of that form that passed the clift of
the rock amidst the thunderous vapours of Sinai? Had that form
turned and that face looked upon him, the face of him who was more
man than any man; the face through which the divine emotion would,
in the ages to come, manifest itself to the eyes of men, bowed, it
might well be, at such a moment, in anticipation of the crown with
which the children of the people for whom Moses pleaded with his
life, would one day crown him; the face of him who was bearing and
was yet to bear their griefs and carry their sorrows, who is now
bearing our griefs and carrying our sorrows; the face of the Son of
God, who, instead of accepting the sacrifice of one of his creatures
to satisfy his justice or support his dignity, gave himself utterly
unto them, and therein to the Father by doing his lovely will; who
suffered unto the death, not that men might not suffer, but that
their suffering might be like his, and lead them up to his
perfection; if that face, I say, had turned and looked upon Moses,
would Moses have lived? Would he not have died, not of splendour,
not of sorrow, (terror was not there,) but of the actual sight of
the incomprehensible? If infinite mystery had not slain him, would
he not have gone about dazed, doing nothing, having no more any
business that he could do in the world, seeing God was to him
altogether unknown? For thus a full revelation would not only be no
revelation, but the destruction of all revelation.
“May it not then hurt to say that God is Love, all
love, and nothing other than love? It is not enough to answer that
such is the truth, even granted that it is. Upon your own showing,
too much revelation may hurt by dazzling and blinding.”
There is a great difference between a mystery of God
that no man understands, and a mystery of God laid hold of, let it
be but by one single man. The latter is already a revelation; and,
passing through that man’s mind, will be so presented, it may be so
feebly presented, that it will not hurt his fellows. Let God conceal
as he will: (although I believe he is ever destroying concealment,
ever giving all that he can, all that men can receive at his hands,
that he does not want to conceal anything, but to reveal
everything,) the light which any man has received is not to be put
under a bushel; it is for him and his fellows. In sowing the seed he
will not withhold his hand because there are thorns and stony places
and waysides. He will think that in some cases even a bird of the
air may carry the matter, that the good seed may be too much for the
thorns, that that which withers away upon the stony place may yet
leave there, by its own decay, a deeper soil for the next seed to
root itself in. Besides, they only can receive the doctrine who have
ears to hear. If the selfish man could believe it, he would
misinterpret it; but he cannot believe it. It is not possible that
he should. But the loving soul, oppressed by wrong teaching, or
partial truth claiming to be the whole, will hear, understand,
rejoice.
For, when we say that God is Love, do we teach men
that their fear of him is groundless? No. As much as they fear will
come upon them, possibly far more. But there is something beyond
their fear,—a divine fate which they cannot withstand, because it
works along with the human individuality which the divine
individuality has created in them. The wrath will consume what they
call themselves; so that the selves God made shall appear, coming
out with tenfold consciousness of being, and bringing with them all
that made the blessedness of the life the men tried to lead without
God. They will know that now first are they fully themselves. The
avaricious, weary, selfish, suspicious old man shall have passed
away. The young, ever young self, will remain. That which they
thought themselves shall have vanished: that which they felt
themselves, though they misjudged their own feelings, shall
remain—remain glorified in repentant hope. For that which cannot be
shaken shall remain. That which is immortal in God shall remain in
man. The death that is in them shall be consumed.
It is the law of Nature—that is, the law of God—that
all that is destructible shall be destroyed. When that which is
immortal buries itself in the destructible—when it receives all the
messages from without, through the surrounding region of decadence,
and none from within, from the eternal doors—it cannot, though
immortal still, know its own immortality. The destructible must be
burned out of it, or begin to be burned out of it, before it can
partake of eternal life. When that is all burnt away and gone, then
it has eternal life. Or rather, when the fire of eternal life has
possessed a man, then the destructible is gone utterly, and he is
pure. Many a man’s work must be burned, that by that very burning he
may be saved—“so as by fire.” Away in smoke go the lordships, the
Rabbi-hoods of the world, and the man who acquiesces in the burning
is saved by the fire; for it has destroyed the destructible, which
is the vantage point of the deathly, which would destroy both body
and soul in hell. If still he cling to that which can be burned, the
burning goes on deeper and deeper into his bosom, till it reaches
the roots of the falsehood that enslaves him—possibly by looking
like the truth.
The man who loves God, and is not yet pure, courts
the burning of God. Nor is it always torture. The fire shows itself
sometimes only as light—still it will be fire of purifying. The
consuming fire is just the original, the active form of Purity,—that
which makes pure, that which is indeed Love, the creative energy of
God. Without purity there can be as no creation so no persistence.
That which is not pure is corruptible, and corruption cannot inherit
incorruption.
The man whose deeds are evil, fears the burning. But
the burning will not come the less that he fears it or denies it.
Escape is hopeless. For Love is inexorable. Our God is a consuming
fire. He shall not come out till he has paid the uttermost farthing.
If the man resists the burning of God, the consuming
fire of Love, a terrible doom awaits him, and its day will come. He
shall be cast into the outer darkness who hates the fire of God.
What sick dismay shall then seize upon him! For let a man think and
care ever so little about God, he does not therefore exist without
God. God is here with him, upholding, warming, delighting, teaching
him—making life a good thing to him. God gives him himself, though
he knows it not. But when God withdraws from a man as far as that
can be without the man’s ceasing to be; when the man feels himself
abandoned, hanging in a ceaseless vertigo of existence upon the
verge of the gulf of his being, without support, without refuge,
without aim, without end—for the soul has no weapons wherewith to
destroy herself—with no inbreathing of joy, with nothing to make
life good;—then will he listen in agony for the faintest sound of
life from the closed door; then, if the moan of suffering humanity
ever reaches the ear of the outcast of darkness, he will be ready to
rush into the very heart of the Consuming Fire to know life once
more, to change this terror of sick negation, of unspeakable death,
for that region of painful hope. Imagination cannot mislead us into
too much horror of being without God—that one living death. Is not
this
to be worse than worst
Of those that lawless and incertain thoughts
Imagine howling?
But with this divine difference: that the outer
darkness is but the most dreadful form of the consuming fire—the
fire without light—the darkness visible, the black flame. God hath
withdrawn himself, but not lost his hold. His face is turned away,
but his hand is laid upon him still. His heart has ceased to beat
into the man’s heart, but he keeps him alive by his fire. And that
fire will go searching and burning on in him, as in the highest
saint who is not yet pure as he is pure.
But at length, O God, wilt thou not cast Death and
Hell into the lake of Fire—even into thine own consuming self? Death
shall then die everlastingly,
And Hell itself will pass away,
And leave her dolorous mansions to the peering day.
Then indeed wilt thou be all in all. For then our
poor brothers and sisters, every one—O God, we trust in thee, the
Consuming Fire—shall have been burnt clean and brought home. For if
their moans, myriads of ages away, would turn heaven for us into
hell—shall a man be more merciful than God? Shall, of all his
glories, his mercy alone not be infinite? Shall a brother love a
brother more than The Father loves a son?—more than The Brother
Christ loves his brother? Would he not die yet again to save one
brother more?
As for us, now will we come to thee, our Consuming
Fire. And thou wilt not burn us more than we can bear. But thou wilt
burn us. And although thou seem to slay us, yet will we trust in
thee even for that which thou hast not spoken, if by any means at
length we may attain unto the blessedness of those who have not seen
and yet have believed.
The Higher Faith
the Unspoken Sermons
THE HIGHER FAITH.
Jesus saith unto him, Thomas,
because thou hast seen me, thou hast believed: blessed are they that
have not seen, and yet have believed.—John xx. 29.
The aspiring child is often checked by
the dull disciple who has learned his lessons so imperfectly that he
has never got beyond his school-books. Full of fragmentary rules, he
has perceived the principle of none of them. The child draws near to
him with some outburst of unusual feeling, some scintillation of a
lively hope, some wide-reaching imagination that draws into the
circle of religious theory the world of nature, and the yet wider
world of humanity, for to the child the doings of the Father fill
the spaces; he has not yet learned to divide between God and nature,
between Providence and grace, between love and benevolence;—the
child comes, I say, with his heart full, and the answer he receives
from the dull disciple is—“God has said nothing about that in his
word, therefore we have no right to believe anything about it. It is
better not to speculate on such matters. However desirable it may
seem to us, we have nothing to do with it. It is not revealed.” For
such a man is incapable of suspecting, that what has remained hidden
from him may have been revealed to the babe. With the authority,
therefore, of years and ignorance, he forbids the child, for he
believes in no revelation but the Bible, and in the word of that
alone. For him all revelation has ceased with and been buried in the
Bible, to be with difficulty exhumed, and, with much questioning of
the decayed form, re-united into a rigid skeleton of metaphysical
and legal contrivance for letting the love of God have its way
unchecked by the other perfections of his being.
But to the man who would live throughout the whole
divine form of his being, not confining himself to one broken corner
of his kingdom, and leaving the rest to the demons that haunt such
deserts, a thousand questions will arise to which the Bible does not
even allude. Has he indeed nothing to do with such? Do they lie
beyond the sphere of his responsibility? “Leave them,” says the dull
disciple. “I cannot,” returns the man. “Not only does that degree of
peace of mind without which action is impossible, depend upon the
answers to these questions, but my conduct itself must correspond to
these answers.” “Leave them at least till God chooses to explain, if
he ever will.” “No. Questions imply answers. He has put the
questions in my heart; he holds the answers in his. I will seek them
from him. I will wait, but not till I have knocked. I will be
patient, but not till I have asked. I will seek until I find. He has
something for me. My prayer shall go up unto the God of my life.”
Sad, indeed, would the whole matter be, if the Bible
had told us everything God meant us to believe. But herein is the
Bible itself greatly wronged. It nowhere lays claim to be regarded
as the Word, the Way, the Truth. The Bible leads us to Jesus, the
inexhaustible, the ever unfolding Revelation of God. It is Christ
“in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge,” not the
Bible, save as leading to him. And why are we told that these
treasures are hid in him who is the Revelation of God? Is it that we
should despair of finding them and cease to seek them? Are they not
hid in him that they may be revealed to us in due time—that is, when
we are in need of them? Is not their hiding in him the mediatorial
step towards their unfolding in us? Is he not the Truth?—the Truth
to men? Is he not the High Priest of his brethren, to answer all the
troubled questionings that arise in their dim humanity? For it is
his heart which Contains of good, wise, just, the perfect shape.
Didymus answers, “No doubt, what we know not now, we
shall know hereafter.” Certainly there may be things which the mere
passing into another stage of existence will illuminate; but the
questions that come here, must be inquired into here, and if not
answered here, then there too until they be answered. There is more
hid in Christ than we shall ever learn, here or there either; but
they that begin first to inquire will soonest be gladdened with
revelation; and with them he will be best pleased, for the slowness
of his disciples troubled him of old. To say that we must wait for
the other world, to know the mind of him who came to this world to
give himself to us, seems to me the foolishness of a worldly and
lazy spirit. The Son of God is the Teacher of men, giving to them of
his Spirit—that Spirit which manifests the deep things of God, being
to a man the mind of Christ. The great heresy of the Church of the
present day is unbelief in this Spirit. The mass of the Church does
not believe that the Spirit has a revelation for every man
individually—a revelation as different from the revelation of the
Bible, as the food in the moment of passing into living brain and
nerve differs from the bread and meat. If we were once filled with
the mind of Christ, we should know that the Bible had done its work,
was fulfilled, and had for us passed away, that thereby the Word of
our God might abide for ever. The one use of the Bible is to make us
look at Jesus, that through him we might know his Father and our
Father, his God and our God. Till we thus know Him, let us hold the
Bible dear as the moon of our darkness, by which we travel towards
the east; not dear as the sun whence her light cometh, and towards
which we haste, that, walking in the sun himself, we may no more
need the mirror that reflected his absent brightness.
But this doctrine of the Spirit is not my end now,
although, were it not true, all our religion would be vain, that of
St Paul and that of Socrates. What I want to say and show, if I may,
is, that a man will please God better by believing some things that
are not told him, than by confining his faith to those things that
are expressly said—said to arouse in us the truth-seeing faculty,
the spiritual desire, the prayer for the good things which God will
give to them that ask him.
“But is not this dangerous doctrine? Will not a man be
taught thus to believe the things he likes best, even to pray for
that which he likes best? And will he not grow arrogant in his
confidence?”
If it be true that the Spirit strives with our spirit;
if it be true that God teaches men, we may safely leave those
dreaded results to him. If the man is of the Lord’s company, he is
safer with him than with those who would secure their safety by
hanging on the outskirts and daring nothing. If he is not taught of
God in that which he hopes for, God will let him know it. He will
receive something else than he prays for. If he can pray to God for
anything not good, the answer will come in the flames of that
consuming fire. These will soon bring him to some of his spiritual
senses. But it will be far better for him to be thus sharply
tutored, than to go on a snail’s pace in the journey of the
spiritual life. And for arrogance, I have seen nothing breed it
faster or in more offensive forms than the worship of the letter.
And to whom shall a man, whom the blessed God has
made, look for what he likes best, but to that blessed God? If we
have been indeed enabled to see that God is our Father, as the Lord
taught us, let us advance from that truth to understand that he is
far more than father—that his nearness to us is beyond the
embodiment of the highest idea of father; that the fatherhood of God
is but a step towards the Godhood for them that can receive it. What
a man likes best may be God’s will, may be the voice of the Spirit
striving with his spirit, not against it; and if, as I have said, it
be not so—if the thing he asks is not according to his will—there is
that consuming fire. The danger lies, not in asking from God what is
not good, nor even in hoping to receive it from him, but in not
asking him, in not having him of our council. Nor will the fact that
we dare not inquire his will, preserve us from the necessity of
acting in some such matter as we call unrevealed, and where shall we
find ourselves then? Nor, once more, for such a disposition of mind
is it likely that the book itself will contain much of a revelation.
The whole matter may safely be left to God.
But I doubt if a man can ask anything from God that
is bad. Surely one who has begun to pray to him is child enough to
know the bad from the good when it has come so near him, and dares
not pray for that. If you refer me to David praying such fearful
prayers against his enemies, I answer, you must read them by your
knowledge of the man himself and his history. Remember that this is
he who, with the burning heart of an eastern, yet, when his greatest
enemy was given into his hands, instead of taking the vengeance of
an eastern, contented himself with cutting off the skirt of his
garment. It was justice and right that he craved in his soul,
although his prayers took a wild form of words. God heard him, and
gave him what contented him. In a good man at least, “revenge is,”
as Lord Bacon says, “a kind of wild justice,” and is easily
satisfied. The hearts desire upon such a one’s enemies is best met
and granted when the hate is changed into love and compassion.
But it is about hopes rather than prayers that I wish
to write.
What should I think of my child, if I found that he
limited his faith in me and hope from me to the few promises he had
heard me utter! The faith that limits itself to the promises of God,
seems to me to partake of the paltry character of such a faith in my
child—good enough for a Pagan, but for a Christian a miserable and
wretched faith. Those who rest in such a faith would feel yet more
comfortable if they had God’s bond instead of his word, which they
regard not as the outcome of his character, but as a pledge of his
honour. They try to believe in the truth of his word, but the truth
of his Being, they understand not. In his oath they persuade
themselves that they put confidence: in himself they do not believe,
for they know him not. Therefore it is little wonder that they
distrust those swellings of the heart which are his drawings of the
man towards him, as sun and moon heave the ocean mass heavenward.
Brother, sister, if such is your faith, you will not, must not stop
there. You must come out of this bondage of the law to which you
give the name of grace, for there is little that is gracious in it.
You will yet know the dignity of your high calling, and the love of
God that passeth knowledge. He is not afraid of your presumptuous
approach to him. It is you who are afraid to come near him. He is
not watching over his dignity. It is you who fear to be sent away as
the disciples would have sent away the little children. It is you
who think so much about your souls and are so afraid of losing your
life, that you dare not draw near to the Life of life, lest it
should consume you.
Our God, we will trust thee. Shall we not find thee
equal to our faith? One day, we shall laugh ourselves to scorn that
we looked for so little from thee; for thy giving will not be
limited by our hoping.
O thou of little faith! “in everything,”—I am quoting
your own Bible; nay, more, I am quoting a divine soul that knew his
master Christ, and in his strength opposed apostles, not to say
christians, to their faces, because they could not believe more than
a little in God; could believe only for themselves and not for their
fellows; could believe for the few of the chosen nation, for whom
they had God’s ancient word, but could not believe for the multitude
of the nations, for the millions of hearts that God had made to
search after him and find him;—“In everything,” says St Paul, “In
everything, by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your
requests be made known unto God.” For this everything, nothing is
too small. That it should trouble us is enough. There is some
principle involved in it worth the notice even of God himself, for
did he not make us so that the thing does trouble us? And surely for
this everything, nothing can be too great. When the Son of man
cometh and findeth too much faith on the earth—may God in his mercy
slay us. Meantime, we will hope and trust.
Do you count it a great faith to believe what God has
said? It seems to me, I repeat, a little faith, and, if alone,
worthy of reproach. To believe what he has not said is faith indeed,
and blessed. For that comes of believing in Him. Can you not believe
in God himself? Or, confess,—do you not find it so hard to believe
what he has said, that even that is almost more than you can do? If
I ask you why, will not the true answer be—“Because we are not quite
sure that he did say it”? If you believed in God you would find it
easy to believe the word. You would not even need to inquire whether
he had said it: you would know that he meant it.
Let us then dare something. Let us not always be
unbelieving children. Let us keep in mind that the Lord, not
forbidding those who insist on seeing before they will believe,
blesses those who have not seen and yet have believed—those who
trust in him more than that—who believe without the sight of the
eyes, without the hearing of the ears. They are blessed to whom a
wonder is not a fable, to whom a mystery is not a mockery, to whom a
glory is not an unreality—who are content to ask, “Is it like Him?”
It is a dull-hearted, unchildlike people that will be always putting
God in mind of his promises. Those promises are good to reveal what
God is; if they think them good as binding God, let them have it so
for the hardness of their hearts. They prefer the Word to the
Spirit: it is theirs.
Even such will leave us—some of them will, if not
all—to the “uncovenanted mercies of God.” We desire no less; we hope
for no better. Those are the mercies beyond our height, beyond our
depth, beyond our reach. We know in whom we have believed, and we
look for that which it hath not entered into the heart of man to
conceive. Shall God’s thoughts be surpassed by man’s thoughts? God’s
giving by man’s asking? God’s creation by man’s imagination? No. Let
us climb to the height of our Alpine desires; let us leave them
behind us and ascend the spear-pointed Himmalays of our aspirations;
still shall we find the depth of God’s sapphire above us; still
shall we find the heavens higher than the earth, and his thoughts
and his ways higher than our thoughts and our ways.
Ah Lord! be thou in all our being; as not in the
Sundays of our time alone, so not in the chambers of our hearts
alone. We dare not think that thou canst not, carest not; that some
things are not for thy beholding, some questions not to be asked of
thee. For are we not all thine—utterly thine? That which a man
speaks not to his fellow, we speak to thee. Our very passions we
hold up to thee, and say, “Behold, Lord! Think about us; for thus
thou hast made us.” We would not escape from our history by fleeing
into the wilderness, by hiding our heads in the sands of
forgetfulness, or the repentance that comes of pain, or the lethargy
of hopelessness. We take it, as our very life, in our hand, and flee
with it unto thee. Triumphant is the answer which thou holdest for
every doubt. It may be we could not understand it yet, even if thou
didst speak it “with most miraculous organ.” But thou shalt at least
find faith in the earth, O Lord, if thou comest to look for it
now—the faith of ignorant but hoping children, who know that they do
not know, and believe that thou knowest.
And for our brothers and sisters, who cleave to what
they call thy word, thinking to please thee so, they are in thy holy
safe hands, who hast taught us that whosoever shall speak a word
against the Son of man, it shall be forgiven him; though unto him
that blasphemes against the Holy Ghost, it shall not be forgiven.
It Shall Not Be Forgiven
the Unspoken Sermons
IT SHALL NOT BE FORGIVEN.
And whosoever shall speak a word
against the Son of man, it shall be forgiven him: but unto him that
blasphemeth against the Holy Ghost, it shall not be forgiven.—Luke xi. 18.
