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THE TRANSIENT AND PERMANENT IN
CHRISTIANITY
Theodore Parker
Delivered at the Ordination of Rev. Charles C. Shackford
in the Hawes Place Church, Boston
May 19, 1841
Luke xxi.33. "Heaven and earth shall pass away: but my word shall
not pass away."
In this sentence we have a very clear indication that Jesus of
Nazareth believed the religion he taught would be eternal, that the
substance of it would last forever. Yet there are some, who are
affrighted by the faintest rustle which a heretic makes among the dry
leaves of theology; they tremble lest Christianity it self should
perish without hope. Ever and anon the cry is raised, "The
Philistines be upon us, and Christianity is in danger." The least
doubt respecting the popular theology, or the existing machinery of
the church; the least sign of distrust in the Religion of the Pulpit,
or the Religion of the Street, is by some good men supposed to be at
enmity with faith in Christ, and capable of shaking Christianity
itself. On the other hand, a few bad men and a few pious men, it is
said, on both sides of the water, tell us the day of Christianity is
past. The latter -- it is alleged -- would persuade us that,
hereafter, Piety must take a new form; the teachings of Jesus are to
be passed by; that Religion is to wing her way sublime, above the
flight of Christianity, far away, toward heaven, as the fledged eaglet
leaves forever the nest which sheltered his callow youth. Let us,
therefore, devote a few moments to this subject, and consider what is
TRANSIENT in Christianity, and what is PERMANENT therein. The topic
seems not inappropriate to the times in which we live, or the occasion
that calls us together.
Christ says, his Word shall never pass away. Yet at
first sight nothing seems more fleeting than a word. It is an
evanescent impulse of the most fickle element. It leaves no track
where it went through the air. Yet to this, and this only did Jesus
entrust the truth wherewith he came laden, to the earth; truth for the
salvation of the world. He took no pains to perpetuate hiss thoughts;
they were poured fourth where occasion found him an audience, --by the
side of the lake, or a well; in a cottage, or the temple; in a
fisher's boat, or the synagogue of the Jews. He founds no institution
as a monument of his words. He appoints no order of men to preserve
his bright and glad revelations. He only bids his friends give freely
the truth they had freely received. He did not even write his words in
a book. With a noble confidence, the result of his abiding faith, he
scattered them broad-cast on the world, leaving the seed to its own
vitality. He knew, that is of God cannot fail, for God keeps his own.
He sowed his seed in the heart, and left it there, to be watered and
warmed by the dew and the un which heaven sends. He felt his words
were for eternity. So he trusted them to the uncertain air; and for
eighteen hundred years that faithful element has held them good,
--distinct as when first warm from his lips. Now they are translated
into every human speech, and murmured in all earth's thousand tongues,
from the pine forests of the North to the palm groves of eastern Ind.
They mingle, as it were, with the roar of a populous city, and join
the chime of the desert sea. Of a Sabbath morn they are repeated from
church to church, from isle to isle, and land to land, till their
music goes round the world. Those words have become the breath of the
good, the hope of the wise, the joy of the pious, and that for many
millions of hearts. They are the prayers of our churches; our better
devotions by fireside and fieldside; the enchantment of our hearts. It
is these words, that still work wonders, to which the first recorded
miracles were nothing in grandeur and utility. It is these, which
build our temples and beautify our homes. They raise our thoughts of
sublimity; they purify our ideal of purity: they hallow our prayer for
truth and love. The make beauteous and divine the life which plain men
lead. The give wings to our aspirations. What charmers they are!