Whatever belonging to the region of
thought and feeling is uttered in words, is of necessity uttered
imperfectly. For thought and feeling are infinite, and human speech,
although far-reaching in scope, and marvellous in delicacy, can
embody them after all but approximately and suggestively. Spirit and
Truth are like the Lady Una and the Red Cross Knight; Speech like
the dwarf that lags behind with the lady’s “bag of needments.”
Our Lord had no design of constructing a system of
truth in intellectual forms. The truth of the moment in its relation
to him, The Truth, was what he spoke. He spoke out of a region of
realities which he knew could only be suggested—not represented—in
the forms of intellect and speech. With vivid flashes of life and
truth his words invade our darkness, rousing us with sharp stings of
light to will our awaking, to arise from the dead and cry for the
light which he can give, not in the lightning of words only, but in
indwelling presence and power.
How, then, must the truth fare with those who, having
neither glow nor insight, will build intellectual systems upon the
words of our Lord, or of his disciples? A little child would better
understand Plato than they St Paul. The meaning in those great
hearts who knew our Lord is too great to enter theirs. The sense
they find in the words must be a sense small enough to pass through
their narrow doors. And if mere words, without the interpreting
sympathy, may mean, as they may, almost anything the receiver will
or can attribute to them, how shall the man, bent at best on the
salvation of his own soul, understand, for instance, the meaning of
that apostle who was ready to encounter banishment itself from the
presence of Christ, that the beloved brethren of his nation might
enter in? To men who are not simple, simple words are the most
inexplicable of riddles.
If we are bound to search after what our Lord means—and
he speaks that we may understand—we are at least equally bound to
refuse any interpretation which seems to us unlike him, unworthy of
him. He himself says, “Why do ye not of your own selves judge what
is right?” In thus refusing, it may happen that, from ignorance or
misunderstanding, we refuse the verbal form of its true
interpretation, but we cannot thus refuse the spirit and the truth
of it, for those we could not have seen without being in the
condition to recognize them as the mind of Christ. Some
misapprehension, I say, some obliquity, or some slavish adherence to
old prejudices, may thus cause us to refuse the true interpretation,
but we are none the less bound to refuse and wait for more light. To
accept that as the will of our Lord which to us is inconsistent with
what we have learned to worship in him already, is to introduce
discord into that harmony whose end is to unite our hearts, and make
them whole.
“Is it for us,” says the objector who, by some sleight
of will, believes in the word apart from the meaning for which it
stands, “to judge of the character of our Lord?” I answer, “This
very thing he requires of us.” He requires of us that we should do
him no injustice. He would come and dwell with us, if we would but
open our chambers to receive him. How shall we receive him if,
avoiding judgment, we hold this or that daub of authority or
tradition hanging upon our walls to be the real likeness of our
Lord? Is it not possible at least that, judging unrighteous judgment
by such while we flatter ourselves that we are refusing to judge, we
may close our doors against the Master himself as an impostor, not
finding him like the picture that hangs in our oratory. And if we do
not judge—humbly and lovingly—who is to judge for us? Better to
refuse even the truth for a time, than, by accepting into our
intellectual creed that which our heart cannot receive, not seeing
its real form, to introduce hesitation into our prayers, a jar into
our praises, and a misery into our love. If it be the truth, we
shall one day see it another thing than it appears now, and love it
because we see it lovely; for all truth is lovely. “Not to the
unregenerate mind.” But at least, I answer, to the mind which can
love that Man, Christ Jesus; and that part of us which loves him let
us follow, and in its judgements let us trust; hoping, beyond all
things else, for its growth and enlightenment by the Lord, who is
that Spirit. Better, I say again, to refuse the right form, than, by
accepting it in misapprehension of what it really is, to refuse the
spirit, the truth that dwells therein. Which of these, I pray, is
liker to the sin against the Holy Ghost? To mistake the meaning of
the Son of man may well fill a man with sadness. But to care so
little for him as to receive as his what the noblest part of our
nature rejects as low and poor, or selfish and wrong, that surely is
more like the sin against the Holy Ghost that can never be forgiven;
for it is a sin against the truth itself, not the embodiment of it
in him.
Words for their full meaning depend upon their source,
the person who speaks them. An utterance may even seem commonplace,
till you are told that thus spoke one whom you know to be always
thinking, always feeling, always acting. Recognizing the mind whence
the words proceed, you know the scale by which they are to be
understood. So the words of God cannot mean just the same as the
words of man. “Can we not, then, understand them?” Yes, we can
understand them—we can understand them more than the words of men.
Whatever a good word means, as used by a good man, it means just
infinitely more as used by God. And the feeling or thought expressed
by that word takes higher and higher forms in us as we become
capable of understanding him,—that is, as we become like him.
I am far less anxious to show what the sin against the
Holy Ghost means, than to show what the nonforgiveness means; though
I think we may arrive at some understanding of both. I cannot admit
for a moment that there is anything in the Bible too mysterious to
be looked into; for the Bible is a revelation, an unveiling. True,
into many things uttered there I can see only a little way. But that
little way is the way of life; for the depth of their mystery is
God. And even setting aside the duty of the matter, and seeking for
justification as if the duty were doubtful, it is reason enough for
inquiring into such passages as this before me, that they are often
torture to human minds, chiefly those of holy women and children. I
knew a child who believed she had committed the sin against the Holy
Ghost, because she had, in her toilette, made an improper use of a
pin. Dare not to rebuke me for adducing the diseased fancy of a
child in a weighty matter of theology. “Despise not one of these
little ones.” Would the theologians were as near the truth in such
matters as the children. Diseased fancy! The child knew, and was
conscious that she knew, that she was doing wrong because she had
been forbidden. There was rational ground for her fear. How would
Jesus have received the confession of the darling? He would not have
told her she was silly, and “never to mind.” Child as she was, might
he not have said to her, “I do not condemn thee: go and sin no
more”?
To reach the first position necessary for the final
attainment of our end, I will inquire what the divine forgiveness
means. And in order to arrive at this naturally, I will begin by
asking what the human forgiveness means; for, if there be any
meaning in the Incarnation, it is through the Human that we must
climb up to the Divine.
I do not know that it is of much use to go back to the
Greek or the English word for any primary idea of the act—the one
meaning a sending away, the other, a giving away. It will be enough
if we look at the feelings associated with the exercise of what is
called forgiveness.
A man will say: “I forgive, but I cannot forget. Let
the fellow never come in my sight again.” To what does such a
forgiveness reach? To the remission or sending away of the penalties
which the wronged believes he can claim from the wrong-doer.
But there is no sending away of the wrong itself from
between them.
Again, a man will say: “He has done a very mean
action, but he has the worst of it himself in that he is capable of
doing so. I despise him too much to desire revenge. I will take no
notice of it. I forgive him. I don’t care.”
Here, again, there is no sending away of the wrong
from between them—no remission of the sin.
A third will say: “I suppose I must forgive him; for
if I do not forgive him, God will not forgive me.”
This man is a little nearer the truth, inasmuch as a
ground of sympathy, though only that of common sin, is recognized as
between the offender and himself.
One more will say: “He has wronged me grievously. It
is a dreadful thing to me, and more dreadful still to him, that he
should have done it. He has hurt me, but he has nearly killed
himself. He shall have no more injury from it that I can save him. I
cannot feel the same towards him yet; but I will try to make him
acknowledge the wrong he has done me, and so put it away from him.
Then, perhaps, I shall be able to feel towards him as I used to
feel. For this end I will show him all the kindness I can, not
forcing it upon him, but seizing every fit opportunity; not, I hope,
from a wish to make myself great through bounty to him, but because
I love him so much that I want to love him more in reconciling him
to his true self. I would destroy this evil deed that has come
between us. I send it away. And I would have him destroy it from
between us too, by abjuring it utterly.”
Which comes nearest to the divine idea of forgiveness?
nearest, though with the gulf between, wherewith the heavens are
higher than the earth?
For the Divine creates the Human, has the creative
power in excess of the Human. It is the Divine forgiveness that,
originating itself, creates our forgiveness, and therefore can do so
much more. It can take up all our wrongs, small and great, with
their righteous attendance of griefs and sorrows, and carry them
away from between our God and us.
Christ is God’s Forgiveness.
Before we approach a little nearer to this great
sight, let us consider the human forgiveness in a more definite
embodiment—as between a father and a son. For although God is so
much more to us, and comes so much nearer to us than a father can be
or come, yet the fatherhood is the last height of the human stair
whence our understandings can see him afar off, and where our hearts
can first know that he is nigh, even in them.
There are various kinds and degrees of wrongdoing,
which need varying kinds and degrees of forgiveness. An outburst of
anger in a child, for instance, scarcely wants forgiveness. The
wrong in it may be so small, that the parent has only to influence
the child for self-restraint, and the rousing of the will against
the wrong. The father will not feel that such a fault has built up
any wall between him and his child. But suppose that he discovered
in him a habit of sly cruelty towards his younger brothers, or the
animals of the house, how differently would he feel! Could his
forgiveness be the same as in the former case? Would not the
different evil require a different form of forgiveness? I mean,
would not the forgiveness have to take the form of that kind of
punishment fittest for restraining, in the hope of finally rooting
out, the wickedness? Could there be true love in any other kind of
forgiveness than this? A passing-by of the offence might spring from
a poor human kindness, but never from divine love. It would not be
remission. Forgiveness can never be indifference. Forgiveness is
love towards the unlovely.
Let us look a little closer at the way a father might
feel, and express his feelings. One child, the moment the fault was
committed, the father would clasp to his bosom, knowing that very
love in its own natural manifestation would destroy the fault in
him, and that, the next moment, he would be weeping. The father’s
hatred of the sin would burst forth in his pitiful tenderness
towards the child who was so wretched as to have done the sin, and
so destroy it. The fault of such a child would then cause no
interruption of the interchange of sweet affections. The child is
forgiven at once. But the treatment of another upon the same
principle would be altogether different. If he had been guilty of
baseness, meanness, selfishness, deceit, self-gratulation in the
evil brought upon others, the father might say to himself: “I cannot
forgive him. This is beyond forgiveness.” He might say so, and keep
saying so, while all the time he was striving to let forgiveness
find its way that it might lift him from the gulf into which he had
fallen. His love might grow yet greater because of the wandering and
loss of his son. For love is divine, and then most divine when it
loves according to needs and not according to merits. But the
forgiveness would be but in the process of making, as it were, or of
drawing nigh to the sinner. Not till his opening heart received the
divine flood of destroying affection, and his own affection burst
forth to meet it and sweep the evil away, could it be said to be
finished, to have arrived, could the son be said to be forgiven.
God is forgiving us every day—sending from between him
and us our sins and their fogs and darkness. Witness the shining of
his sun and the falling of his rain, the filling of their hearts
with food and gladness, that he loves them that love him not. When
some sin that we have committed has clouded all our horizon, and
hidden him from our eyes, he, forgiving us, ere we are, and that we
may be, forgiven, sweeps away a path for this his forgiveness to
reach our hearts, that it may by causing our repentance destroy the
wrong, and make us able even to forgive ourselves. For some are too
proud to forgive themselves, till the forgiveness of God has had its
way with them, has drowned their pride in the tears of repentance,
and made their heart come again like the heart of a little child.
But, looking upon forgiveness, then, as the perfecting
of a work ever going on, as the contact of God’s heart and ours, in
spite and in destruction of the intervening wrong, we may say that
God’s love is ever in front of his forgiveness. God’s love is the
prime mover, ever seeking to perfect his forgiveness, which latter
needs the human condition for its consummation. The love is perfect,
working out the forgiveness. God loves where he cannot yet
forgive—where forgiveness in the full sense is as yet simply
impossible, because no contact of hearts is possible, because that
which lies between has not even begun to yield to the besom of his
holy destruction.
Some things, then, between the Father and his
children, as between a father and his child, may comparatively, and
in a sense, be made light of—I do not mean made light of in
themselves: away they must go—inasmuch as, evils or sins though they
be, they yet leave room for the dwelling of God’s Spirit in the
heart, forgiving and cleansing away the evil. When a man’s evil is
thus fading out of him, and he is growing better and better, that is
the forgiveness coming into him more and more. Perfect in God’s
will, it is having its perfect work in the mind of the man. When the
man hath, with his whole nature, cast away his sin, there is no room
for forgiveness any more, for God dwells in him, and he in God. With
the voice of Nathan, “Thou art the man,” the forgiveness of God laid
hold of David, the heart of the king was humbled to the dust; and
when he thus awoke from the moral lethargy that had fallen upon him,
he found that he was still with God. “When I awake,” he said, “I am
still with thee.”
But there are two sins, not of individual deed, but of
spiritual condition, which cannot be forgiven; that is, as it seems
to me, which cannot be excused, passed by, made little of by the
tenderness even of God, inasmuch as they will allow no forgiveness
to come into the soul, they will permit no good influence to go on
working alongside of them; they shut God out altogether. Therefore
the man guilty of these can never receive into himself the holy
renewing saving influences of God’s forgiveness. God is outside of
him in every sense, save that which springs from his creating
relation to him, by which, thanks be to God, he yet keeps a hold of
him, although against the will of the man who will not be forgiven.
The one of these sins is against man; the other against God.
The former is unforgivingness to our neighbour; the
shutting of him out from our mercies, from our love—so from the
universe, as far as we are a portion of it—the murdering therefore
of our neighbour. It may be an infinitely less evil to murder a man
than to refuse to forgive him. The former may be the act of a moment
of passion: the latter is the heart’s choice. It is spiritual
murder, the worst, to hate, to brood over the feeling that excludes,
that, in our microcosm, kills the image, the idea of the hated. We
listen to the voice of our own hurt pride or hurt affection (only
the latter without the suggestion of the former, thinketh no evil)
to the injury of the evil-doer. In as far as we can, we quench the
relations of life between us; we close up the passages of possible
return. This is to shut out God, the Life, the One. For how are we
to receive the forgiving presence while we shut out our brother from
our portion of the universal forgiveness, the final restoration,
thus refusing to let God be All in all? If God appeared to us, how
could he say, “I forgive you,” while we remained unforgiving to our
neighbour? Suppose it possible that he should say so, his
forgiveness would be no good to us while we were uncured of our
unforgivingness. It would not touch us. It would not come near us.
Nay, it would hurt us, for we should think ourselves safe and well,
while the horror of disease was eating the heart out of us. Tenfold
the forgiveness lies in the words, “If ye forgive not men their
trespasses, neither will your heavenly Father forgive your
trespasses.” Those words are kindness indeed. God holds the
unforgiving man with his hand, but turns his face away from him. If,
in his desire to see the face of his Father, he turns his own
towards his brother, then the face of God turns round and seeks his,
for then the man may look upon God and not die. With our forgiveness
to our neighbour, in flows the consciousness of God’s forgiveness to
us; or even with the effort, we become capable of believing that God
can forgive us. No man who will not forgive his neighbour, can
believe that God is willing, yea, wanting to forgive him, can
believe that the dove of God’s peace is hovering over a chaotic
heart, fain to alight, but finding no rest for the sole of its foot.
For God to say to such a man, “I cannot forgive you,” is love as
well as necessity. If God said, “I forgive you,” to a man who hated
his brother, and if (as is impossible) that voice of forgiveness
should reach the man, what would it mean to him? How would the man
interpret it? Would it not mean to him, “You may go on hating. I do
not mind it. You have had great provocation, and are justified in
your hate”? No doubt God takes what wrong there is, and what
provocation there is, into the account; but the more provocation,
the more excuse that can be urged for the hate, the more reason, if
possible, that the hater should be delivered from the hell of his
hate, that God’s child should be made the loving child that he meant
him to be. The man would think, not that God loved the sinner, but
that he forgave the sin, which God never does. Every sin meets with
its due fate—inexorable expulsion from the paradise of God’s
Humanity. He loves the sinner so much that he cannot forgive him in
any other way than by banishing from his bosom the demon that
possesses him, by lifting him out of that mire of his iniquity.
No one, however, supposes for a moment that a man who
has once refused to forgive his brother, shall therefore be
condemned to endless unforgiveness and unforgivingness. What is
meant is, that while a man continues in such a mood, God cannot be
with him as his friend; not that he will not be his friend, but the
friendship being all on one side—that of God—must take forms such as
the man will not be able to recognize as friendship. Forgiveness, as
I have said, is not love merely, but love conveyed as love to the
erring, so establishing peace towards God, and forgiveness towards
our neighbour.
To return then to our immediate text: Is the refusal
of forgiveness contained in it a condemnation to irrecoverable
impenitence? Strange righteousness would be the decree, that because
a man has done wrong—let us say has done wrong so often and so much
that he is wrong—he shall for ever remain wrong! Do not tell me the
condemnation is only negative—a leaving of the man to the
consequences of his own will, or at most a withdrawing from him of
the Spirit which he has despised. God will not take shelter behind
such a jugglery of logic or metaphysics. He is neither schoolman nor
theologian, but our Father in heaven. He knows that that in him
would be the same unforgivingness for which he refuses to forgive
man. The only tenable ground for supporting such a doctrine is, that
God cannot do more; that Satan has overcome; and that Jesus, amongst
his own brothers and sisters in the image of God, has been less
strong than the adversary, the destroyer. What then shall I say of
such a doctrine of devils as that, even if a man did repent, God
would not or could not forgive him?
Let us look at “the unpardonable sin,” as this mystery
is commonly called, and see what we can find to understand about it.
All sin is unpardonable. There is no compromise to be
made with it. We shall not come out except clean, except having paid
the uttermost farthing. But the special unpardonableness of those
sins, the one of which I have spoken and that which we are now
considering, lies in their shutting out God from his genial, his
especially spiritual, influences upon the man. Possibly in the case
of the former sin, I may have said this too strongly; possibly the
love of God may have some part even in the man who will not forgive
his brother, although, if he continues unforgiving, that part must
decrease and die away; possibly resentment against our brother,
might yet for a time leave room for some divine influences by its
side, although either the one or the other must speedily yield; but
the man who denies truth, who consciously resists duty, who says
there is no truth, or that the truth he sees is not true, who says
that which is good is of Satan, or that which is bad is of God,
supposing him to know that it is good or is bad, denies the Spirit,
shuts out the Spirit, and therefore cannot be forgiven. For without
the Spirit no forgiveness can enter the man to cast out the satan.
Without the Spirit to witness with his spirit, no man could know
himself forgiven, even if God appeared to him and said so. The full
forgiveness is, as I have said, when a man feels that God is
forgiving him; and this cannot be while he opposes himself to the
very essence of God’s will.
As far as we can see, the men of whom this was spoken
were men who resisted the truth with some amount of perception that
it was the truth; men neither led astray by passion, nor altogether
blinded by their abounding prejudice; men who were not excited to
condemn one form of truth by the love which they bore to another
form of it; but men so set, from selfishness and love of influence,
against one whom they saw to be a good man, that they denied the
goodness of what they knew to be good, in order to put down the man
whom they knew to be good, because He had spoken against them, and
was ruining their influence and authority with the people by
declaring them to be no better than they knew themselves to be. Is
not this to be Satan? to be in hell? to be corruption? to be that
which is damned? Was not this their condition unpardonable? How,
through all this mass of falsehood, could the pardon of God reach
the essential humanity within it? Crying as it was for God’s
forgiveness, these men had almost separated their humanity from
themselves, had taken their part with the powers of darkness.
Forgiveness while they were such was an impossibility. No. Out of
that they must come, else there was no word of God for them. But the
very word that told them of the unpardonable state in which they
were, was just the one form the voice of mercy could take in calling
on them to repent. They must hear and be afraid. I dare not, cannot
think that they refused the truth, knowing all that it was; but I
think they refused the truth, knowing that it was true—not carried
away, as I have said, by wild passion, but by cold self-love, and
envy, and avarice, and ambition; not merely doing wrong knowingly,
but setting their whole natures knowingly against the light. Of this
nature must the sin against the Holy Ghost surely be. “This is the
condemnation,” (not the sins that men have committed, but the
condition of mind in which they choose to remain,) “that light is
come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light,
because their deeds were evil.” In this sin against the Holy Ghost,
I see no single act alone, although it must find expression in many
acts, but a wilful condition of mind,
As far removed from God and light of heaven,
As from the centre thrice to the utmost pole.
For this there could be no such excuse made as that
even a little light might work beside it; for there light could find
no entrance and no room; light was just what such a mind was set
against, almost because it was what it was. The condition was
utterly bad.
But can a man really fall into such a condition of
spiritual depravity?
That is my chief difficulty. But I think it may be.
And wiser people than I, have thought so. I have difficulty in
believing it, I say; yet I think it must be so. But I do not believe
that it is a fixed, a final condition. I do not see why it should be
such any more than that of the man who does not forgive his
neighbour. If you say it is a worse offence, I say, Is it too bad
for the forgiveness of God?
But is God able to do anything more with the man? Or
how is the man ever to get out of this condition? If the Spirit of
God is shut out from his heart, how is he to become better?
The Spirit of God is the Spirit whose influence is
known by its witnessing with our spirit. But may there not be other
powers and means of the Spirit preparatory to this its highest
office with man? God who has made us can never be far from any man
who draws the breath of life—nay, must be in him; not necessarily in
his heart, as we say, but still in him. May not then one day some
terrible convulsion from the centre of his being, some fearful
earthquake from the hidden gulfs of his nature, shake such a man so
that through all the deafness of his death, the voice of the Spirit
may be faintly heard, the still small voice that comes after the
tempest and the earthquake? May there not be a fire that even such
can feel? Who shall set bounds to the consuming of the fire of our
God, and the purifying that dwells therein?
The only argument that I can think of, which would
with me have weight against this conclusion, is, that the revulsion
of feeling in any one who had thus sinned against the truth, when
once brought to acknowledge his sin, would be so terrible that life
would never more be endurable, and the kindest thing God could do
would be to put such a man out of being, because it had been a
better thing for him never to have been born. But he who could make
such a man repent, could make him so sorrowful and lowly, and so
glad that he had repented, that he would wish to live ever that he
might ever repent and ever worship the glory he now beheld. When a
man gives up self, his past sins will no longer oppress him. It is
enough for the good of life that God lives, that the All-perfect
exists, and that we can behold him.
“Father, forgive them, for they know not what they
do,” said the Divine, making excuse for his murderers, not after it
was all over, but at the very moment when he was dying by their
hands. Then Jesus had forgiven them already. His prayer the Father
must have heard, for he and the Son are one. When the Father
succeeded in answering his prayer, then his forgiveness in the
hearts of the murderers broke out in sorrow, repentance, and faith.
Here was a sin dreadful enough surely—but easy for our Lord to
forgive. All that excuse for the misled populace! Lord Christ be
thanked for that! That was like thee! But must we believe that
Judas, who repented even to agony, who repented so that his
high-prized life, self, soul, became worthless in his eyes and met
with no mercy at his own hand,—must we believe that he could find no
mercy in such a God? I think, when Judas fled from his hanged and
fallen body, he fled to the tender help of Jesus, and found it—I say
not how. He was in a more hopeful condition now than during any
moment of his past life, for he had never repented before. But I
believe that Jesus loved Judas even when he was kissing him with the
traitor’s kiss; and I believe that he was his Saviour still. And if
any man remind me of his words, “It had been good for that man if he
had not been born,” I had not forgotten them, though I know that I
now offer nothing beyond a conjectural explanation of them when I
say: Judas had got none of the good of the world into which he had
been born. He had not inherited the earth. He had lived an evil
life, out of harmony with the world and its God. Its love had been
lost upon him. He had been brought to the very Son of God, and had
lived with him as his own familiar friend; and he had not loved him
more, but less than himself. Therefore it had been all useless. “It
had been good for that man if he had not been born;” for it was all
to try over again, in some other way—inferior perhaps, in some other
world, in a lower school. He had to be sent down the scale of
creation which is ever ascending towards its Maker. But I will not,
cannot believe, O my Lord, that thou wouldst not forgive thy enemy,
even when he repented, and did thee right. Nor will I believe that
thy holy death was powerless to save thy foe—that it could not reach
to Judas. Have we not heard of those, thine own, taught of thee, who
could easily forgive their betrayers in thy name? And if thou
forgivest, will not thy forgiveness find its way at last in
redemption and purification?
Look for a moment at the clause preceding my text: “He
that denieth me before men shall be denied before the angels of
God.” What does it mean? Does it mean—“Ah! you are mine, but not of
my sort. You denied me. Away to the outer darkness”? Not so. “It
shall be forgiven to him that speaketh against the Son of man;” for
He may be but the truth revealed without him. Only he must have
shame before the universe of the loving God, and may need the fire
that burneth and consumeth not.
But for him that speaketh against the Spirit of Truth,
against the Son of God revealed within him, he is beyond the
teaching of that Spirit now. For how shall he be forgiven? The
forgiveness would touch him no more than a wall of stone. Let him
know what it is to be without the God he hath denied. Away with him
to the Outer Darkness! Perhaps that will make him repent.
My friends, I offer this as only a contribution
towards the understanding of our Lord’s words. But if we ask him, he
will lead us into all truth. And let us not be afraid to think, for
he will not take it ill.
But what I have said must be at least a part of the
truth.
No amount of discovery in his words can tell us more
than we have discovered, more than we have seen and known to be
true. For all the help the best of his disciples can give us is only
to discover, to see for ourselves.
And beyond all our discoveries in his words and being,
there lie depths within depths of truth that we cannot understand,
and yet shall be ever going on to understand. Yea, even now
sometimes we seem to have dim glimpses into regions from which we
receive no word to bring away.
The fact that some things have become to us so much
more simple than they were, and that great truths have come out of
what once looked common, is ground enough for hope that such will go
on to be our experience through the ages to come. Our advance from
our former ignorance can measure but a small portion of the distance
that lies, and must ever lie, between our childishness and his
manhood, between our love and his love, between our dimness and his
mighty vision.
To him ere long may we all come, all children, still
children, more children than ever, to receive from his hand the
white stone, and in the stone a new name written, which no man
knoweth saving he that receiveth it.
The New Name
the Unspoken Sermons
THE NEW NAME.
To him that overcometh, I will give
a white stone, and in the stone a new name written, which no man
knoweth saving he that receiveth it.—Rev. ii. 17.
Whether the Book of the Revelation be
written by the same man who wrote the Gospel according to St John or
not, there is, at least, one element common to the two—the
mysticism.
I use the word mysticism as representing a certain
mode of embodying truth, common, in various degrees, to almost all,
if not all, the writers of the New Testament. The attempt to define
it thoroughly would require an essay. I will hazard but one
suggestion towards it: A mystical mind is one which, having
perceived that the highest expression of which the truth admits,
lies in the symbolism of nature and the human customs that result
from human necessities, prosecutes thought about truth so embodied
by dealing with the symbols themselves after logical forms. This is
the highest mode of conveying the deepest truth; and the Lord
himself often employed it, as, for instance, in the whole passage
ending with the words, “If therefore the light that is in thee be
darkness, how great is the darkness!”
The mysticism in the Gospel of St John is of the
simplest, and, therefore, noblest nature. No dweller in this planet
can imagine a method of embodying truth that shall be purer,
loftier, truer to the truth embodied. There may be higher modes in
other worlds, or there may not—I cannot tell; but of all our modes
these forms are best illustrations of the highest. Apparently the
mysticism of St John’s own nature enabled him to remember and report
with sufficient accuracy the words of our Lord, always, it seems to
me, of a recognizably different kind from those of any of the
writers of the New Testament—chiefly, perhaps, in the simplicity of
their poetical mysticism.
But the mysticism in the Book of the Revelation is
more complicated, more gorgeous, less poetic, and occasionally, I
think, perhaps arbitrary, or approaching the arbitrary; reminding
one, in a word, of the mysticism of Swedenborg. Putting aside both
historical and literary criticism, in neither of which with regard
to the authorship of these two books have I a right even to an
opinion, I would venture to suggest that possibly their difference
in tone is just what one might expect when the historian of a
mystical teacher and the recorder of his mystical sayings, proceeds
to embody his own thoughts, feelings, and inspirations; that is,
when the revelation flows no longer from the lips of the Master, but
through the disciple’s own heart, soul, and brain. For surely not
the most idolatrous of our Bible-worshipping brothers and sisters
will venture to assert that the Spirit of God could speak as freely
by the lips of the wind-swayed, reed-like, rebukable Peter, or of
the Thomas who could believe his own eyes, but neither the word of
his brethren, nor the nature of his Master, as by the lips of Him
who was blind and deaf to everything but the will of him that sent
him.
Truth is truth, whether from the lips of Jesus or
Balaam. But, in its deepest sense, the truth is a condition of
heart, soul, mind, and strength towards God and towards our
fellow—not an utterance, not even a right form of words; and
therefore such truth coming forth in words is, in a sense, the
person that speaks. And many of the utterances of truth in the
Revelation, commonly called of St John, are not merely lofty in
form, but carry with them the conviction that the writer was no mere
“trumpet of a prophecy,” but spoke that he did know, and testified
that he had seen.
In this passage about the gift of the white stone, I
think we find the essence of religion.
What the notion in the mind of the writer with regard
to the white stone was, is, I think, of comparatively little moment.
I take the stone to belong more to the arbitrary and fanciful than
to the true mystical imagery, although for the bringing out of the
mystical thought in which it is concerned, it is of high and
honourable dignity. For fancy itself will subserve the true
imagination of the mystic, and so be glorified. I doubt if the
writer himself associated any essential meaning with it. Certainly I
will not allow that he had such a poor notion in it as that of a
voting pebble-white, because the man who receives it is accepted or
chosen. The word is used likewise for a precious stone set as a
jewel. And the writer thought of it mystically, a mode far more
likely to involve a reference to nature than to a political custom.
What his mystic meaning may be, must be taken differently by
different minds. I think he sees in its whiteness purity, and in its
substance indestructibility. But I care chiefly to regard the stone
as the vehicle of the name,—as the form whereby the name is
represented as passing from God to the man, and what is involved in
this communication is what I wish to show. If my reader will not
acknowledge my representation as St John’s meaning, I yet hope so to
set it forth that he shall see the representation to be true in
itself, and then I shall willingly leave the interpretation to its
fate.
I say, in brief, the giving of the white stone with
the new name is the communication of what God thinks about the man
to the man. It is the divine judgment, the solemn holy doom of the
righteous man, the “Come, thou blessed,” spoken to the individual.
In order to see this, we must first understand what
is the idea of a name,—that is, what is the perfect notion of a
name. For, seeing the mystical energy of a holy mind here speaks of
God as giving something, we must understand that the essential
thing, and not any of its accidents or imitations, is intended.
A name of the ordinary kind in this world, has
nothing essential in it. It is but a label by which one man and a
scrap of his external history may be known from another man and a
scrap of his history. The only names which have significance are
those which the popular judgment or prejudice or humour bestows,
either for ridicule or honour, upon a few out of the many. Each of
these is founded upon some external characteristic of the man, upon
some predominant peculiarity of temper, some excellence or the
reverse of character, or something which he does or has done well or
ill enough, or at least, singularly enough, to render him, in the
eyes of the people, worthy of such distinction from other men. As
far as they go, these are real names, for, in some poor measure,
they express individuality.
The true name is one which expresses the character,
the nature, the being, the meaning of the person who bears it. It is
the man’s own symbol,—his soul’s picture, in a word,—the sign which
belongs to him and to no one else. Who can give a man this, his own
name? God alone. For no one but God sees what the man is, or even,
seeing what he is, could express in a name-word the sum and harmony
of what he sees. To whom is this name given? To him that overcometh.
When is it given? When he has overcome. Does God then not know what
a man is going to become? As surely as he sees the oak which he put
there lying in the heart of the acorn. Why then does he wait till
the man has become by overcoming ere he settles what his name shall
be? He does not wait; he knows his name from the first. But
as—although repentance comes because God pardons—yet the man becomes
aware of the pardon only in the repentance; so it is only when the
man has become his name that God gives him the stone with the name
upon it, for then first can he understand what his name signifies.
It is the blossom, the perfection, the completion, that determines
the name; and God foresees that from the first, because he made it
so; but the tree of the soul, before its blossom comes, cannot
understand what blossom it is to bear, and could not know what the
word meant, which, in representing its own unarrived completeness,
named itself. Such a name cannot be given until the man is the name.
God’s name for a man must then be the expression in a
mystical word—a word of that language which all who have overcome
understand—of his own idea of the man, that being whom he had in his
thought when he began to make the child, and whom he kept in his
thought through the long process of creation that went to realize
the idea. To tell the name is to seal the success—to say, “In thee
also I am well pleased.”
But we are still in the region of symbol. For
supposing that such a form were actually observed between God and
him that overcometh, it would be no less a symbol—only an acted one.
We must therefore look deeper still for the fulness of its meaning.
Up to this point little has been said to justify our expectations of
discovery in the text. Let us, I say, look deeper. We shall not look
long before we find that the mystic symbol has for its centre of
significance the fact of the personal individual relation of every
man to his God. That every man has affairs, and those his first
affairs, with God, stands to the reason of every man who associates
any meaning or feeling with the words, Maker, Father, God. Were we
but children of a day, with the understanding that some one had
given us that one holiday, there would be something to be thought,
to be felt, to be done, because we knew it. For then our nature
would be according to our fate, and we could worship and die. But it
would be only the praise of the dead, not the praise of the living,
for death would be the deepest, the lasting, the overcoming. We
should have come out of nothingness, not out of God. He could only
be our Maker, not our Father, our Origin. But now we know that God
cannot be the God of the dead—must be the God of the living;
inasmuch as to know that we died, would freeze the heart of worship,
and we could not say Our God, or feel him worthy of such worth-ship
as we could render. To him who offers unto this God of the living
his own self of sacrifice, to him that overcometh, him who has
brought his individual life back to its source, who knows that he is
one of God’s children, this one of the Father’s making, he giveth
the white stone. To him who climbs on the stair of all his God-born
efforts and God-given victories up to the height of his being—that
of looking face to face upon his ideal self in the bosom of the
Father—God’s him, realized in him through the Father’s love in the
Elder Brother’s devotion—to him God gives the new name written.
But I leave this, because that which follows embraces
and intensifies this individuality of relation in a fuller
development of the truth. For the name is one “which no man knoweth
saving he that receiveth it.” Not only then has each man his
individual relation to God, but each man has his peculiar relation
to God. He is to God a peculiar being, made after his own fashion,
and that of no one else; for when he is perfected he shall receive
the new name which no one else can understand. Hence he can worship
God as no man else can worship him,—can understand God as no man
else can understand him. This or that man may understand God more,
may understand God better than he, but no other man can understand
God as he understands him. God give me grace to be humble before
thee, my brother, that I drag not my simulacrum of thee before the
judgment-seat of the unjust judge, but look up to thyself for what
revelation of God thou and no one else canst give. As the fir-tree
lifts up itself with a far different need from the need of the
palm-tree, so does each man stand before God, and lift up a
different humanity to the common Father. And for each God has a
different response. With every man he has a secret—the secret of the
new name. In every man there is a loneliness, an inner chamber of
peculiar life into which God only can enter. I say not it is the
innermost chamber—but a chamber into which no brother, nay, no
sister can come.
From this it follows that there is a chamber also—(O
God, humble and accept my speech)—a chamber in God himself, into
which none can enter but the one, the individual, the peculiar
man,—out of which chamber that man has to bring revelation and
strength for his brethren. This is that for which he was made—to
reveal the secret things of the Father.
By his creation, then, each man is isolated with God;
each, in respect of his peculiar making, can say, “my God;” each can
come to him alone, and speak with him face to face, as a man
speaketh with his friend. There is no massing of men with God. When
he speaks of gathered men, it is as a spiritual body, not a mass.
For in a body every smallest portion is individual, and therefore
capable of forming a part of the body.
See, now, what a significance the symbolism of our
text assumes. Each of us is a distinct flower or tree in the
spiritual garden of God,—precious, each for his own sake, in the
eyes of him who is even now making us,—each of us watered and shone
upon and filled with life, for the sake of his flower, his completed
being, which will blossom out of him at last to the glory and
pleasure of the great gardener. For each has within him a secret of
the Divinity; each is growing towards the revelation of that secret
to himself, and so to the full reception, according to his measure,
of the divine. Every moment that he is true to his true self, some
new shine of the white stone breaks on his inward eye, some fresh
channel is opened upward for the coming glory of the flower, the
conscious offering of his whole being in beauty to the Maker. Each
man, then, is in God’s sight worth. Life and action, thought and
intent, are sacred. And what an end lies before us! To have a
consciousness of our own ideal being flashed into us from the
thought of God! Surely for this may well give way all our paltry
self-consciousnesses, our self-admirations and self-worships! Surely
to know what he thinks about us will pale out of our souls all our
thoughts about ourselves! and we may well hold them loosely now, and
be ready to let them go. Towards this result St Paul had already
drawn near, when he who had begun the race with a bitter cry for
deliverance from the body of his death, was able to say that he
judged his own self no longer.
“But is there not the worst of all dangers involved
in such teaching—the danger of spiritual pride?” If there be, are we
to refuse the spirit for fear of the pride? Or is there any other
deliverance from pride except the spirit? Pride springs from
supposed success in the high aim: with attainment itself comes
humility. But here there is no room for ambition. Ambition is the
desire to be above one’s neighbour; and here there is no possibility
of comparison with one’s neighbour: no one knows what the white
stone contains except the man who receives it. Here is room for
endless aspiration towards the unseen ideal; none for ambition.
Ambition would only be higher than others; aspiration would be high.
Relative worth is not only unknown—to the children of the kingdom it
is unknowable. Each esteems the other better than himself. How shall
the rose, the glowing heart of the summer heats, rejoice against the
snowdrop risen with hanging head from the white bosom of the snow?
Both are God’s thoughts; both are dear to him; both are needful to
the completeness of his earth and the revelation of himself. “God
has cared to make me for himself,” says the victor with the white
stone, “and has called me that which I like best; for my own name
must be what I would have it, seeing it is myself. What matter
whether I be called a grass of the field, or an eagle of the air? a
stone to build into his temple, or a Boanerges to wield his thunder?
I am his; his idea, his making; perfect in my kind, yea, perfect in
his sight; full of him, revealing him, alone with him. Let him call
me what he will. The name shall be precious as my life. I seek no
more.”
Gone then will be all anxiety as to what his
neighbour may think about him. It is enough that God thinks about
him. To be something to God—is not that praise enough? To be a thing
that God cares for and would have complete for himself, because it
is worth caring for—is not that life enough?
Neither will he thus be isolated from his fellows.
For that we say of one, we say of all. It is as one that the man has
claims amongst his fellows. Each will feel the sacredness and awe of
his neighbour’s dark and silent speech with his God. Each will
regard the other as a prophet, and look to him for what the Lord
hath spoken. Each, as a high priest returning from his Holy of
Holies, will bring from his communion some glad tidings, some gospel
of truth, which, when spoken, his neighbours shall receive and
understand. Each will behold in the other a marvel of revelation, a
present son or daughter of the Most High, come forth from him to
reveal him afresh. In God each will draw nigh to each.
Yes, there will be danger—danger as everywhere; but
he giveth more grace. And if the man who has striven up the heights
should yet fall from them into the deeps, is there not that fire of
God, the consuming fire, which burneth and destroyeth not?
To no one who has not already had some speech with
God, or who has not at least felt some aspiration towards the fount
of his being, can all this appear other than foolishness. So be it.
But, Lord, help them and us, and make our being grow
into thy likeness. If through ages of strife and ages of growth, yet
let us at last see thy face, and receive the white stone from thy
hand. That thus we may grow, give us day by day our daily bread.
Fill us with the words that proceed out of thy mouth. Help us to lay
up treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt.
The Heart with the Treasure
the Unspoken Sermons
THE HEART WITH THE TREASURE.
Lay not up for yourselves
treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where
thieves break through and steal. But lay up for yourselves treasures
in heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt, and where
thieves do not break through nor steal. For where your treasure is,
there will your heart be also.—Matt. vi. 19, 20, 21.
To understand the words of our Lord is
the business of life. For it is the main road to the understanding
of The Word himself. And to receive him is to receive the Father,
and so to have Life in ourselves. And Life, the higher, the deeper,
the simpler, the original, is the business of life.