Sorrow is lulled at their bidding. They take the sting out of disease,
and rob adversity of his power to disappoint. They give health and
wings to the pious soul, broken-hearted and shipwrecked in his voyage
of life, and encourage him to tempt the perilous way once more. The
make all things ours: Christ our brother; Time our servant; Death our
ally and the witness of our triumph. They reveal to us the presence of
God, which else we might not have seen so clearly, in the first
wind-flower of spring; in the falling of a sparrow; in the distress of
a nation; in the sorrow or the rapture of the world. Silence the voice
of Christianity, and the world is well nigh dumb, for gone is that
sweet music which kept in awe the rulers and the people, which cheers
the poor widow in her lonely toil, and comes like light through the
windows of morning, to men who sit stooping and feeble, with failing
eyes and a hungering heart. It is gone -- all gone! only the cold,
bleak world left before them. Such is the life of these Words; such
the empire they have won for hemselves over men's minds since they
were spoken first. In the mean time, the words of great men and
mighty, whose name shook whole continents, though graven in metal and
stone, though stamped in institutions and defended by whole tribes of
priest and troops of followers -- their words have gone to the ground,
and the world gives back no echo of their voice. Meanwhile the great
works also of old times, castle and tower and town, their cities and
their empires, have perished, and left scarce a mark on the bosom of
the earth to show they once have been. The philosophy of the wise, the
art of the accomplished, the song of the poet, the ritual of the
priest, though honored as divine in their day, have gone down, a prey
to oblivion. Silence has closed over them; only their spectres now
haunt the earth. A deluge of blood has swept over the nations; a night
of darkness, more deep than the fabled darkness of Egypt, has lowered
down upon that flood, to destroy or to hide what the deluge had
spared. But through all this, the words of Christianity have come down
to us from the lips of that Hebrew youth, gentle and beautiful as the
light of a star, not spent by their journey through time and through
space. They have built up a new civilization, which the wisest Gentile
never hoped for; which the most pious Hebrew never foretold. Through
centuries of wasting, these words have flown on like a dove in the
storm, and now wait to descend on hearts pure and earnest, as the
Father's spirit, we are told, came on his lowly Son. The old heavens
and the old earth are indeed passed away, but the Word stands. Nothing
shows clearer than this, how fleeting is what man calls great; how
lasting what God pronounces true.
Looking at the Word of Jesus, at real Christianity, the pure religion
he taught, nothing appears more fixed and certain. Its influence
widens as light extends; it deepens as the nations grow more wise.
But, looking at the history of what men call Christianity, nothing
seems more uncertain and perishable. While true religion is always the
same thing, in each century and every land, in each man that feels it,
the Christianity of the Pulpit, which is the religion taught; the
Christianity of the People, which is the religion that is accepted and
lived out; has never been the same thing in any two centuries or
lands, except only in name. The difference between what is called
Christianity by the Unitarians in our times, and that of some ages
past, is greater than the difference between Mahomet and the messiah.
The difference at this day between opposing classes of Christians; the
difference between the Christianity of some sects, and that of Christ
himself; is deeper and more vital than that between Jesus and Plato,
Pagan as we call him. The Christianity of the seventh century has
passed away. We recognize only the ghost of Superstition in its faded
features, as it comes up at our call. It is one of the things which
has been, and can be no more, for neither God nor the world goes back.
Its terrors do not frighten, nor its hopes allure us. We rejoice that
it has gone. But how do we know that our Christianity shall not share
the same fate? Is there that difference between the nineteenth
century, and some seventeen that have gone before it, since Jesus, to
warrant the belief that our notion of Christianity shall last forever?
The stream of time has already beat down Philosophies and Theologies,
Temple and Church, though never so old and revered. How do we know
there is not a perishing element in what we call Christianity>
Jesus tells us, HIS Word is the word of God, and so shall never pass
away. But who tells us, that OUR word shall never pass away? that OUR
NOTION of his Word shall stand forever?
Let us look at this matter a little more closely. In actual
Christianity -- that is, in that portion of Christianity which is
preached and believed -- there seem to have been, ever since the time
of its earthly founder, two elements, the one transient, the other
permanent. The one is the thought, the folly, the uncertain wisdom,
the theological notions, the impiety of man; the other, the eternal
truth of God. These two bear perhaps the same relation to each other
that the phenomena of outward nature, such as sunshine and cloud,
growth, decay, and reproduction, bear to the great law of nature,
which underlies and supports them all. As in that case, more attention
is commonly paid to the particular phenomena than to the general law;
so in this case, more is generally given to the Transient in
Christianity than to the Permanent therein.
It must be confessed, though with sorrow, that transient things form a
great part of what is commonly taught as Religion. An undue place has
often been assigned to forms and doctrines, while too little stress
has been laid on the divine life of the soul, love to God, and love to
man. Religious forms may be useful and beautiful. They are so,
whenever they speak to the soul, and answer a want thereof. In our
present state some forms are perhaps necessary. But they are only the
accident of Christianity; not its substance. They are the robe, not
the angel, who may take another robe, quite as becoming and useful.