The Word is that by which we live, namely, Jesus
himself; and his words represent, in part, in shadow, in suggestion,
himself. Any utterance worthy of being called a truth, is human
food: how much more The Word, presenting no abstract laws of our
being, but the vital relation of soul and body, heart and will,
strength and rejoicing, beauty and light, to Him who first gave
birth to them all! The Son came forth to be, before our eyes and in
our hearts, that which he had made us for, that we might behold the
truth in him, and cry out for the living God, who, in the highest
sense of all is The Truth, not as understood, but as understanding,
living, and being, doing and creating the truth. “I am the truth,”
said our Lord; and by those who are in some measure like him in
being the truth, the Word can be understood. Let us try to
understand him.
Sometimes, no doubt, the Saviour would have spoken
after a different fashion of speech, if he had come to Englishmen,
instead of to Jews. But the lessons he gave would have been the
same; for even when questioned about a matter for its passing
import, his reply contained the enunciation of the great human
principle which lay in it, and that lies changeless in every
variation of changeful circumstance. With the light of added ages of
Christian experience, it ought to be easier for us to understand his
words than it was for those who heard him.
What, I ask now, is here the power of his word For:
For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also? The
meaning of the reason thus added is not obvious upon its surface. It
has to be sought for because of its depth at once and its
simplicity. But it is so complete, so imaginatively comprehensive,
so immediately operative on the conscience through its poetic
suggestiveness, that when it is once understood, there is nothing
more to be said, but everything to be done.
“Why not lay up for ourselves treasures upon earth?”
“Because there the moth and rust and the thief come.”
“And so we should lose those treasures!”
“Yes; by the moth and the rust and the thief.”
“Does the Lord then mean that the reason for not
laying up such treasures is their transitory and corruptible
nature?”
“No. He adds a For: ‘For where your treasure is,
there will your heart be also.’”
“Of course the heart will be where the treasure is;
but what has that to do with the argument?”
This: that what is with the treasure must fare as
the treasure; that the heart which haunts the treasure-house where
the moth and rust corrupt, will be exposed to the same ravages as
the treasure, will itself be rusted and moth-eaten.
Many a man, many a woman, fair and flourishing to
see, is going about with a rusty moth-eaten heart within that form
of strength or beauty.
“But this is only a figure.”
True. But is the reality intended, less or more than
the figure? Does not the rust and the moth mean more than disease?
And does not the heart mean more than the heart? Does it not mean a
deeper heart, the heart of your own self, not of your body? of the
self that suffers, not pain, but misery? of the self whose end is
not comfort, or enjoyment, but blessedness, yea, ecstasy? a heart
which is the inmost chamber wherein springs the divine fountain of
your being? a heart which God regards, though you may never have
known its existence, not even when its writhings under the gnawing
of the moth and the slow fire of the rust have communicated a dull
pain to that outer heart which sends the blood to its appointed
course through your body? If God sees that heart corroded with the
rust of cares, riddled into caverns and films by the worms of
ambition and greed, then your heart is as God sees it, for God sees
things as they are. And one day you will be compelled to see, nay,
to feel your heart as God sees it; and to know that the cankered
thing which you have within you, a prey to the vilest of diseases,
is indeed the centre of your being, your very heart.
Nor does the lesson apply to those only who worship
Mammon, who give their lives, their best energies to the
accumulation of wealth: it applies to those equally who in any way
worship the transitory; who seek the praise of men more than the
praise of God; who would make a show in the world by wealth, by
taste, by intellect, by power, by art, by genius of any kind, and so
would gather golden opinions to be treasured in a storehouse of
earth.
Nor to such only, but surely to those as well whose
pleasures are of a more evidently transitory nature still, such as
the pleasures of the senses in every direction—whether lawfully or
unlawfully indulged, if the joy of being is centred in them—do these
words bear terrible warning. For the hurt lies not in this—that
these pleasures are false like the deceptions of magic, for such
they are not: pleasures they are; nor yet in this—that they pass
away, and leave a fierce disappointment behind: that is only so much
the better; but the hurt lies in this—that the immortal, the
infinite, created in the image of the everlasting God, is housed
with the fading and the corrupting, and clings to them as its
good—clings to them till it is infected and interpenetrated with
their proper diseases, which assume in it a form more terrible in
proportion to the superiority of its kind, that which is mere decay
in the one becoming moral vileness in the other, that which fits the
one for the dunghill casting the other into the outer darkness;
creeps, that it may share with them, into a burrow in the earth,
where its budded wings wither and damp and drop away from its
shoulders, instead of haunting the open plains and the high—uplifted
table-lands, spreading abroad its young pinions to the sun and the
air, and strengthening them in further and further flights, till at
last they should become strong to bear the God-born into the
presence of its Father in Heaven. Therein lies the hurt.
He whose heart is sound because it haunts the
treasure-house of heaven may be tempted of the devil, but will be
first led up of the Spirit into the wilderness.
The Temptation in the Wilderness
the Unspoken Sermons
THE TEMPTATION IN THE WILDERNESS.
Then was Jesus led up of the
Spirit into the wilderness, to be tempted of the devil. And when he
had fasted forty days and forty nights, he was afterward an
hungered. And when the tempter came to him, he said, if thou be the
Son of God, command that these stones be made bread. But he answered
and said, It is written, Man shall not live by bread alone, but by
every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God. Then the devil
taketh him up into the holy city, and setteth him on a pinnacle of
the temple, and saith unto him, If thou be the Son of God, cast
thyself down; for it is written, He shall give his angels charge
concerning thee, and in their hands they shall bear thee up, lest at
any time thou dash thy foot against a stone. Jesus said unto him, It
is written again, thou shall not tempt the Lord thy God. Again, the
devil taketh him up into an exceeding high mountain, and showeth him
all the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them: and saith unto
him, All these things will I give thee, if thou wilt fall down and
worship me. Then saith Jesus unto him, Get thee hence, Satan; for it
is written, Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and him only shalt
thou serve. Then the devil leaveth him; and, behold, angels came and
ministered unto him.—Matt. iv. 1-11.
This narrative must have one of two
origins. Either it is an invention, such as many tales told of our
Lord in the earlier periods of Christianity; or it came from our
Lord himself, for, according to the story, except the wild beasts,
of earthly presence there was none at his Temptation.
As to the former of the two origins: The story bears
upon it no sign of human invention. The man who could see such
things as are here embodied, dared not invent such an embodiment for
them. To one in doubt about the matter it will be helpful, I think,
to compare this story with the best of those for which one or other
of the apocryphal gospels is our only authority—say the grand
account of the Descent into Hell in the Gospel according to
Nicodemus.
If it have not this origin, there is but the other
that it can have—Our Lord himself. To this I will return presently.
And now, let us approach the subject from another
side.
With this in view, I ask you to think how much God
must know of which we know nothing. Think what an abyss of truth was
our Lord, out of whose divine darkness, through that revealing
countenance, that uplifting voice, those hands whose tenderness has
made us great, broke all holy radiations of human significance.
Think of his understanding, imagination, heart, in which lay the
treasures of wisdom and knowledge. Must he not have known, felt,
imagined, rejoiced in things that would not be told in human words,
could not be understood by human hearts? Was he not always bringing
forth out of the light inaccessible? Was not his very human form a
veil hung over the face of the truth that, even in part by dimming
the effulgence of the glory, it might reveal? What could be conveyed
must be thus conveyed: an infinite More must lie behind. And even of
those things that might be partially revealed to men, could he talk
to his Father and talk to his disciples in altogether the same
forms, in altogether the same words? Would what he said to God on
the mountain-tops, in the dim twilight or the gray dawn, never be
such that his disciples could have understood it no more than the
people, when the voice of God spoke to him from heaven, could
distinguish that voice from the inarticulate thunderings of the
element?
There is no attempt made to convey to us even the
substance of the battle of those forty days. Such a conflict of
spirit as for forty days absorbed all the human necessities of The
Man in the cares of the Godhead could not be rendered into forms
intelligible to us, or rather, could not be in itself intelligible
to us, and therefore could not take any form of which we could lay
hold. It is not till the end of those forty days that the divine
event begins to dawn out from the sacred depths of the eternal
thought, becomes human enough to be made to appear, admits of
utterance, becomes capable of being spoken in human forms to the
ears of men, though yet only in a dark saying, which he that hath
ears to hear may hear, and he that hath a heart to understand may
understand. For the mystery is not left behind, nor can the speech
be yet clear unto men.
At the same moment when the approaching event comes
within human ken, may from afar be dimly descried by the God-upheld
intelligence, the same humanity seizes on the Master, and he is an
hungered. The first sign that he has come back to us, that the
strife is approaching its human result, is his hunger. On what a sea
of endless life do we float, are our poor necessities sustained—not
the poorest of them dissociated from the divine! Emerging from the
storms of the ocean of divine thought and feeling into the shallower
waters that lave the human shore, bearing with him the treasures won
in the strife, our Lord is straightway an hungered; and from this
moment the temptation is human, and can be in some measure
understood by us.
But could it even then have been conveyed to the
human mind in merely intellectual forms? Or, granting that it might,
could it be so conveyed to those who were only beginning to have the
vaguest, most error-mingled and confused notions about our Lord and
what he came to do? No. The inward experiences of our Lord, such as
could be conveyed to them at all, could be conveyed to them only in
a parable. For far plainer things than these, our Lord chose this
form. The form of the parable is the first in which truth will admit
of being embodied. Nor is this all: it is likewise the fullest; and
to the parable will the teacher of the truth ever return. Is he who
asserts that the passage contains a simple narrative of actual
events, prepared to believe, as the story, so interpreted,
indubitably gives us to understand, that a visible demon came to our
Lord and, himself the prince of worldly wisdom, thought, by quoting
Scripture after the manner of the priests, to persuade a good man to
tempt God; thought, by the promise of power, to prevail upon him to
cast aside every claim he had upon the human race, in falling down
and worshipping one whom he knew to be the adversary of Truth, of
Humanity, of God? How could Satan be so foolish? or, if Satan might
be so foolish, wherein could such temptation so presented have
tempted our Lord? and wherein would a victory over such be a victory
for the race?
Told as a parable, it is as full of meaning as it
would be bare if received as a narrative.
Our Lord spake then this parable unto them, and so
conveyed more of the truth with regard to his temptation in the
wilderness, than could have been conveyed by any other form in which
the truth he wanted to give them might have been embodied. Still I
do not think it follows that we have it exactly as he told it to his
disciples. A man will hear but what he can hear, will see but what
he can see, and, telling the story again, can tell but what he laid
hold of, what he seemed to himself to understand. His effort to
reproduce the impression made upon his mind will, as well as the
impression itself, be liable to numberless altering, modifying,
even, in a measure, discomposing influences. But it does not,
therefore, follow that the reproduction is false. The mighty hosts
of life-bearing worlds, requiring for the freedom of their courses,
and the glory of their changes, such awful abysses of space, dwindle
in the human eye to seeds of light sown upon a blue plain. How faint
in the ears of man is the voice of their sphere-born thunder of
adoration! Yet are they lovely indeed, uttering speech and teaching
knowledge. So this story may not be just as the Lord told it, and
yet may contain in its mirror as much of the truth as we are able to
receive, and as will afford us sufficient scope for a life’s
discovery. The modifying influences of the human channels may be
essential to God’s revealing mode. It is only by seeing them first
from afar that we learn the laws of the heavens.
And now arises the question upon the right answer
to which depends the whole elucidation of the story: How could the
Son of God be tempted?
If any one say that he was not moved by those
temptations, he must be told that then they were no temptations to
him, and he was not tempted; nor was his victory of more
significance than that of the man who, tempted to bear false witness
against his neighbour, abstains from robbing him of his goods. For
human need, struggle, and hope, it bears no meaning; and we must
reject the whole as a fantastic folly of crude invention; a mere
stage-show; a lie for the poor sake of the fancied truth; a doing of
evil that good might come; and, with how many fragments soever of
truth its mud may be filled, not in any way to be received as a
divine message.
But asserting that these were real temptations if
the story is to be received at all, am I not involving myself in a
greater difficulty still? For how could the Son of God be tempted
with evil—with that which must to him appear in its true colours of
discord, its true shapes of deformity? Or how could he then be the
Son of his Father who cannot be tempted with evil?
In the answer to this lies the centre, the
essential germ of the whole interpretation: He was not tempted with
Evil but with Good; with inferior forms of good, that is, pressing
in upon him, while the higher forms of good held themselves aloof,
biding their time, that is, God’s time. I do not believe that the
Son of God could be tempted with evil, but I do believe that he
could be tempted with good—to yield to which temptation would have
been evil in him—ruin to the universe.
But does not all evil come from good?
Yes; but it has come from it. It is no longer good.
A good corrupted is no longer a good. Such could not tempt our Lord.
Revenge may originate in a sense of justice, but it is revenge not
justice; an evil thing, for it would be fearfully unjust. Evil is
evil whatever it may have come from. The Lord could not have felt
tempted to take vengeance upon his enemies, but he might have felt
tempted to destroy the wicked from the face of the earth—to destroy
them from the face of the earth, I say, not to destroy them for
ever. To that I do not think he could have felt tempted.
But we shall find illustration enough of what I
mean in the matter itself. Let us look at the individual temptations
represented in the parable.
The informing idea which led to St Matthew’s
arrangement seems to me superior to that showing itself in St
Luke’s. In the two accounts, the closes, while each is profoundly
significant, are remarkably different.
Now let us follow St Matthew’s record.
And we shall see how the devil tempted him to evil,
but not with evil.
First, He was hungry, and the devil said, Make
bread of this stone.
The Lord had been fasting for forty days—a fast
impossible except during intense mental absorption. Let no one think
to glorify this fast by calling it miraculous. Wonderful such fasts
are on record on the part of holy men; and inasmuch as the Lord was
more of a man than his brethren, insomuch might he be farther
withdrawn in the depths of his spiritual humanity from the outer
region of his physical nature. So much the slower would be the
goings on of that nature; and fasting in his case might thus be
extended beyond the utmost limits of similar fasts in others. This,
I believe, was all—and this all infinite in its relations. This is
the grandest, simplest, and most significant, and, therefore, the
divinest way of regarding his fast. Hence, at the end of the forty
days, it was not hunger alone that made food tempting to him, but
that exhaustion of the whole system, wasting itself all the time it
was forgotten, which, reacting on the mind when the mind was already
worn out with its own tension, must have deadened it so, that
(speaking after the experience of his brethren, which alone will
explain his,) it could for the time see or feel nothing of the
spiritual, and could only believe in the unfelt, the unseen. What a
temptation was here! There is no sin in wishing to eat; no sin in
procuring food honestly that one may eat. But it rises even into an
awful duty, when a man knows that to eat will restore the lost
vision of the eternal; will, operating on the brain, and thence on
the mind, render the man capable of hope as well as of faith, of
gladness as well as of confidence, of praise as well as of patience.
Why then should he not eat? Why should he not put forth the power
that was in him that he might eat? Because such power was his, not
to take care of himself, but to work the work of him that sent him.
Such power was his not even to honour his Father save as his Father
chose to be honoured, who is far more honoured in the ordinary way
of common wonders, than in the extraordinary way of miracles.
Because it was God’s business to take care of him, his to do what
the Father told him to do. To make that stone bread would be to take
the care out of the Father’s hands, and turn the divinest thing in
the universe into the merest commonplace of self-preservation.
And in nothing was he to be beyond his brethren,
save in faith. No refuge for him, any more than for them, save in
the love and care of the Father. Other refuge, let it be miraculous
power or what you will, would be but hell to him. God is refuge. God
is life.
“Was he not to eat when it came in his way? And did
not the bread come in his way, when his power met that which could
be changed into it?”
Regard that word changed. The whole matter lies in
that. Changed from what? From what God had made it. Changed into
what? Into what he did not make it. Why changed? Because the Son was
hungry, and the Father would not feed him with food convenient for
him! The Father did not give him a stone when he asked for bread. It
was Satan that brought the stone and told him to provide for
himself. The Father said, That is a stone. The Son would not say,
That is a loaf. No one creative fiat shall contradict another. The
Father and the Son are of one mind. The Lord could hunger, could
starve, but would not change into another thing what his Father had
made one thing.1
1 There was no such change in the feeding of the
multitudes. The fish and the bread were fish and bread before. I
think this is significant as regards the true nature of a miracle,
and its relation to the ordinary ways of God. There was in these
miracles, and I think in all, only a hastening of appearances; the
doing of that in a day, which may ordinarily take a thousand years,
for with God time is not what it is with us. He makes it. And the
hastening of a process does not interfere in the least with cause
and effect in the process, nor does it render the process one whit
more miraculous. In deed, the wonder of the growing corn is to me
greater than the wonder of feeding the thousands. It is easier to
understand the creative power going forth at once—immediately—than
through the countless, the lovely, the seemingly forsaken wonders of
the corn-field. To the merely scientific man all this is pure
nonsense, or at best belongs to the region of the fancy. The time
will come, I think, when he will see that there is more in it,
namely, a higher reason, a loftier science, how incorrectly soever
herein indicated.
If we regard the answer he gave the devil, we shall
see the root of the matter at once: “Man shall not live by bread
alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.”
Yea even by the word which made that stone that stone. Everything is
all right. It is life indeed for him to leave that a stone, which
the Father had made a stone. It would be death to him to alter one
word that He had spoken.
“Man shall not live by bread alone.” There are
other ways of living besides that which comes by bread. A man will
live by the word of God, by what God says to him, by what God means
between Him and him, by the truths of being which the Father alone
can reveal to his child, by the communion of love between them.
Without the bread he will die, as men say; but he will not find that
he dies. He will only find that the tent which hid the stars from
him is gone, and that he can see the heavens; or rather, the earthly
house will melt away from around him, and he will find that he has a
palace-home about him, another and loftier word of God clothing upon
him. So the man lives by the word of God even in refusing the bread
which God does not give him, for, instead of dying because he does
not eat, he rises into a higher life even of the same kind.
For I have been speaking of the consciousness of
existence, and not of that higher spiritual life on which all other
life depends. That of course can for no one moment exist save from
the heart of God. When a man tries to live by bread and not by the
word that comes out of that heart of God, he may think he lives, but
he begins to die or is dead. Our Lord says, “I can do without the
life that comes of bread: without the life that comes of the word of
my Father, I die indeed.” Therefore he does not think twice about
the matter. That God’s will be done is all his care. That done, all
will be right, and all right with him, whether he thinks about
himself or not. For the Father does not forget the child who is so
busy trusting in him, that he cares not even to pray for himself.
In the higher aspect of this first temptation,
arising from the fact that a man cannot feel the things he believes
except under certain conditions of physical well-being dependent
upon food, the answer is the same: A man does not live by his
feelings any more than by bread, but by the Truth, that is, the
Word, the Will, the uttered Being of God.
I am even ashamed to yield here to the necessity of
writing what is but as milk for babes, when I would gladly utter, if
I might, only that which would be as bread for men and women. What I
must say is this: that, by the Word of God, I do not understand The
Bible. The Bible is a Word of God, the chief of his written words,
because it tells us of The Word, the Christ; but everything God has
done and given man to know is a word of his, a will of his; and
inasmuch as it is a will of his, it is a necessity to man, without
which he cannot live: the reception of it is man’s life. For
inasmuch as God’s utterances are a whole, every smallest is
essential: he speaks no foolishness—there are with him no vain
repetitions. But by the word of the God and not Maker only, who is
God just because he speaks to men, I must understand, in the deepest
sense, every revelation of Himself in the heart and consciousness of
man, so that the man knows that God is there, nay, rather, that he
is here. Even Christ himself is not The Word of God in the deepest
sense to a man, until he is this Revelation of God to the man,—until
the Spirit that is the meaning in the Word has come to him,—until
the speech is not a sound as of thunder, but the voice of words; for
a word is more than an utterance—it is a sound to be understood. No
word, I say, is fully a Word of God until it is a Word to man, until
the man therein recognizes God. This is that for which the word is
spoken. The words of God are as the sands and the stars,—they cannot
be numbered; but the end of all and each is this—to reveal God. Nor,
moreover, can the man know that any one of them is the word of God,
save as it comes thus to him, is a revelation of God in him. It is
to him that it may be in him; but till it is in him he cannot know
that it was to him. God must be God in man before man can know that
he is God, or that he has received aright, and for that for which it
was spoken, any one of his words.2
2 No doubt the humble spirit will receive the
testimony of every one whom he reveres, and look in the direction
indicated for a word from the Father; but till he thus receives it
in his heart, he cannot know what the word spoken of is.
If, by any will of God—that is, any truth in him—we
live, we live by it tenfold when that will has become a word to us.
When we receive it, his will becomes our will, and so we live by
God. But the word of God once understood, a man must live by the
faith of what God is, and not by his own feelings even in regard to
God. It is the Truth itself, that which God is, known by what goeth
out of his mouth, that man lives by. And when he can no longer feel
the truth, he shall not therefore die. He lives because God is true;
and he is able to know that he lives because he knows, having once
understood the word, that God is truth. He believes in the God of
former vision, lives by that word therefore, when all is dark and
there is no vision.
We now come to the second attempt of the Enemy.
“Then if God is to be so trusted, try him. Fain
would I see the result. Shew thyself his darling. Here is the word
itself for it: He shall give his angels charge concerning thee; not
a stone shall hurt thee. Take him at his word. Throw thyself down,
and strike the conviction into me that thou art the Son of God. For
thou knowest thou dost not look like what thou sayest thou art.”
Again, with a written word, in return, the Lord
meets him. And he does not quote the scripture for logical
purposes—to confute Satan intellectually, but as giving even Satan
the reason of his conduct. Satan quotes Scripture as a verbal
authority; our Lord meets him with a Scripture by the truth in which
he regulates his conduct.
If we examine it, we shall find that this answer
contains the same principle as the former, namely this, that to the
Son of God the will of God is Life. It was a temptation to shew the
powers of the world that he was the Son of God; that to him the
elements were subject; that he was above the laws of Nature, because
he was the Eternal Son; and thus stop the raging of the heathen, and
the vain imaginations of the people. It would be but to shew them
the truth. But he was the Son of God: what was his Father’s will?
Such was not the divine way of convincing the world of sin, of
righteousness, of judgment. If the Father told him to cast himself
down, that moment the pinnacle pointed naked to the sky. If the
devil threw him down, let God send his angels; or, if better, allow
him to be dashed to pieces in the valley below. But never will he
forestall the divine will. The Father shall order what comes next.
The Son will obey. In the path of his work he will turn aside for no
stone. There let the angels bear him in their hands if need be. But
he will not choose the path because there is a stone in it. He will
not choose at all. He will go where the Spirit leads him.
I think this will throw some light upon the words
of our Lord, “If ye have faith and doubt not, if ye shall say unto
this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it
shall be done.” Good people, amongst them John Bunyan, have been
tempted to tempt the Lord their God upon the strength of this
saying, just as Satan sought to tempt our Lord on the strength of
the passage he quoted from the Psalms. Happily for such, the
assurance to which they would give the name of faith generally fails
them in time. Faith is that which, knowing the Lord’s will, goes and
does it; or, not knowing it, stands and waits, content in ignorance
as in knowledge, because God wills; neither pressing into the hidden
future, nor careless of the knowledge which opens the path of
action. It is its noblest exercise to act with uncertainty of the
result, when the duty itself is certain, or even when a course seems
with strong probability to be duty.
But to put God to
the question in any other way than by saying, What wilt thou have me
to do? is an attempt to compel God to declare himself, or to hasten
his work. This probably was the sin of Judas. It is presumption of a
kind similar to the making of a stone into bread. It is, as it were,
either a forcing of God to act where he has created no need for
action, or the making of a case wherein he shall seem to have
forfeited his word if he does not act. The man is therein
dissociating himself from God so far that, instead of acting by the
divine will from within, he acts in God’s face, as it were, to see
what he will do. Man’s first business is, “What does God want me to
do?” not “What will God do if I do so and so?” To tempt a parent
after the flesh in such a manner would be impertinence: to tempt God
so is the same vice in its highest form—a natural result of that
condition of mind which is worse than all the so-called cardinal
sins, namely, spiritual pride, which attributes the tenderness and
love of God not to man’s being and man’s need, but to some
distinguishing excellence in the individual himself, which causes
the Father to love him better than his fellows, and so pass by his
faults with a smile. Not thus did the Son of God regard his relation
to his Father. The faith which will remove mountains is that
confidence in God which comes from seeking nothing but his will. A
man who was thus faithful would die of hunger sooner than say to the
stone, Be bread; would meet the scoffs of the unbelieving without
reply and with apparent defeat, sooner than say to the mountain, Be
thou cast into the sea, even if he knew that it would be torn from
its foundations at the word, except he knew first that God would
have it so.
And thus I am naturally brought to consider more
fully how this should be a real temptation to the Son of Man. It
would be good to confound his adversaries; to force conviction upon
them that he was the God-supported messenger he declared himself.
Why should he have adversaries a moment longer to interfere between
him and the willing hearts which would believe if they could? The
answer to all this was plain to our Lord, and is plain to us now: It
was not the way of the Father’s will. It would not fall in with that
gradual development of life and history by which the Father works,
and which must be the way to breed free, God-loving wills. It would
be violent, theatrical, therefore poor in nature and in result,—not
God-like in any way. Everything in God’s doing comes harmoniously
with and from all the rest. Son of Man, his history shall be a man’s
history, shall be The Man’s history. Shall that begin with an
exception? Yet it might well be a temptation to Him who longed to do
all he could for men. He was the Son of God: why should not the sons
of God know it?
But as this temptation in the wilderness was an
epitome and type of the temptations to come, against which for forty
days he had been making himself strong, revolving truth beyond our
reach, in whose light every commonest duty was awful and divine, a
vision fit almost to oppress a God in his humiliation, so we shall
understand the whole better if we look at his life in relation to
it. As he refused to make stones bread, so throughout that life he
never wrought a miracle to help himself; as he refused to cast
himself from the temple to convince Satan or glory visibly in his
Sonship, so he steadily refused to give the sign which the human
Satans demanded, notwithstanding the offer of conviction which they
held forth to bribe him to the grant. How easy it seems to have
confounded them, and strengthened his followers! But such conviction
would stand in the way of a better conviction in his disciples, and
would do his adversaries only harm. For neither could not in any
true sense be convinced by such a show: it could but prove his
power. It might prove so far the presence of a God; but would it
prove that God? Would it bring him nearer to them, who could not see
him in the face of his Son? To say Thou art God, without knowing
what the Thou means—of what use is it? God is a name only, except we
know God. Our Lord did not care to be so acknowledged.
On the same principle, the very miracles which from
their character did partially reveal his character to those who
already had faith in him, he would not do where unbelief
predominated. He often avoided cities and crowds, and declined
mighty works because of unbelief. Except for the loving help they
gave the distressed, revealing him to their hearts as the Redeemer
from evil, I doubt if he would have wrought a single miracle. I do
not think he cared much about them. Certainly, as regarded the
onlookers, he did not expect much to result from those mighty deeds.
A mere marvel is practically soon forgotten, and long before it is
forgotten, many minds have begun to doubt the senses, their own
even, which communicated it. Inward sight alone can convince of
truth; signs and wonders never. No number of signs can do more than
convey a probability that he who shews them knows that of which he
speaks. They cannot convey the truth. But the vision of the truth
itself, in the knowledge of itself, a something altogether beyond
the region of signs and wonders, is the power of God, is salvation.
This vision was in the Lord’s face and form to the pure in heart who
were able to see God; but not in his signs and wonders to those who
sought after such. Yet it is easy to see how the temptation might
for a moment work upon a mind that longed to enter upon its labours
with the credentials of its truth. How the true heart longs to be
received by its brethren—to be known in its truth! But no. The truth
must show itself in God’s time, in and by the labour. The kingdom
must come in God’s holy human way. Not by a stroke of grandeur, but
by years of love, yea, by centuries of seeming bafflement, by ćons
of labour, must he grow into the hearts of the sons and daughters of
his Father in heaven. The Lord himself will be bound by the
changeless laws which are the harmony of the Fathers being and
utterance. He will be, not seem. He will be, and thereby, not
therefore, seem. Yet, once more, even on him, the idea of asserting
the truth in holy power such as he could have put forth, must have
dawned in grandeur. The thought was good: to have yielded to it
would have been the loss of the world; nay, far worse—ill
inconceivable to the human mind—the God of obedience had fallen from
his throne, and—all is blackness.
But let us not forget that the whole is a faint
parable—faint I mean in relation to the grandeur of the reality, as
the ring and the shoes are poor types (yet how dear!) of the
absolute love of the Father to his prodigal children.
We shall now look at the third temptation. The
first was to help himself in his need; the second, perhaps, to
assert the Father; the third to deliver his brethren.
To deliver them, that is, after the fashion of
men—from the outside still. Indeed, the whole Temptation may be
regarded as the contest of the seen and the unseen, of the outer and
inner, of the likely and the true, of the show and the reality. And
as in the others, the evil in this last lay in that it was a
temptation to save his brethren, instead of doing the Will of his
Father.
Could it be other than a temptation to think that
he might, if he would, lay a righteous grasp upon the reins of
government, leap into the chariot of power, and ride forth
conquering and to conquer? Glad visions arose before him of the
prisoner breaking jubilant from the cell of injustice; of the widow
lifting up the bowed head before the devouring Pharisee; of weeping
children bursting into shouts at the sound of the wheels of the
chariot before which oppression and wrong shrunk and withered,
behind which sprung the fir-tree instead of the thorn, and the
myrtle instead of the brier. What glowing visions of holy vengeance,
what rosy dreams of human blessedness—and all from his hand—would
crowd such a brain as his!—not like the castles-in-the-air of the
aspiring youth, for he builds at random, because he knows that he
cannot realize; but consistent and harmonious as well as grand,
because he knew them within his reach. Could he not mould the people
at his will? Could he not, transfigured in his snowy garments, call
aloud in the streets of Jerusalem, “Behold your King?” And the
fierce warriors of his nation would start at the sound; the
ploughshare would be beaten into the sword, and the pruning-hook
into the spear; and the nation, rushing to his call, learn war yet
again indeed,—a grand, holy war—a crusade—no; we should not have had
that word; but a war against the tyrants of the race—the best, as
they called themselves—who trod upon their brethren, and would not
suffer them even to look to the heavens.—Ah! but when were his
garments white as snow? When, through them, glorifying them as it
passed, did the light stream from his glorified body? Not when he
looked to such a conquest; but when, on a mount like this, he “spake
of the decease that he should accomplish at Jerusalem”! Why should
this be “the sad end of the war”? “Thou shalt worship the Lord thy
God, and him only shalt thou serve.” Not even thine own visions of
love and truth, O Saviour of the world, shall be thy guides to thy
goal, but the will of thy Father in heaven.
But how would he, thus conquering, be a servant of
Satan? Wherein would this be a falling-down and a worshipping of him
(that is, an acknowledging of the worth of him) who was the lord of
misrule and its pain?
I will not inquire whether such an enterprise could
be accomplished without the worship of Satan,—whether men could be
managed for such an end without more or less of the trickery
practised by every ambitious leader, every self-serving
conqueror—without double-dealing, tact, flattery, finesse. I will
not inquire into this, because, on the most distant supposition of
our Lord being the leader of his country’s armies, these things drop
out of sight as impossibilities. If these were necessary, such a
career for him refuses to be for a moment imagined. But I will ask
whether to know better and do not so well, is not a serving of
Satan;—whether to lead men on in the name of God as towards the best
when the end is not the best, is not a serving of Satan;—whether to
flatter their pride by making them conquerors of the enemies of
their nation instead of their own evils, is not a serving of
Satan;—in a word, whether, to desert the mission of God, who knew
that men could not be set free in that way, and sent him to be a
man, a true man, the one man, among them, that his life might become
their life, and that so they might be as free in prison or on the
cross, as upon a hill-side or on a throne,—whether, so deserting the
truth, to give men over to the lie of believing other than spirit
and truth to be the worship of the Father, other than love the
fulfilling of the law, other than the offering of their best selves
the service of God, other than obedient harmony with the primal love
and truth and law, freedom,—whether, to desert God thus, and give
men over thus, would not have been to fall down and worship the
devil. Not all the sovereignty of God, as the theologians call it,
delegated to the Son, and administered by the wisdom of the Spirit
that was given to him without measure, could have wrought the
kingdom of heaven in one corner of our earth. Nothing but the
obedience of the Son, the obedience unto the death, the absolute
doing of the will of God because it was the truth, could redeem the
prisoner, the widow, the orphan. But it would redeem them by
redeeming the conquest-ridden conqueror too, the stripe-giving
jailer, the unjust judge, the devouring Pharisee himself with the
insatiable moth-eaten heart. The earth should be free because Love
was stronger than Death. Therefore should fierceness and wrong and
hypocrisy and God-service play out their weary play. He would not
pluck the spreading branches of the tree; he would lay the axe to
its root. It would take time; but the tree would be dead at
last—dead, and cast into the lake of fire. It would take time; but
his Father had time enough and to spare. It would take courage and
strength and self-denial and endurance; but his Father could give
him all. It would cost pain of body and mind, yea, agony and
torture; but those he was ready to take on himself. It would cost
him the vision of many sad and, to all but him, hopeless sights; he
must see tears without wiping them, hear sighs without changing them
into laughter, see the dead lie, and let them lie; see Rachel
weeping for her children and refusing to be comforted; he must look
on his brothers and sisters crying as children over their broken
toys, and must not mend them; he must go on to the grave, and they
not know that thus he was setting all things right for them. His
work must be one with and completing God’s Creation and God’s
History. The disappointment and sorrow and fear he could, he would
bear. The will of God should be done. Man should be free,—not merely
man as he thinks of himself, but man as God thinks of him. The
divine idea shall be set free in the divine bosom; the man on earth
shall see his angel face to face. He shall grow into the likeness of
the divine thought, free not in his own fancy, but in absolute
divine fact of being, as in God’s idea. The great and beautiful and
perfect will of God must be done.
“Get thee hence, Satan: for it is written, Thou
shalt worship the Lord thy God, and him only shalt thou serve.”
It was when Peter would have withstood him as he
set his face steadfastly to meet this death at Jerusalem, that he
gave him the same kind of answer that he now gave to Satan, calling
him Satan too.
“Then the devil leaveth him, and behold angels came
and ministered unto him.”
So saith St Matthew. They brought him the food he
had waited for, walking in the strength of the word. He would have
died if it had not come now.
“And when the devil had ended all the temptation,
he departed from him for a season.”
So saith St Luke.
Then Satan ventured once more. When?
Was it then, when at the last moment, in the agony
of the last faint, the Lord cried out, “Why hast thou forsaken me?”
when, having done the great work, having laid it aside clean and
pure as the linen cloth that was ready now to infold him, another
cloud than that on the mount overshadowed his soul, and out of it
came a voiceless persuasion that, after all was done, God did not
care for his work or for him?
Even in those words the adversary was foiled—and
for ever. For when he seemed to be forsaken, his cry was still, “My
God! my God!”
The Eloi
the Unspoken Sermons
THE ELOI.
My God, my God, why hast thou
forsaken me?”—Matthew xxvii. 46.
I Do not know that I should dare to
approach this, of all utterances into which human breath has ever
been moulded, most awful in import, did I not feel that, containing
both germ and blossom of the final devotion, it contains therefore
the deepest practical lesson the human heart has to learn. The Lord,
the Revealer, hides nothing that can be revealed, and will not warn
away the foot that treads in naked humility even upon the ground of
that terrible conflict between him and Evil, when the smoke of the
battle that was fought not only with garments rolled in blood but
with burning and fuel of fire, rose up between him and his Father,
and for the one terrible moment ere he broke the bonds of life, and
walked weary and triumphant into his arms, hid God from the eyes of
his Son. He will give us even to meditate the one thought that slew
him at last, when he could bear no more, and fled to the Father to
know that he loved him, and was well-pleased with him. For Satan had
come at length yet again, to urge him with his last temptation; to
tell him that although he had done his part, God had forgotten his;
that although he had lived by the word of his mouth, that mouth had
no word more to speak to him; that although he had refused to tempt
him, God had left him to be tempted more than he could bear; that
although he had worshipped none other, for that worship God did not
care. The Lord hides not his sacred sufferings, for truth is light,
and would be light in the minds of men. The Holy Child, the Son of
the Father, has nothing to conceal, but all the Godhead to reveal.
Let us then put off our shoes, and draw near, and bow the head, and
kiss those feet that bear for ever the scars of our victory. In
those feet we clasp the safety of our suffering, our sinning
brotherhood.
It is with the holiest fear that we should approach
the terrible fact of the sufferings of our Lord. Let no one think
that those were less because he was more. The more delicate the
nature, the more alive to all that is lovely and true, lawful and
right, the more does it feel the antagonism of pain, the inroad of
death upon life; the more dreadful is that breach of the harmony of
things whose sound is torture. He felt more than man could feel,
because he had a larger feeling. He was even therefore worn out
sooner than another man would have been. These sufferings were awful
indeed when they began to invade the region about the will; when the
struggle to keep consciously trusting in God began to sink in
darkness; when the Will of The Man put forth its last determined
effort in that cry after the vanishing vision of the Father: My God,
my God, why hast thou forsaken me? Never had it been so with him
before. Never before had he been unable to see God beside him. Yet
never was God nearer him than now. For never was Jesus more divine.
He could not see, could not feel him near; and yet it is “My God”
that he cries.
Thus the Will of Jesus, in the very moment when his
faith seems about to yield, is finally triumphant. It has no feeling
now to support it, no beatific vision to absorb it. It stands naked
in his soul and tortured, as he stood naked and scourged before
Pilate. Pure and simple and surrounded by fire, it declares for God.
The sacrifice ascends in the cry, My God. The cry comes not out of
happiness, out of peace, out of hope. Not even out of suffering
comes that cry. It was a cry in desolation, but it came out of
Faith. It is the last voice of Truth, speaking when it can but cry.
The divine horror of that moment is unfathomable by human soul. It
was blackness of darkness. And yet he would believe. Yet he would
hold fast. God was his God yet. My God—and in the cry came forth the
Victory, and all was over soon. Of the peace that followed that cry,
the peace of a perfect soul, large as the universe, pure as light,
ardent as life, victorious for God and his brethren, he himself
alone can ever know the breadth and length, and depth and height.
Without this last trial of all, the temptations of our
Master had not been so full as the human cup could hold; there would
have been one region through which we had to pass wherein we might
call aloud upon our Captain-Brother, and there would be no voice or
hearing: he had avoided the fatal spot! The temptations of the
desert came to the young, strong man with his road before him and
the presence of his God around him; nay, gathered their very force
from the exuberance of his conscious faith. “Dare and do, for God is
with thee,” said the devil. “I know it, and therefore I will wait,”
returned the king of his brothers. And now, after three years of
divine action, when his course is run, when the old age of finished
work is come, when the whole frame is tortured until the regnant
brain falls whirling down the blue gulf of fainting, and the giving
up of the ghost is at hand, when the friends have forsaken him and
fled, comes the voice of the enemy again at his ear: “Despair and
die, for God is not with thee. All is in vain. Death, not Life, is
thy refuge. Make haste to Hades, where thy torture will be over.
Thou hast deceived thyself. He never was with thee. He was the God
of Abraham. Abraham is dead. Whom makest thou thyself?” “My God, my
God, why hast thou forsaken me?” the Master cries. For God was his
God still, although he had forsaken him—forsaken his vision that his
faith might glow out triumphant; forsaken himself? no; come nearer
to him than ever; come nearer, even as—but with a yet deeper, more
awful pregnancy of import—even as the Lord himself withdrew from the
bodily eyes of his friends, that he might dwell in their profoundest
being.
I do not think it was our Lord’s deepest trial when in
the garden he prayed that the cup might pass from him, and prayed
yet again that the will of the Father might be done. For that will
was then present with him. He was living and acting in that will.
But now the foreseen horror has come. He is drinking the dread cup,
and the Will has vanished from his eyes. Were that Will visible in
his suffering, his will could bow with tearful gladness under the
shelter of its grandeur. But now his will is left alone to drink the
cup of The Will in torture. In the sickness of this agony, the Will
of Jesus arises perfect at last; and of itself, unsupported now,
declares—a naked consciousness of misery hung in the waste darkness
of the universe—declares for God, in defiance of pain, of death, of
apathy, of self, of negation, of the blackness within and around it;
calls aloud upon the vanished God.