One sect has many forms; another none. Yet both may be equally
Christian, in spite of the redundance or the deficiency. They are a
par of the language in which religion speaks, and exist, with few
sect, we have retained but two of the rites so numerous in the early
Christian church, and even these we have attenuated to the last
degree, leaving them little more than a spectre of the ancient form.
Another age may continue or forsake both; may revive old forms, or
invent new ones to suit the altered circumstance of the times, and yet
be Christians quite as good as we, or our fathers of the dark ages.
Whether the Apostles designed these rites to be perpetual, seems a
question which belongs to scholars and antiquarians; not to us, as
Christian men and women. So long as they satisfy or help the pious
heart, so long they are good. Looking behind, or around us, we see
that the forms and rites of the Christians are quite as fluctuating as
those of the heathens; from whom some of them have been, not unwisely,
adopted by the earlier church.
Again, the doctrines that have been connected with Christianity, and
taught in its name, are quite as changeable as the form. This also
takes place unavoidably. If observations be made upon Nature, -- which
must take place so long as man has sense and understanding, -- there
will be a philosophy of Nature, and philosophical doctrines. These
will differ as the observations are just or inaccurate, and as the
deductions from observed facts are true or false. Hence there will be
different schools of natural philosophy, so long as men have eyes and
understandings of different clearness and strength. And if men observe
and reflect upon Religion, -- which will be done so long as man is a
religious and reflective being, -- there must also be a philosophy of
religion, a theology and theological doctrines. These will differ, as
men have felt much or little religion, as they analyze their
sentiments correctly or otherwise, and as they have reasoned right or
wrong. Now the true system of Nature which exists in the outward
facts, whether discovered our not, is always the same thing, though
the philosophy of Nature, which men invent, changes every month, and
be one thing at London and the opposite at Berlin. Thus there but one
system of Nature as it exits in fact, though many theories, which
exist in our imperfect notion of that system, and by which we may
approximate and at length reach it. Now there can be but one Religion
which is absolutely true, existing in the facts of human nature, and
the ideas of Infinite God. That. whether acknowledged or not, is
always the same thing and never changes. So far as a man has any real
religion -- either the principle or the sentiment thereof -- so far he
has that, by whatever name he may call it. For, strictly speaking,
there is but one kind of religion, as there is but one kind of love,
though the manifestations of this religion, in forms, doctrine, and
life, be never so diverse. It is through these, men approximate to the
true expression of this religion. Now while this religion is one and
always the same thing, there may be numerous system of theology or
philosophies of religion. These with their creeds, confessions, and
collections of doctrines, deduced by reasoning upon the facts
observed, may be baseless and false, either because the observation
was too narrow in extent, or otherwise defective in point of accuracy,
or because the reasoning was illogical, and therefore the deduction
spurious. Each of these three faults is conspicuous in the systems of
theology. Now the solar system as it exists in fact is permanent,
though the notions of Thales and Ptolemy, of Copernicus and Descartes
about this system, prove transient, imperfect approximations to the
true expression. So the Christianity of Jesus is permanent, though
what passes for Christianity with Popes and catechisms, with sects and
churches, in the first century or in the nineteenth century, prove
transient also. Now it has sometimes happened that a man took his
philosophy of Nature at second hand, and then attempted to make his
observations conform to his theory, and Nature ride in his panniers.
Thus some philosophers refused to look at the Moon through Galileo's
telescope, for, according to their theory of vision, such an
instrument would not aid the sight. Thus their preconceived notions
stood up between them and Nature. Now it has often happened that men
took their theology thus at second hand, and distorted the history of
the world an man's nature besides, to make Religion conform to their
notions. Their theology stood between them and God. Those obstinate
philosophers have disciples in no small number.
What another has said of false systems of science, will apply equally
to the popular theology: "It is barren in effects, fruitful in
questions, slow and languid in its improvement, exhibiting in it
generality the counterfeit of perfection, but ill filled up in its
details, popular in its choice, but suspected by its very promoters,
and therefore bolstered up and countenanced with artifices. Even those
who have been determined to try for themselves, to add their support
to earning, and to enlarge its limits, have not dared entirely to
desert received opinions, nor to seek the spring-head of things. But
they think they have done a great thing if they intersperse and
contribute something of their own; prudently considering, that by
their assent they can save their modesty, and by their contributions,
their liberty. Neither is there, nor ever will be, an end or limit to
these things. One snatches at one thing, another is pleased with
another; there is no dry nor clear sight of anything. Every one plays
the philosopher out of the small treasures of his own fancy. The more
sublime wits more acutely and with better success; the duller with
less success but equal obstinacy, and, by the discipline of some
learned men, sciences are bounded within the limits of some certain
authors which they have set down, imposing them upon old men and
instilling them into young. So that now (as Tully cavilled upon
Caesar's consulship) the star Lyra riseth by an edict, and authority
is taken for truth and not truth for authority; which kind of order
and discipline is very convenient for our present use, but banisheth
those which are better."