This is the Faith of the Son of God. God withdrew, as
it were, that the perfect Will of the Son might arise and go forth
to find the Will of the Father.
Is it possible that even then he thought of the lost
sheep who could not believe that God was their Father; and for them,
too, in all their loss and blindness and unlove, cried, saying the
word they might say, knowing for them that God means Father and
more, and knowing now, as he had never known till now, what a
fearful thing it is to be without God and without hope? I dare not
answer the question I put.
But wherein or what can this Alpine apex of faith have
to do with the creatures who call themselves Christians, creeping
about in the valleys, hardly knowing that there are mountains above
them, save that they take offence at and stumble over the pebbles
washed across their path by the glacier streams? I will tell you. We
are and remain such creeping Christians, because we look at
ourselves and not at Christ; because we gaze at the marks of our own
soiled feet, and the trail of our own defiled garments, instead of
up at the snows of purity, whither the soul of Christ clomb. Each,
putting his foot in the footprint of the Master, and so defacing it,
turns to examine how far his neighbour’s footprint corresponds with
that which he still calls the Master’s, although it is but his own.
Or, having committed a petty fault, I mean a fault such as only a
petty creature could commit, we mourn over the defilement to
ourselves, and the shame of it before our friends, children, or
servants, instead of hastening to make the due confession and amends
to our fellow, and then, forgetting our paltry self with its
well-earned disgrace, lift up our eyes to the glory which alone will
quicken the true man in us, and kill the peddling creature we so
wrongly call our self. The true self is that which can look Jesus in
the face, and say My Lord.
When the inward sun is shining, and the wind of
thought, blowing where it lists amid the flowers and leaves of fancy
and imagination, rouses glad forms and feelings, it is easy to look
upwards, and say My God. It is easy when the frosts of external
failure have braced the mental nerves to healthy endurance and fresh
effort after labour, it is easy then to turn to God and trust in
him, in whom all honest exertion gives an ability as well as a right
to trust. It is easy in pain, so long as it does not pass certain
undefinable bounds, to hope in God for deliverance, or pray for
strength to endure. But what is to be done when all feeling is gone?
when a man does not know whether he believes or not, whether he
loves or not? when art, poetry, religion are nothing to him, so
swallowed up is he in pain, or mental depression, or disappointment,
or temptation, or he knows not what? It seems to him then that God
does not care for him, and certainly he does not care for God. If he
is still humble, he thinks that he is so bad that God cannot care
for him. And he then believes for the time that God loves us only
because and when and while we love him; instead of believing that
God loves us always because he is our God, and that we live only by
his love. Or he does not believe in a God at all, which is better.
So long as we have nothing to say to God, nothing to
do with him, save in the sunshine of the mind when we feel him near
us, we are poor creatures, willed upon, not willing; reeds,
flowering reeds, it may be, and pleasant to behold, but only reeds
blown about of the wind; not bad, but poor creatures.
And how in such a condition do we generally act? Do
we not sit mourning over the loss of our feelings? or worse, make
frantic efforts to rouse them? or, ten times worse, relapse into a
state of temporary atheism, and yield to the pressing temptation?
or, being heartless, consent to remain careless, conscious of evil
thoughts and low feelings alone, but too lazy, too content to rouse
ourselves against them? We know we must get rid of them some day,
but meantime—never mind; we do not feel them bad, we do not feel
anything else good; we are asleep and we know it, and we cannot be
troubled to wake. No impulse comes to arouse us, and so we remain as
we are.
God does not, by the instant gift of his Spirit, make
us always feel right, desire good, love purity, aspire after him and
his will. Therefore either he will not, or he cannot. If he will
not, it must be because it would not be well to do so. If he cannot,
then he would not if he could; else a better condition than God’s is
conceivable to the mind of God—a condition in which he could save
the creatures whom he has made, better than he can save them. The
truth is this: He wants to make us in his own image, choosing the
good, refusing the evil. How should he effect this if he were always
moving us from within, as he does at divine intervals, towards the
beauty of holiness? God gives us room to be; does not oppress us
with his will; “stands away from us,” that we may act from
ourselves, that we may exercise the pure will for good. Do not,
therefore, imagine me to mean that we can do anything of ourselves
without God. If we choose the right at last, it is all God’s doing,
and only the more his that it is ours, only in a far more marvellous
way his than if he had kept us filled with all holy impulses
precluding the need of choice. For up to this very point, for this
very point, he has been educating us, leading us, pushing us,
driving us, enticing us, that we may choose him and his will, and so
be tenfold more his children, of his own best making, in the freedom
of the will found our own first in its loving sacrifice to him, for
which in his grand fatherhood he has been thus working from the
foundations of the earth, than we could be in the most ecstatic
worship flowing from the divinest impulse, without this willing
sacrifice. For God made our individuality as well as, and a greater
marvel than, our dependence; made our apartness from himself, that
freedom should bind us divinely dearer to himself, with a new and
inscrutable marvel of love; for the Godhead is still at the root, is
the making root of our individuality, and the freer the man, the
stronger the bond that binds him to him who made his freedom. He
made our wills, and is striving to make them free; for only in the
perfection of our individuality and the freedom of our wills call we
be altogether his children. This is full of mystery, but can we not
see enough in it to make us very glad and very peaceful?
Not in any other act than one which, in spite of
impulse or of weakness, declares for the Truth, for God, does the
will spring into absolute freedom, into true life.
See, then, what lies within our reach every time that
we are thus lapt in the folds of night. The highest condition of the
human will is in sight, is attainable. I say not the highest
condition of the Human Being; that surely lies in the Beatific
Vision, in the sight of God. But the highest condition of the Human
Will, as distinct, not as separated from God, is when, not seeing
God, not seeming to itself to grasp him at all, it yet holds him
fast. It cannot continue in this condition, for, not finding, not
seeing God, the man would die; but the will thus asserting itself,
the man has passed from death into life, and the vision is nigh at
hand. Then first, thus free, in thus asserting its freedom, is the
individual will one with the Will of God; the child is finally
restored to the father; the childhood and the fatherhood meet in
one; the brotherhood of the race arises from the dust; and the
prayer of our Lord is answered, “I in them and thou in me, that they
may be made perfect in one.” Let us then arise in God-born strength
every time that we feel the darkness closing, or become aware that
it has closed around us, and say, “I am of the Light and not of the
Darkness.”
Troubled soul, thou art not bound to feel, but thou
art bound to arise. God loves thee whether thou feelest or not. Thou
canst not love when thou wilt, but thou art bound to fight the
hatred in thee to the last. Try not to feel good when thou art not
good, but cry to Him who is good. He changes not because thou
changest. Nay, he has an especial tenderness of love towards thee
for that thou art in the dark and hast no light, and his heart is
glad when thou dost arise and say, “I will go to my Father.” For he
sees thee through all the gloom through which thou canst not see
him. Will thou his will. Say to him: “My God, I am very dull and low
and hard; but thou art wise and high and tender, and thou art my
God. I am thy child. Forsake me not.” Then fold the arms of thy
faith, and wait in quietness until light goes up in thy darkness.
Fold the arms of thy Faith I say, but not of thy Action: bethink
thee of something that thou oughtest to do, and go and do it, if it
be but the sweeping of a room, or the preparing of a meal, or a
visit to a friend. Heed not thy feelings: Do thy work.
As God lives by his own will, and we live in him, so
has he given to us power to will in ourselves. How much better
should we not fare if, finding that we are standing with our heads
bowed away from the good, finding that we have no feeble inclination
to seek the source of our life, we should yet will upwards toward
God, rousing that essence of life in us, which he has given us from
his own heart, to call again upon him who is our Life, who can fill
the emptiest heart, rouse the deadest conscience, quicken the
dullest feeling, and strengthen the feeblest will!
Then, if ever the time should come, as perhaps it
must come to each of us, when all consciousness of well-being shall
have vanished, when the earth shall be but a sterile promontory, and
the heavens a dull and pestilent congregation of vapours, when man
nor woman shall delight us more, nay, when God himself shall be but
a name, and Jesus an old story, then, even then, when a Death far
worse than “that phantom of grisly bone” is griping at our hearts,
and having slain love, hope, faith, forces existence upon us only in
agony, then, even then, we shall be able to cry out with our Lord,
“My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?” Nor shall we die then,
I think, without being able to take up his last words as well, and
say, “Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit.”
The Hands of the Father
the Unspoken Sermons
THE HANDS OF THE FATHER.
“Father, into thy hand I commend my
spirit.”—Luke xxiii. 46.
Neither St Matthew nor St Mark tells us
of any words uttered by our Lord after the Eloi. They both, along
with St Luke, tell us of a cry with a loud voice, and the giving up
of the ghost; between which cry and the giving up, St Luke records
the words, “Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit.” St Luke
says nothing of the Eloi prayer of desolation. St John records
neither the Eloi, nor the Father into thy hands, nor the loud cry.
He tells us only that after Jesus had received the vinegar, he said,
“It is finished,” and bowed his head, and gave up the ghost.
Will the Lord ever tell us why he cried so? Was it the
cry of relief at the touch of death? Was it the cry of victory? Was
it the cry of gladness that he had endured to the end? Or did the
Father look out upon him in answer to his My God, and the
blessedness of it make him cry aloud because he could not smile? Was
such his condition now that the greatest gladness of the universe
could express itself only in a loud cry? Or was it but the last
wrench of pain ere the final repose began? It may have been all in
one. But never surely in all books, in all words of thinking men,
can there be so much expressed as lay unarticulated in that cry of
the Son of God. Now had he made his Father Lord no longer in the
might of making and loving alone, but Lord in right of devotion and
deed of love. Now should inward sonship and the spirit of glad
sacrifice be born in the hearts of men; for the divine obedience was
perfected by suffering. He had been amongst his brethren what he
would have his brethren be. He had done for them what he would have
them do for God and for each other. God was henceforth inside and
beneath them, as well as around and above them, suffering with them
and for them, giving them all he had, his very life-being, his
essence of existence, what best he loved, what best he was. He had
been among them, their God-brother. And the mighty story ends with a
cry.
Then the cry meant, It is finished; the cry meant,
Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit. Every highest human act
is just a giving back to God of that which he first gave to us.
“Thou God hast given me: here again is thy gift. I send my spirit
home.” Every act of worship is a holding up to God of what God hath
made us. “Here, Lord, look what I have got: feel with me in what
thou hast made me, in this thy own bounty, my being. I am thy child,
and know not how to thank thee save by uplifting the heave-offering
of the overflowing of thy life, and calling aloud, ‘It is thine: it
is mine. I am thine, and therefore I am mine.’” The vast operations
of the spiritual as of the physical world, are simply a turning
again to the source.
The last act of our Lord in thus commending his spirit
at the close of his life, was only a summing up of what he had been
doing all his life. He had been offering this sacrifice, the
sacrifice of himself, all the years, and in thus sacrificing he had
lived the divine life. Every morning when he went out ere it was
day, every evening when he lingered on the night-lapt mountain after
his friends were gone, he was offering himself to his Father in the
communion of loving words, of high thoughts, of speechless feelings;
and, between, he turned to do the same thing in deed, namely, in
loving word, in helping thought, in healing action towards his
fellows; for the way to worship God while the daylight lasts is to
work; the service of God, the only “divine service,” is the helping
of our fellows.
I do not seek to point out this commending of our
spirits to the Father as a duty: that is to turn the highest
privilege we possess into a burden grievous to be borne. But I want
to shew that it is the simplest blessedest thing in the human world.
For the Human Being may say thus with himself: “Am I
going to sleep—to lose consciousness—to be helpless for a
time—thoughtless—dead? Or, more awful consideration, in the dreams
that may come may I not be weak of will and scant of
conscience?—Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit. I give
myself back to thee. Take me, soothe me, refresh me, ‘make me over
again.’ Am I going out into the business and turmoil of the day,
where so many temptations may come to do less honourably, less
faithfully, less kindly, less diligently than the Ideal Man would
have me do?—Father, into thy hands. Am I going to do a good deed?
Then, of all times,—Father, into thy hands; lest the enemy should
have me now. Am I going to do a hard duty, from which I would gladly
be turned aside,—to refuse a friend’s request, to urge a neighbour’s
conscience?—Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit. Am I in
pain? Is illness coming upon me to shut out the glad visions of a
healthy brain, and bring me such as are troubled and untrue?—Take my
spirit, Lord, and see, as thou art wont, that it has no more to bear
than it can bear. Am I going to die? Thou knowest, if only from the
cry of thy Son, how terrible that is; and if it comes not to me in
so terrible a shape as that in which it came to him, think how poor
to bear I am beside him. I do not know what the struggle means; for,
of the thousands who pass through it every day, not one enlightens
his neighbour left behind; but shall I not long with agony for one
breath of thy air, and not receive it? shall I not be torn asunder
with dying?—I will question no more: Father, into thy hands I
commend my spirit. For it is thy business, not mine. Thou wilt know
every shade of my suffering; thou wilt care for me with thy perfect
fatherhood; for that makes my sonship, and inwraps and infolds it.
As a child I could bear great pain when my father was leaning over
me, or had his arm about me: how much nearer my soul cannot thy
hands come!—yea, with a comfort, father of me, that I have never yet
even imagined; for how shall my imagination overtake thy swift
heart? I care not for the pain, so long as my spirit is strong, and
into thy hands I commend that spirit. If thy love, which is better
than life, receive it, then surely thy tenderness will make it
great.”
Thus may the Human Being say with himself.
Think, brothers, think, sisters, we walk in the air of
an eternal fatherhood. Every uplifting of the heart is a looking up
to The Father. Graciousness and truth are around, above, beneath us,
yea, in us. When we are least worthy, then, most tempted, hardest,
unkindest, let us yet commend our spirits into his hands. Whither
else dare we send them? How the earthly father would love a child
who would creep into his room with angry, troubled face, and sit
down at his feet, saying when asked what he wanted: “I feel so
naughty, papa, and I want to get good”! Would he say to his child:
“How dare you! Go away, and be good, and then come to me?” And shall
we dare to think God would send us away if we came thus, and would
not be pleased that we came, even if we were angry as Jonah? Would
we not let all the tenderness of our nature flow forth upon such a
child? And shall we dare to think that if we being evil know how to
give good gifts to our children, God will not give us his own spirit
when we come to ask him? Will not some heavenly dew descend cool
upon the hot anger? some genial rain-drop on the dry selfishness?
some glance of sunlight on the cloudy hopelessness? Bread, at least,
will be given, and not a stone; water, at least, will be sure, and
not vinegar mingled with gall.
Nor is there anything we can ask for ourselves that we
may not ask for another. We may commend any brother, any sister, to
the common fatherhood. And there will be moments when, filled with
that spirit which is the Lord, nothing will ease our hearts of their
love but the commending of all men, all our brothers, all our
sisters, to the one Father. Nor shall we ever know that repose in
the Father’s hands, that rest of the Holy Sepulchre, which the Lord
knew when the agony of death was over, when the storm of the world
died away behind his retiring spirit, and he entered the regions
where there is only life, and therefore all that is not music is
silence, (for all noise comes of the conflict of Life and Death)—we
shall never be able, I say, to rest in the bosom of the Father, till
the fatherhood is fully revealed to us in the love of the brothers.
For he cannot be our father save as he is their father; and if we do
not see him and feel him as their father, we cannot know him as
ours. Never shall we know him aright until we rejoice and exult for
our race that he is the Father. He that loveth not his brother whom
he hath seen, how can he love God whom he hath not seen? To rest, I
say, at last, even in those hands into which the Lord commended his
spirit, we must have learned already to love our neighbour as
ourselves.
Love Thy Neighbor
the Unspoken Sermons
LOVE THY NEIGHBOUR.
Thou shalt love thy neighbor as
thyself.—Matthew xxii. 39.
The original here quoted by our Lord is
to be found in the words of God to Moses, (Leviticus xix. 18:)
“Thou shalt not avenge, nor bear any grudge against the children of
thy people, but thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself: I am the
Lord.” Our Lord never thought of being original. The older the
saying the better, if it utters the truth he wants to utter. In him
it becomes fact: The Word was made flesh. And so, in the wondrous
meeting of extremes, the words he spoke were no more words, but
spirit and life.
The same words are twice quoted by St Paul, and once
by St James, always in a similar mode: Love they represent as the
fulfilling of the law.
Is the converse true then? Is the fulfilling of the
law love? The apostle Paul says: “Love worketh no ill to his
neighbour, therefore love is the fulfilling of the law.” Does it
follow that working no ill is love? Love will fulfil the law: will
the law fulfil love? No, verily. If a man keeps the law, I know he
is a lover of his neighbour. But he is not a lover because he keeps
the law: he keeps the law because he is a lover. No heart will be
content with the law for love. The law cannot fulfil love.
“But, at least, the law will be able to fulfil itself,
though it reaches not to love.”
I do not believe it. I am certain that it is
impossible to keep the law towards one’s neighbour except one loves
him. The law itself is infinite, reaching to such delicacies of
action, that the man who tries most will be the man most aware of
defeat. We are not made for law, but for love. Love is law, because
it is infinitely more than law. It is of an altogether higher region
than law—is, in fact, the creator of law. Had it not been for love,
not one of the shalt-nots of the law would have been uttered. True,
once uttered, they shew themselves in the form of justice, yea, even
in the inferior and worldly forms of prudence and self-preservation;
but it was love that spoke them first. Were there no love in us,
what sense of justice could we have? Would not each be filled with
the sense of his own wants, and be for ever tearing to himself? I do
not say it is conscious love that breeds justice, but I do say that
without love in our nature justice would never be born. For I do not
call that justice which consists only in a sense of our own rights.
True, there are poor and withered forms of love which are
immeasurably below justice now; but even now they are of speechless
worth, for they will grow into that which will supersede, because it
will necessitate, justice.
Of what use then is the law? To lead us to Christ, the
Truth,—to waken in our minds a sense of what our deepest nature, the
presence, namely, of God in us, requires of us,—to let us know, in
part by failure, that the purest effort of will of which we are
capable cannot lift us up even to the abstaining from wrong to our
neighbour. What man, for instance, who loves not his neighbour and
yet wishes to keep the law, will dare be confident that never by
word, look, tone, gesture, silence, will he bear false witness
against that neighbour? What man can judge his neighbour aright save
him whose love makes him refuse to judge him? Therefore are we told
to love, and not judge. It is the sole justice of which we are
capable, and that perfected will comprise all justice. Nay more, to
refuse our neighbour love, is to do him the greatest wrong. But of
this afterwards. In order to fulfil the commonest law, I repeat, we
must rise into a loftier region altogether, a region that is above
law, because it is spirit and life and makes the law: in order to
keep the law towards our neighbour, we must love our neighbour. We
are not made for law, but for grace—or for faith, to use another
word so much misused. We are made on too large a scale altogether to
have any pure relation to mere justice, if indeed we can say there
is such a thing. It is but an abstract idea which, in reality, will
not be abstracted. The law comes to make us long for the needful
grace,—that is, for the divine condition, in which love is all, for
God is Love.
Though the fulfilling of the law is the practical form
love will take, and the neglect of it is the conviction of
lovelessness; though it is the mode in which a man’s will must begin
at once to be love to his neighbour, yet, that our Lord meant by the
love of our neighbour; not the fulfilling of the law towards him,
but that condition of being which results in the fulfilling of the
law and more, is sufficiently clear from his story of the good
Samaritan. “Who is my neighbour?” said the lawyer. And the Lord
taught him that every one to whom he could be or for whom he could
do anything was his neighbour, therefore, that each of the race, as
he comes within the touch of one tentacle of our nature, is our
neighbour. Which of the inhibitions of the law is illustrated in the
tale? Not one. The love that is more than law, and renders its
breach impossible, lives in the endless story, coming out in active
kindness, that is, the recognition of kin, of kind, of nighness, of
neighbourhood; yea, in tenderness and loving-kindness—the
Samaritan—heart akin to the Jew-heart, the Samaritan hands
neighbours to the Jewish wounds.
Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.
So direct and complete is this parable of our Lord,
that one becomes almost ashamed of further talk about it. Suppose a
man of the company had put the same question to our Lord that we
have been considering, had said, “But I may keep the law and yet not
love my neighbour,” would he not have returned: “Keep thou the law
thus, not in the letter, but in the spirit, that is, in the truth of
action, and thou wilt soon find, O Jew, that thou lovest thy
Samaritan”? And yet, when thoughts and questions arise in our minds,
he desires that we should follow them. He will not check us with a
word of heavenly wisdom scornfully uttered. He knows that not even
his words will apply to every question of the willing soul; and we
know that his spirit will reply. When we want to know more, that
more will be there for us. Not every man, for instance, finds his
neighbour in need of help, and he would gladly hasten the slow
results of opportunity by true thinking. Thus would we be ready for
further teaching from that Spirit who is the Lord.
“But how,” says a man, who is willing to recognize
the universal neighbourhead, but finds himself unable to fulfil the
bare law towards the woman even whom he loves best,—“How am I then
to rise into that higher region, that empyrean of love?” And,
beginning straightway to try to love his neighbour, he finds that
the empyrean of which he spoke is no more to be reached in itself
than the law was to be reached in itself. As he cannot keep the law
without first rising into the love of his neighbour, so he cannot
love his neighbour without first rising higher still. The whole
system of the universe works upon this law—the driving of things
upward towards the centre. The man who will love his neighbour can
do so by no immediately operative exercise of the will. It is the
man fulfilled of God from whom he came and by whom he is, who alone
can as himself love his neighbour who came from God too and is by
God too. The mystery of individuality and consequent relation is
deep as the beginnings of humanity, and the questions thence arising
can be solved only by him who has, practically, at least, solved the
holy necessities resulting from his origin. In God alone can man
meet man. In him alone the converging lines of existence touch and
cross not. When the mind of Christ, the life of the Head, courses
through that atom which the man is of the slowly revivifying body,
when he is alive too, then the love of the brothers is there as
conscious life. From Christ through the neighbours comes the life
that makes him a part of the body.
It is possible to love our neighbour as ourselves.
Our Lord never spoke hyperbolically, although, indeed, that is the
supposition on which many unconsciously interpret his words, in
order to be able to persuade themselves that they believe them. We
may see that it is possible before we attain to it; for our
perceptions of truth are always in advance of our condition. True,
no man can see it perfectly until he is it; but we must see it, that
we may be it. A man who knows that he does not yet love his
neighbour as himself may believe in such a condition, may even see
that there is no other goal of human perfection, nothing else to
which the universe is speeding, propelled by the Father’s will. Let
him labour on, and not faint at the thought that God’s day is a
thousand years: his millennium is likewise one day—yea, this day,
for we have him, The Love, in us, working even now the far end.
But while it is true that only when a man loves God
with all his heart, will he love his neighbour as himself, yet there
are mingled processes in the attainment of this final result. Let us
try to aid such operation of truth by looking farther. Let us
suppose that the man who believes our Lord both meant what he said,
and knew the truth of the matter, proceeds to endeavour obedience in
this of loving his neighbour as himself. He begins to think about
his neighbours generally, and he tries to feel love towards them. He
finds at once that they begin to classify themselves. With some he
feels no difficulty, for he loves them already, not indeed because
they are, but because they have, by friendly qualities, by showing
themselves lovable, that is loving, already, moved his feelings as
the wind moves the waters, that is without any self-generated action
on his part. And he feels that this is nothing much to the point;
though, of course, he would be farther from the desired end if he
had none such to love, and farther still if he loved none such. He
recalls the words of our Lord, “If ye love them which love you, what
reward have ye?” and his mind fixes upon—let us say—one of a second
class, and he tries to love him. The man is no enemy—we have not
come to that class of neighbours yet—but he is dull,
uninteresting—in a negative way, he thinks, unlovable. What is he to
do with him? With all his effort, he finds the goal as far off as
ever.
Naturally, in his failure, the question arises, “Is
it my duty to love him who is unlovable?”
Certainly not, if he is unlovable. But that is a
begging of the question.
Thereupon the man falls back on the primary
foundation of things, and asks—
“How, then, is the man to be loved by me? Why should
I love my neighbour as myself?”
We must not answer “Because the Lord says so.” It is
because the Lord says so that the man is inquiring after some help
to obey. No man can love his neighbour merely because the Lord says
so. The Lord says so because it is right and necessary and natural,
and the man wants to feel it thus right and necessary and natural.
Although the Lord would be pleased with any man for doing a thing
because he said it, he would show his pleasure by making the man
more and more dissatisfied until he knew why the Lord had said it.
He would make him see that he could not in the deepest sense—in the
way the Lord loves—obey any command until he saw the reasonableness
of it. Observe I do not say the man ought to put off obeying the
command until he see its reasonableness: that is another thing
quite, and does not lie in the scope of my present supposition. It
is a beautiful thing to obey the rightful source of a command: it is
a more beautiful thing to worship the radiant source of our light,
and it is for the sake of obedient vision that our Lord commands us.
For then our heart meets his: we see God.
Let me represent in the form of a conversation what
might pass in the man’s mind on the opposing sides of the
question.—“Why should I love my neighbour?”
“He is the same as I, and therefore I ought to love
him.”
“Why? I am I. He is he.”
“He has the same thoughts, feelings, hopes, sorrows,
joys, as I.”
“Yes; but why should I love him for that? He must
mind his, I can only do with mine.”
“He has the same consciousness as I have. As things
look to me, so things look to him.”
“Yes; but I cannot get into his consciousness, nor he
into mine. I feel myself, I do not feel him. My life flows through
my veins, not through his. The world shines into my consciousness,
and I am not conscious of his consciousness. I wish I could love
him, but I do not see why. I am an individual; he is an individual.
My self must be closer to me than he can be. Two bodies keep me
apart from his self. I am isolated with myself.”
Now, here lies the mistake at last. While the thinker
supposes a duality in himself which does not exist, he falsely
judges the individuality a separation. On the contrary, it is the
sole possibility and very bond of love. Otherness is the essential
ground of affection. But in spiritual things, such a unity is
pre-supposed in the very contemplation of them by the spirit of man,
that wherever anything does not exist that ought to be there, the
space it ought to occupy, even if but a blank, assumes the
appearance of a separating gulf. The negative looks a positive.
Where a man does not love, the not-loving must seem rational. For no
one loves because he sees why, but because he loves. No human reason
can be given for the highest necessity of divinely created
existence. For reasons are always from above downwards. A man must
just feel this necessity, and then questioning is over. It justifies
itself. But he who has not felt has it not to argue about. He has
but its phantom, which he created himself in a vain effort to
understand, and which he supposes to be it. Love cannot be argued
about in its absence, for there is no reflex, no symbol of it near
enough to the fact of it, to admit of just treatment by the algebra
of the reason or imagination. Indeed, the very talking about it
raises a mist between the mind and the vision of it. But let a man
once love, and all those difficulties which appeared opposed to
love, will just be so many arguments for loving.
Let a man once find another who has fallen among
thieves; let him be a neighbour to him, pouring oil and wine into
his wounds, and binding them up, and setting him on his own beast,
and paying for him at the inn; let him do all this merely from a
sense of duty; let him even, in the pride of his fancied, and the
ignorance of his true calling, bate no jot of his Jewish
superiority; let him condescend to the very baseness of his own
lowest nature; yet such will be the virtue of obeying an eternal
truth even to his poor measure, of putting in actuality what he has
not even seen in theory, of doing the truth even without believing
it, that even if the truth does not after the deed give the faintest
glimmer as truth in the man, he will yet be ages nearer the truth
than before, for he will go on his way loving that Samaritan
neighbour a little more than his Jewish dignity will justify. Nor
will he question the reasonableness of so doing, although he may not
care to spend any logic upon its support. How much more if he be a
man who would love his neighbour if he could, will the higher
condition unsought have been found in the action! For man is a
whole; and so soon as he unites himself by obedient action, the
truth that is in him makes itself known to him, shining from the new
whole. For his action is his response to his maker’s design, his
individual part in the creation of himself, his yielding to the All
in all, to the tides of whose harmonious cosmoplastic life all his
being thenceforward lies open for interpenetration and assimilation.
When will once begins to aspire, it will soon find that action must
precede feeling, that the man may know the foundation itself of
feeling.
With those who recognize no authority as the ground
of tentative action, a doubt, a suspicion of truth ought to be
ground enough for putting it to the test.
The whole system of divine education as regards the
relation of man and man, has for its end that a man should love his
neighbour as himself. It is not a lesson that he can learn by
itself, or a duty the obligation of which can be shown by argument,
any more than the difference between right and wrong can be defined
in other terms than their own.
“But that difference,” it may be objected, “manifests
itself of itself to every mind: it is self-evident; whereas the
loving of one’s neighbour is not seen to be a primary truth; so far
from it, that far the greater number of those who hope for an
eternity of blessedness through him who taught it, do not really
believe it to be a truth; believe, on the contrary, that the
paramount obligation is to take care of one’s self at much risk of
forgetting one’s neighbour.”
But the human race generally has got as far as the
recognition of right and wrong; and therefore most men are born
capable of making the distinction. The race has not yet lived long
enough for its latest offspring to be born with the perception of
the truth of love to the neighbour. It is to be seen by the present
individual only after a long reception of and submission to the
education of life. And once seen, it is believed.
The whole constitution of human society exists for
the express end, I say, of teaching the two truths by which man
lives, Love to God and Love to Man. I will say nothing more of the
mysteries of the parental relation, because they belong to the
teaching of the former truth, than that we come into the world as we
do, to look up to the love over us, and see in it a symbol, poor and
weak, yet the best we can have or receive of the divine love.4 4 It
might be expressed after a deeper and truer fashion by saying that,
God making human affairs after his own thoughts, they are therefore
such as to be the best teachers of love to him and love to our
neighbour. This is an immeasurably nobler and truer manner of
regarding them than as a scheme or plan invented by the divine
intellect.
And thousands more would find it easy to love God if
they had not such miserable types of him in the self-seeking,
impulse-driven, purposeless, faithless beings who are all they have
for father and mother, and to whom their children are no dearer than
her litter is to the unthinking dam. What I want to speak of now,
with regard to the second great commandment, is the relation of
brotherhood and sisterhood. Why does my brother come of the same
father and mother? Why do I behold the helplessness and confidence
of his infancy? Why is the infant laid on the knee of the child? Why
do we grow up with the same nurture? Why do we behold the wonder of
the sunset and the mystery of the growing moon together? Why do we
share one bed, join in the same games, and attempt the same
exploits? Why do we quarrel, vow revenge and silence and endless
enmity, and, unable to resist the brotherhood within us, wind arm in
arm and forget all within the hour? Is it not that Love may grow
lord of all between him and me? Is it not that I may feel towards
him what there are no words or forms of words to express—a love
namely, in which the divine self rushes forth in utter
self-forgetfulness to live in the contemplation of the brother—a
love that is stronger than death,—glad and proud and satisfied? But
if love stop there, what will be the result? Ruin to itself; loss of
the brotherhood. He who loves not his brother for deeper reasons
than those of a common parentage will cease to love him at all. The
love that enlarges not its borders, that is not ever spreading and
including, and deepening, will contract, shrivel, decay, die. I have
had the sons of my mother that I may learn the universal
brotherhood. For there is a bond between me and the most wretched
liar that ever died for the murder he would not even confess, closer
infinitely than that which springs only from having one father and
mother. That we are the sons and the daughters of God born from his
heart, the outcoming offspring of his love, is a bond closer than
all other bonds in one. No man ever loved his own child aright who
did not love him for his humanity, for his divinity, to the utter
forgetting of his origin from himself. The son of my mother is
indeed my brother by this greater and closer bond as well; but if I
recognize that bond between him and me at all, I recognize it for my
race. True, and thank God! the greater excludes not the less; it
makes all the weaker bonds stronger and truer, nor forbids that
where all are brothers, some should be those of our bosom. Still my
brother according to the flesh is my first neighbour, that we may be
very nigh to each other, whether we will or no, while our hearts are
tender, and so may learn brotherhood. For our love to each other is
but the throbbing of the heart of the great brotherhood, and could
come only from the eternal Father, not from our parents. Then my
second neighbour appears, and who is he? Whom I come in contact with
soever. He with whom I have any transactions, any human dealings
whatever. Not the man only with whom I dine; not the friend only
with whom I share my thoughts; not the man only whom my compassion
would lift from some slough; but the man who makes my clothes; the
man who prints my book; the man who drives me in his cab; the man
who begs from me in the street, to whom, it may be, for
brotherhood’s sake, I must not give; yea, even the man who
condescends to me. With all and each there is a chance of doing the
part of a neighbour, if in no other way yet by speaking truly,
acting justly, and thinking kindly. Even these deeds will help to
that love which is born of righteousness. All true action clears the
springs of right feeling, and lets their waters rise and flow. A man
must not choose his neighbour; he must take the neighbour that God
sends him. In him, whoever he be, lies, hidden or revealed, a
beautiful brother. The neighbour is just the man who is next to you
at the moment, the man with whom any business has brought you in
contact.
Thus will love spread and spread in wider and
stronger pulses till the whole human race will be to the man
sacredly lovely. Drink-debased, vice-defeatured, pride-puffed,
wealth-bollen, vanity-smeared, they will yet be brothers, yet be
sisters, yet be God-born neighbours. Any rough-hewn semblance of
humanity will at length be enough to move the man to reverence and
affection. It is harder for some to learn thus than for others.
There are whose first impulse is ever to repel and not to receive.
But learn they may, and learn they must. Even these may grow in this
grace until a countenance unknown will awake in them a yearning of
affection rising to pain, because there is for it no expression, and
they can only give the man to God and be still.
And now will come in all the arguments out of which
the man tried in vain before to build a stair up to the sunny
heights of love. “Ah brother! thou hast a soul like mine,” he will
say. “Out of thine eyes thou lookest, and sights and sounds and
odours visit thy soul as mine, with wonder and tender comforting.
Thou too lovest the faces of thy neighbours. Thou art oppressed with
thy sorrows, uplifted with thy joys. Perhaps thou knowest not so
well as I, that a region of gladness surrounds all thy grief, of
light all thy darkness, of peace all thy tumult. Oh, my brother! I
will love thee. I cannot come very near thee: I will love thee the
more. It may be thou dost not love thy neighbour; it may be thou
thinkest only how to get from him, how to gain by him. How lonely
then must thou be! how shut up in thy poverty-stricken room, with
the bare walls of thy selfishness, and the hard couch of thy
unsatisfaction! I will love thee the more. Thou shalt not be alone
with thyself. Thou art not me; thou art another life—a second self;
therefore I can, may, and will love thee.”
When once to a man the human face is the human face
divine, and the hand of his neighbour is the hand of a brother, then
will he understand what St Paul meant when he said, “I could wish
that myself were accursed from Christ for my brethren.” But he will
no longer understand those who, so far from feeling the love of
their neighbour an essential of their being, expect to be set free
from its law in the world to come. There, at least, for the glory of
God, they may limit its expansive tendencies to the narrow circle of
their heaven. On its battlements of safety, they will regard hell
from afar, and say to each other, “Hark! Listen to their moans. But
do not weep, for they are our neighbours no more.” St Paul would be
wretched before the throne of God, if he thought there was one man
beyond the pale of his mercy, and that as much for God’s glory as
for the man’s sake. And what shall we say of the man Christ Jesus?
Who, that loves his brother, would not, upheld by the love of
Christ, and with a dim hope that in the far-off time there might be
some help for him, arise from the company of the blessed, and walk
down into the dismal regions of despair, to sit with the last, the
only unredeemed, the Judas of his race, and be himself more blessed
in the pains of hell, than in the glories of heaven? Who, in the
midst of the golden harps and the white wings, knowing that one of
his kind, one miserable brother in the old-world-time when men were
taught to love their neighbour as themselves, was howling unheeded
far below in the vaults of the creation, who, I say, would not feel
that he must arise, that he had no choice, that, awful as it was, he
must gird his loins, and go down into the smoke and the darkness and
the fire, travelling the weary and fearful road into the far country
to find his brother?—who, I mean, that had the mind of Christ, that
had the love of the Father?
But it is a wild question. God is, and shall be, All
in all. Father of our brothers and sisters! thou wilt not be less
glorious than we, taught of Christ, are able to think thee. When
thou goest into the wilderness to seek, thou wilt not come home
until thou hast found. It is because we hope not for them in thee,
not knowing thee, not knowing thy love, that we are so hard and so
heartless to the brothers and sisters whom thou hast given us.
One word more: This love of our neighbour is the only
door out of the dungeon of self, where we mope and mow, striking
sparks, and rubbing phosphorescences out of the walls, and blowing
our own breath in our own nostrils, instead of issuing to the fair
sunlight of God, the sweet winds of the universe. The man thinks his
consciousness is himself; whereas his life consisteth in the
inbreathing of God, and the consciousness of the universe of truth.
To have himself, to know himself, to enjoy himself, he calls life;
whereas, if he would forget himself, tenfold would be his life in
God and his neighbours. The region of man’s life is a spiritual
region. God, his friends, his neighbours, his brothers all, is the
wide world in which alone his spirit can find room. Himself is his
dungeon. If he feels it not now, he will yet feel it one day—feel it
as a living soul would feel being prisoned in a dead body, wrapped
in sevenfold cerements, and buried in a stone-ribbed vault within
the last ripple of the sound of the chanting people in the church
above. His life is not in knowing that he lives, but in loving all
forms of life. He is made for the All, for God, who is the All, is
his life. And the essential joy of his life lies abroad in the
liberty of the All. His delights, like those of the Ideal Wisdom,
are with the sons of men. His health is in the body of which the Son
of Man is the head. The whole region of life is open to him—nay, he
must live in it or perish.
Nor thus shall a man lose the consciousness of
well-being. Far deeper and more complete, God and his neighbour will
flash it back upon him—pure as life. No more will he agonize “with
sick assay” to generate it in the light of his own decadence. For he
shall know the glory of his own being in the light of God and of his
brother.
But he may have begun to love his neighbour, with the
hope of ere long loving him as himself, and notwithstanding start
back affrighted at yet another word of our Lord, seeming to be
another law yet harder than the first, although in truth it is not
another, for without obedience to it the former cannot be attained
unto. He has not yet learned to love his neighbour as himself whose
heart sinks within him at the word, I say unto you, Love your
enemies.
Love Thine Enemy
the Unspoken Sermons
LOVE THINE ENEMY.
Ye have heard that it hath been
said, Thou shalt love thy neighbour, and hate thine enemy; but I say
unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to
them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you,
and persecute you; that ye may be the children of your Father which
is in heaven; for he maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the
good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust. For if ye love
them which love you, what reward have ye? do not even the publicans
the same? And if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more than
others? do not even the publicans so? Be ye therefore perfect, even
as your Father which is in heaven is perfect.—Matthew v. 43-48.
Is not this at length too much to
expect? Will a man ever love his enemies? He may come to do good to
them that hate him; but when will he pray for them that despitefully
use him and persecute him? When? When he is the child of his Father
in heaven. Then shall he love his neighbour as himself, even if that
neighbour be his enemy. In the passage in Leviticus (xix. 18,)
already referred to as quoted by our Lord and his apostles, we find
the neighbour and the enemy are one. “Thou shalt not avenge, nor
bear any grudge against the children of thy people, but thou shalt
love thy neighbour as thyself: I am the Lord.”
Look at the glorious way in which Jesus interprets
the scripture that went before him. “I am the Lord,”—“That ye may be
perfect, as your Father in heaven is perfect.”
Is it then reasonable to love our enemies? God does;
therefore it must be the highest reason. But is it reasonable to
expect that man should become capable of doing so? Yes; on one
ground: that the divine energy is at work in man, to render at
length man’s doing divine as his nature is. For this our Lord prayed
when he said: “That they all may be one, as thou, Father, art in me,
and I in thee, that they also may be one in us.” Nothing could be
less likely to human judgment: our Lord knows that one day it will
come.
Why should we love our enemies? The deepest reason
for this we cannot put in words, for it lies in the absolute reality
of their being, where our enemies are of one nature with us, even of
the divine nature. Into this we cannot see, save as into a dark
abyss. But we can adumbrate something of the form of this deepest
reason, if we let the thoughts of our heart move upon the face of
the dim profound.