Any one, who traces the history of what is called Christianity, will
see that nothing changes more from age to age than the doctrines
taught as Christian, and insisted on as essential to Christianity and
personal salvation. What is falsehood in one province passes for truth
in another. The heresy of one age is the orthodox belief and
"only infallible rule" of the next. Now Arius, and now
Athanasius is Lord of the ascendant. Both were excommunicated in their
turn, each for affirming what the other denied. Men are burned for
professing what men are burned for denying. For centuries the
doctrines of the Christians were no better, to say the least, than
those of their contemporary pagans. The theological doctrines derived
from our fathers seem to have come from Judaism, Heathenism, and the
caprice of philosophers, far more than they have come from the
principle and sentiment of Christianity. The doctrine of the Trinity,
the very Achilles of theological dogmas, belongs to philosophy and not
religion; its subtleties cannot even be expressed in our tongue. As
old religions became superannuated and died out, they left to the
rising faith, as to a residuary legatee, their forms and their
doctrines; or rather, as the giant in the fable left his poisoned
garment to work the overthrow of his conqueror. Many tenets, that pass
current in our theology, seem to be the refuse of idol temples; the
offscourings of Jewish and heathen cities, rather than the sands of
virgin gold, which the stream of Christianity has worn off from the
rock of ages, and brought in it bosom for us. It is wood, hay, an
stubble, wherewith men have built on the corner stone Christ laid.
What wonder the fabric is in peril when tried by fire? The stream of
Christianity, as men receive it, has caught a stain from every soil it
has filtered through, so that now it is not the pure water from the
well of Life, which is offered to our lips, but streams troubled and
polluted by man with mire and dirt. If Paul and Jesus could read our
books of theological doctrines, would they accept as their teaching,
what men have vented in their name? Never till the letters of Paul had
faded out of his memory; never till the words of jesus had been torn
out from the Book of Life. It is their notions about Christianity men
have taught as the only living word of God. They have piled their own
rubbish against the temple of Truth where Piety comes to worship; what
wonder the pile seems unshapely and like to fall? But these
theological doctrines are fleeting as the leaves on the trees. They
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"Are found _ _ _ Now green in youth,
now withered on the ground; _ _ _ Another race the following spring
supplies; _ _ _ They fall successive and successive rise."
Like clouds of the sky, they are here to-day; to-morrow, all swept off
and vanished; while Christianity itself, like the heaven above, with
tis sun, and moon, and uncounted stars, is always over our head,
though the cloud sometimes debars us of the needed light. It must of
necessity be the case that our reasonings, and therefore our
theological doctrines, are imperfect, and so perishing. It is only
gradually that we approach to the true system of Nature by observation
and reasoning, and work out our philosophy and theology by the toil of
the brain. But meantime, it we are faithful, the great truths of
morality and religion, the deep sentiment of love to man and love to
God, are perceived intuitively, and by instinct, as it were, though
our theology be imperfect and miserable. The theological notions of
Abraham, to take the story as it stands, were exceedingly gross, yet a
great than Abraham has told us Abraham desired to see my day, saw it,
and was glad. Since these notions are so fleeting, why need we accept
the commandment of men, as the doctrine of God?