“Are our enemies men like ourselves?” let me begin by
asking. “Yes.” “Upon what ground? The ground of their enmity? The
ground of the wrong they do us?” “No.” “In virtue of cruelty,
heartlessness, injustice, disrespect, misrepresentation?” “Certainly
not. Humanum est errare is a truism; but it possesses, like most
truisms, a latent germ of worthy truth. The very word errare is a
sign that there is a way so truly the human that, for a man to leave
it, is to wander. If it be human to wander, yet the wandering is not
humanity. The very words humane and humanity denote some shadow of
that loving-kindness which, when perfected after the divine fashion,
shall include even our enemies. We do not call the offering of human
sacrifices, the torturing of captives, cannibalism-humanity. Not
because they do such deeds are they men. Their humanity must be
deeper than those. It is in virtue of the divine essence which is in
them, that pure essential humanity, that we call our enemies men and
women. It is this humanity that we are to love—a something, I say,
deeper altogether than and independent of the region of hate. It is
the humanity that originates the claim of neighbourhead; the
neighbourhood only determines the occasion of its exercise.” “Is
this humanity in every one of our enemies?” “Else there were nothing
to love.” “Is it there in very deed?—Then we must love it, come
between us and it what may.”
But how can we love a man or a woman who is cruel and
unjust to us?—who sears with contempt, or cuts off with wrong every
tendril we would put forth to embrace?—who is mean, unlovely,
carping, uncertain, self-righteous, self-seeking, and
self-admiring?—who can even sneer, the most inhuman of human faults,
far worse in its essence than mere murder?
These things cannot be loved. The best man hates them
most; the worst man cannot love them. But are these the man? Does a
woman bear that form in virtue of these? Lies there not within the
man and the woman a divine element of brotherhood, of sisterhood, a
something lovely and lovable,—slowly fading, it may be,—dying away
under the fierce heat of vile passions, or the yet more fearful cold
of sepulchral selfishness—but there? Shall that divine something,
which, once awakened to be its own holy self in the man, will loathe
these unlovely things tenfold more than we loathe them now—shall
this divine thing have no recognition from us? It is the very
presence of this fading humanity that makes it possible for us to
hate. If it were an animal only, and not a man or a woman that did
us hurt, we should not hate: we should only kill. We hate the man
just because we are prevented from loving him. We push over the
verge of the creation—we damn—just because we cannot embrace. For to
embrace is the necessity of our deepest being. That foiled, we hate.
Instead of admonishing ourselves that there is our enchained
brother, that there lies our enchanted, disfigured, scarce
recognizable sister, captive of the devil, to break, how much
sooner, from their bonds, that we love them!—we recoil into the hate
which would fix them there; and the dearly lovable reality of them
we sacrifice to the outer falsehood of Satan’s incantations, thus
leaving them to perish. Nay, we murder them to get rid of them, we
hate them. Yet within the most obnoxious to our hate, lies that
which, could it but show itself as it is, and as it will show itself
one day, would compel from our hearts a devotion of love. It is not
the unfriendly, the unlovely, that we are told to love, but the
brother, the sister, who is unkind, who is unlovely. Shall we leave
our brother to his desolate fate? Shall we not rather say, “With my
love at least shalt thou be compassed about, for thou hast not thy
own lovingness to infold thee; love shall come as near thee as it
may; and when thine comes forth to meet mine, we shall be one in the
indwelling God”?
Let no one say I have been speaking in a figure
merely. That I have been so speaking I know. But many things which
we see most vividly and certainly are more truly expressed by using
a right figure, than by attempting to give them a clear outline of
logical expression. My figure means a truth.
If any one say, “Do not make such vague
distinctions. There is the person. Can you deny that that person is
unlovely? How then can you love him?” I answer, “That person, with
the evil thing cast out of him, will be yet more the person, for he
will be his real self. The thing that now makes you dislike him is
separable from him, is therefore not he, makes himself so much less
himself, for it is working death in him. Now he is in danger of
ceasing to be a person at all. When he is clothed and in his right
mind, he will be a person indeed. You could not then go on hating
him. Begin to love him now, and help him into the loveliness which
is his. Do not hate him although you can. The personalty, I say,
though clouded, besmeared, defiled with the wrong, lies deeper than
the wrong, and indeed, so far as the wrong has reached it, is by the
wrong injured, yea, so far, it may be, destroyed.
But those who will not acknowledge the claim of
love, may yet acknowledge the claim of justice. There are who would
shrink with horror from the idea of doing injustice to those, from
the idea of loving whom they would shrink with equal horror. But if
it is impossible, as I believe, without love to be just, much more
cannot justice co-exist with hate. The pure eye for the true vision
of another’s claims can only go with the loving heart. The man who
hates can hardly be delicate in doing justice, say to his
neighbour’s love, to his neighbour’s predilections and
peculiarities. It is hard enough to be just to our friends; and how
shall our enemies fare with us? For justice demands that we shall
think rightly of our neighbour as certainly as that we shall neither
steal his goods nor bear false witness against him. Man is not made
for justice from his fellow, but for love, which is greater than
justice, and by including supersedes justice. Mere justice is an
impossibility, a fiction of analysis. It does not exist between man
and man, save relatively to human law. Justice to be justice must be
much more than justice. Love is the law of our condition, without
which we can no more render justice than a man can keep a straight
line walking in the dark. The eye is not single, and the body is not
full of light. No man who is even indifferent to his brother can
recognize the claims which his humanity has upon him. Nay, the very
indifference itself is an injustice.
I have taken for granted that the fault lies with
the enemy so considered, for upon the primary rocks would I build my
foundation. But the question must be put to each man by himself, “Is
my neighbour indeed my enemy, or am I my neighbour’s enemy, and so
take him to be mine?—awful thought! Or, if he be mine, am not I his?
Am I not refusing to acknowledge the child of the kingdom within his
bosom, so killing the child of the kingdom within my own?” Let us
claim for ourselves no more indulgence than we give to him. Such
honesty will end in severity at home and clemency abroad. For we are
accountable for the ill in ourselves, and have to kill it; for the
good in our neighbour, and have to cherish it. He only, in the name
and power of God, can kill the bad in him; we can cherish the good
in him by being good to it across all the evil fog that comes
between our love and his good.
Nor ought it to be forgotten that this fog is often
the result of misapprehension and mistake, giving rise to all kinds
of indignations, resentments, and regrets. Scarce anything about us
is just as it seems, but at the core there is truth enough to dispel
all falsehood and reveal life as unspeakably divine. O brother,
sister, across this weary fog, dim-lighted by the faint torches of
our truth-seeking, I call to the divine in thee, which is mine, not
to rebuke thee, not to rouse thee, not to say “Why hatest thou me?”
but to say “I love thee; in God’s name I love thee.” And I will wait
until the true self looks out of thine eyes, and knows the true self
in me.
But in the working of the Divine Love upon the race,
my enemy is doomed to cease to be my enemy, and to become my friend.
One flash of truth towards me would destroy my enmity at once; one
hearty confession of wrong, and our enmity passes away; from each
comes forth the brother who was inside the enemy all the time. For
this The Truth is at work. In the faith of this, let us love the
enemy now, accepting God’s work in reversion, as it were; let us
believe as seeing his yet invisible triumph, clasping and holding
fast our brother, in defiance of the changeful wiles of the wicked
enchantment which would persuade our eyes and hearts that he is not
our brother, but some horrible thing, hateful and hating.
But again I must ask, What if we are in the wrong
and do the wrong, and hate because we have injured? What then? Why,
then, let us cry to God as from the throat of hell; struggle, as
under the weight of a spiritual incubus; cry, as knowing the vile
disease that cleaveth fast unto us; cry, as possessed of an evil
spirit; cry, as one buried alive, from the sepulchre of our evil
consciousness, that He would take pity upon us the chief of sinners,
the most wretched and vile of men, and send some help to lift us
from the fearful pit and the miry clay. Nothing will help but the
Spirit proceeding from the Father and the Son, the spirit of the
Father and the Brother casting out and revealing. It will be with
tearing and foaming, with a terrible cry and a lying as one dead,
that such a demon will go out. But what a vision will then arise in
the depths of the purified soul!
“Be ye therefore perfect, even as your father which
is in heaven is perfect.” “Love your enemies, and ye shall be the
children of the highest.” It is the divine glory to forgive.
Yet a time will come when the Unchangeable will
cease to forgive; when it will no more belong to his perfection to
love his enemies; when he will look calmly, and have his children
look calmly too, upon the ascending smoke of the everlasting
torments of our strong brothers, our beautiful sisters! Nay, alas!
the brothers are weak now; the sisters are ugly now!
O brother, believe it not. “O Christ!” the redeemed
would cry, “where art thou, our strong Jesus? Come, our grand
brother. See the suffering brothers down below! See the tormented
sisters! Come, Lord of Life! Monarch of Suffering! Redeem them. For
us, we will go down into the burning, and see whether we cannot at
least carry through the howling flames a drop of water to cool their
tongues.”
Believe it not, my brother, lest it quench
forgiveness in thee, and thou be not forgiven, but go down with
those thy brothers to the torment; whence, if God were not better
than that phantom thou callest God, thou shouldst never come out;
but whence assuredly thou shalt come out when thou hast paid the
uttermost farthing; when thou hast learned of God in hell what thou
didst refuse to learn of him upon the gentle-toned earth; what the
sunshine and the rain could not teach thee, nor the sweet
compunctions of the seasons, nor the stately visitings of the morn
and the eventide, nor the human face divine, nor the word that was
nigh thee in thy heart and in thy mouth—the story of Him who was
mighty to save, because he was perfect in love.
O Father, thou art All-in-all, perfect beyond the
longing of thy children, and we are all and altogether thine. Thou
wilt make us pure and loving and free. We shall stand fearless in
thy presence, because perfect in thy love. Then shall thy children
be of good cheer, infinite in the love of each other, and eternal in
thy love. Lord Jesus, let the heart of a child be given to us, that
so we may arise from the grave of our dead selves and die no more,
but see face to face the God of the Living.
The God of the Living
the Unspoken Sermons
THE GOD OF THE LIVING.
He is not a God of the dead, but
of the living: for all live unto him.—Luke xx. 38.
It is a recurring cause of perplexity
in our Lord’s teaching, that he is too simple for us; that while we
are questioning with ourselves about the design of Solomon’s carving
upon some gold-plated door of the temple, he is speaking about the
foundations of Mount Zion, yea, of the earth itself, upon which it
stands. If the reader of the Gospel supposes that our Lord was here
using a verbal argument with the Sadducees, namely, “I am the God of
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; therefore they are,” he will be
astonished that no Sadducee was found with courage enough to reply:
“All that God meant was to introduce himself to Moses as the same
God who had aided and protected his fathers while they were alive,
saying, I am he that was the God of thy fathers. They found me
faithful. Thou, therefore, listen to me, and thou too shalt find me
faithful unto the death.”
But no such reply suggested itself even to the
Sadducees of that day, for their eastern nature could see argument
beyond logic. Shall God call himself the God of the dead, of those
who were alive once, but whom he either could not or would not keep
alive? Is that the Godhood, and its relation to those who worship
it? The changeless God of an ever-born and ever-perishing torrent of
life; of which each atom cries with burning heart, My God! and
straightway passes into the Godless cold! “Trust in me, for I took
care of your fathers once upon a time, though they are gone now.
Worship and obey me, for I will be good to you for threescore years
and ten, or there-abouts; and after that, when you are not, and the
world goes on all the same without you, I will call myself your God
still.” God changes not. Once God he is always God. If he has once
said to a man, “I am thy God, and that man has died the death of the
Sadducee’s creed,” then we have a right to say that God is the God
of the dead.
“And wherefore should he not be so far the God of
the dead, if during the time allotted to them here, he was the
faithful God of the living?” What Godlike relation can the
ever-living, life-giving, changeless God hold to creatures who
partake not of his life, who have death at the very core of their
being, are not worth their Maker’s keeping alive? To let his
creatures die would be to change, to abjure his Godhood, to cease to
be that which he had made himself. If they are not worth keeping
alive, then his creating is a poor thing, and he is not so great,
nor so divine as even the poor thoughts of those his dying creatures
have been able to imagine him. But our Lord says, “All live unto
him.” With Him death is not. Thy life sees our life, O Lord. All of
whom all can be said, are present to thee. Thou thinkest about us,
eternally more than we think about thee. The little life that burns
within the body of this death, glows unquenchable in thy true-seeing
eyes. If thou didst forget us for a moment then indeed death would
be. But unto thee we live. The beloved pass from our sight, but they
pass not from thine. This that we call death, is but a form in the
eyes of men. It looks something final, an awful cessation, an utter
change. It seems not probable that there is anything beyond. But if
God could see us before we were, and make us after his ideal, that
we shall have passed from the eyes of our friends can be no argument
that he beholds us no longer. “All live unto Him.” Let the change be
ever so great, ever so imposing; let the unseen life be ever so
vague to our conception, it is not against reason to hope that God
could see Abraham, after his Isaac had ceased to see him; saw Isaac
after Jacob ceased to see him; saw Jacob after some of the Sadducees
had begun to doubt whether there ever had been a Jacob at all. He
remembers them; that is, he carries them in his mind: he of whom God
thinks, lives. He takes to himself the name of Their God. The Living
One cannot name himself after the dead; when the very Godhead lies
in the giving of life. Therefore they must be alive. If he speaks of
them, remembers his own loving thoughts of them, would he not have
kept them alive if he could; and if he could not, how could he
create them? Can it be an easier thing to call into life than to
keep alive?
“But if they live to God, they are aware of God. And
if they are aware of God, they are conscious of their own being:
Whence then the necessity of a resurrection?”
For their relation to others of God’s children in
mutual revelation; and for fresh revelation of God to all.—But let
us inquire what is meant by the resurrection of the body. “With what
body do they come?”
Surely we are not required to believe that the same
body is raised again. That is against science, common sense,
Scripture. St Paul represents the matter quite otherwise. One feels
ashamed of arguing such a puerile point. Who could wish his material
body which has indeed died over and over again since he was born,
never remaining for one hour composed of the same matter, its
endless activity depending upon its endless change, to be fixed as
his changeless possession, such as it may then be, at the moment of
death, and secured to him in worthless identity for the ages to
come? A man’s material body will be to his consciousness at death no
more than the old garment he throws aside at night, intending to put
on a new and a better in the morning. To desire to keep the old body
seems to me to argue a degree of sensual materialism excusable only
in those pagans who in their Elysian fields could hope to possess
only such a thin, fleeting, dreamy, and altogether funebrial
existence, that they might well long for the thicker, more tangible
bodily being in which they had experienced the pleasures of a
tumultuous life on the upper world. As well might a Christian desire
that the hair which has been shorn from him through all his past
life should be restored to his risen and glorified head.
Yet not the less is the doctrine of the Resurrection
gladdening as the sound of the silver trumpet of its visions,
needful as the very breath of life to our longing souls. Let us know
what it means, and we shall see that it is thus precious.
Let us first ask what is the use of this body of
ours. It is the means of Revelation to us, the camera in which God’s
eternal shows are set forth. It is by the body that we come into
contact with Nature, with our fellow-men, with all their revelations
of God to us. It is through the body that we receive all the lessons
of passion, of suffering, of love, of beauty, of science. It is
through the body that we are both trained outwards from ourselves,
and driven inwards into our deepest selves to find God. There is
glory and might in this vital evanescence, this slow glacier-like
flow of clothing and revealing matter, this ever uptossed rainbow of
tangible humanity. It is no less of God’s making than the spirit
that is clothed therein.
We cannot yet have learned all that we are meant to
learn through the body. How much of the teaching even of this world
can the most diligent and most favoured man have exhausted before he
is called to leave it! Is all that remains to be lost? Who that has
loved this earth can but believe that the spiritual body of which St
Paul speaks will be a yet higher channel of such revelation? The
meek who have found that their Lord spake true, and have indeed
inherited the earth, who have seen that all matter is radiant of
spiritual meaning, who would not cast a sigh after the loss of mere
animal pleasure, would, I think, be the least willing to be without
a body, to be unclothed without being again clothed upon. Who, after
centuries of glory in heaven, would not rejoice to behold once more
that patient-headed child of winter and spring, the meek snowdrop?
In whom, amidst the golden choirs, would not the vision of an old
sunset wake such a song as the ancient dwellers of the earth would
with gently flattened palm hush their throbbing harps to hear?
All this revelation, however, would render only a
body necessary, not this body. The fulness of the word Resurrection
would be ill met if this were all. We need not only a body to convey
revelation to us, but a body to reveal us to others. The thoughts,
feelings, imaginations which arise in us, must have their garments
of revelation whereby shall be made manifest the unseen world within
us to our brothers and sisters around us; else is each left in human
loneliness. Now, if this be one of the uses my body served on earth
before, the new body must be like the old. Nay, it must be the same
body, glorified as we are glorified, with all that was distinctive
of each from his fellows more visible than ever before. The
accidental, the nonessential, the unrevealing, the incomplete will
have vanished. That which made the body what it was in the eyes of
those who loved us will be tenfold there. Will not this be the
resurrection of the body? of the same body though not of the same
dead matter? Every eye shall see the beloved, every heart will cry,
“My own again!—more mine because more himself than ever I beheld
him!” For do we not say on earth, “He is not himself to-day,” or
“She looks her own self;” “She is more like herself than I have seen
her for long”? And is not this when the heart is glad and the face
is radiant? For we carry a better likeness of our friends in our
hearts than their countenances, save at precious seasons, manifest
to us.
Who will dare to call anything less than this a
resurrection? Oh, how the letter killeth! There are who can believe
that the dirt of their bodies will rise the same as it went down to
the friendly grave, who yet doubt if they will know their friends
when they rise again. And they call that believing in the
resurrection!
What! shall a man love his neighbour as himself,
and must he be content not to know him in heaven? Better be content
to lose our consciousness, and know ourselves no longer. What! shall
God be the God of the families of the earth, and shall the love that
he has thus created towards father and mother, brother and sister,
wife and child, go moaning and longing to all eternity; or worse,
far worse, die out of our bosoms? Shall God be God, and shall this
be the end?
Ah, my friends! what will resurrection or life be
to me, how shall I continue to love God as I have learned to love
him through you, if I find he cares so little for this human heart
of mine, as to take from me the gracious visitings of your faces and
forms? True, I might have a gaze at Jesus, now and then; but he
would not be so good as I had thought him. And how should I see him
if I could not see you? God will not take you, has not taken you
from me to bury you out of my sight in the abyss of his own
unfathomable being, where I cannot follow and find you, myself lost
in the same awful gulf. No, our God is an unveiling, a revealing
God. He will raise you from the dead, that I may behold you; that
that which vanished from the earth may again stand forth, looking
out of the same eyes of eternal love and truth, holding out the same
mighty hand of brotherhood, the same delicate and gentle, yet strong
hand of sisterhood, to me, this me that knew you and loved you in
the days gone by. I shall not care that the matter of the forms I
loved a thousand years ago has returned to mingle with the sacred
goings on of God’s science, upon that far-off world wheeling its
nursery of growing loves and wisdoms through space; I shall not care
that the muscle which now sends the ichor through your veins is not
formed of the very particles which once sent the blood to the
pondering brain, the flashing eye, or the nervous right arm; I shall
not care, I say, so long as it is yourselves that are before me,
beloved; so long as through these forms I know that I look on my
own, on my loving souls of the ancient time; so long as my spirits
have got garments of revealing after their own old lovely fashion,
garments to reveal themselves to me. The new shall then be dear as
the old, and for the same reason, that it reveals the old love. And
in the changes which, thank God, must take place when the mortal
puts on immortality, shall we not feel that the nobler our friends
are, the more they are themselves; that the more the idea of each is
carried out in the perfection of beauty, the more like they are to
what we thought them in our most exalted moods, to that which we saw
in them in the rarest moments of profoundest communion, to that
which we beheld through the veil of all their imperfections when we
loved them the truest?
Lord, evermore give us this Resurrection, like
thine own in the body of thy Transfiguration. Let us see and hear,
and know, and be seen, and heard, and known, as thou seest, hearest,
and knowest. Give us glorified bodies through which to reveal the
glorified thoughts which shall then inhabit us, when not only shalt
thou reveal God, but each of us shall reveal thee.
And for this, Lord Jesus, come thou, the child, the
obedient God, that we may be one with thee, and with every man and
woman whom thou hast made, in the Father.