This transitoriness of doctrines appears, in many instances, of which
two may be selected for a more attentive consideration. First, the
doctrine respecting the origin and authority of the Old and New
Testament. There has been a time when men were burned for asserting
doctrines of natural philosophy, which rested on evidence the most
incontestable, because those doctrines conflicted with sentences in
the Old Testament. Every word of that Jewish record was regarded as
miraculously inspired, and therefore as infallibly true. It was
believed that the Christian religion itself rested thereon, and must
stand or fall with the immaculate Hebrew text. He was deemed no small
sinner who found mistakes in manuscripts. On the authority of the
written Word, man was taught to believe impossible legends,
conflicting assertions; to take fiction for fact; a dream for a
miraculous revelation of God; an oriental poem for a grave history of
miraculous events; a collection of amatory idyls for a serious
discourse "touching the mutual love of Christ and the
Church;" they have been taught to accept a picture sketched by
some glowing eastern imagination, never intended to be taken for
reality, as proof that the Infinite God spoke in human words, appeared
in the shape of a cloud, a flaming bush, or a man who ate, and drank,
and vanished into smoke; that he gave counsels today, and the opposite
tomorrow; that he violated his own laws; was angry, and was only
dissuaded by a mortal man from destroying at once a whole nation --
millions of men who rebelled against their leader in a moment of
anguish. Questions in philosophy, questions in the Christian religion,
have been settled by an appeal to that book. The inspiration of its
authors has been assumed as infallible. Every fact in the early Jewish
history has been taken as a type of some analogous fact in Christian
history. The most distant events, even such as are still in the arms
of time, were supposed to be clearly foreseen and foretold by pious
Hebrews several centuries before Christ. It has been assumed at the
outset, with no shadow of evidence, that those writers held a
miraculous communication with God, such as he has granted to no other
man. What was originally a presumption of bigoted Jews became an
article of faith, which Christians were burned for not believing. This
has been for centuries the general opinion of the Christian church,
both Catholic and Protestant, though the former never accepted the
Bible as the ONLY source or religious truth. It has been so. Still
worse, it is now the general opinion of religious sects at this day.
Hence the attempt, which always fails, to reconcile the philosophy or
our times with the poems in Genesis writ a thousand years before
Christ; hence the attempt to conceal the contradictions in the record
itself. Matters have come to such a pass, that even now he is deemed
an infidel, if not by implication an atheist, whose reverence for the
Most High forbids him to believe that God commanded Abraham to
sacrifice his Son, a thought at which the flesh creeps with horror; to
believe it solely on the authority of an oriental story, written down
nobody know when or by whom, or for what purpose; which may be a poem,
but cannot be the record of a fact, unless God is the author of
confusion and a lie.
Now this idolatry of the Old Testament has not always existed. Jesus
says that none born of a woman is greater than John the Baptist, yet
the least in the kingdom of heaven was greater than John. Paul tells
us the Law -- the very crown of the old Hebrew revelation -- is a
shadow of good things, which have now come, that we are no longer
under the schoolmaster; that it was a law of sin and death, from which
we are made free by the Law of the spirit of Life. Christian teachers
themselves have differed so widely in their notion of the doctrines
and meaning of those books, that it makes one weep to think of the
follies deduced therefrom. But modern Criticism is fast breaking to
pieces this idol which men have made out of the Scriptures. It has
show that here are the most different works thrown together. That
their authors, wise as they sometimes were; pious as we feel often
their spirit to have been, had only that inspiration which is common
to other men equally pious and wise; that they were by no means
infallible; but were mistaken in facts or in reasoning; uttered
predictions which time has not fulfilled; men who in some measure
partook of the darkness and limited notions of their age, and where
not always above its mistakes or its corruptions.
The history of opinions on the New Testament is quite similar. It has
been assumed at the outset, it would seem with no sufficient reason,
without the smallest pretence on its writers' part, that all of its
authors were infallibly and miraculously inspired, so that they could
commit no error of doctrine or fact. Men have been bid to close their
eyes at the obvious difference between Luke and John; the serious
disagreement between Paul and Peter; to believe, on the smallest
evidence, accounts which shock the moral sense and revolt the reason,
and tend to place Jesus in the same series with Hercules, and
Apollonius of Tyana; accounts which Paul in the Epistles never
mentions, thought he also had a vein of the miraculous running quite
through him. Men have been told that all these things must be taken as
part of Christianity, and if they accepted the religion, they must
take all these accessories along with it; that the living spirit could
not be had without the killing letter. All the books, which caprice or
accident had brought together between the lids of the Bible, were
declared to be the infallible word of God; the only certain rule of
religious faith and practice. Thus the Bible was made not a single
channel, but the ONLY certain rule of religious faith and practice. To
disbelieve any of its statements, or even the common interpretation
put upon those statements by the particular age or church in which the
man belonged, was held to be infidelity if not atheism. In the name of
him who forbid us to judge our brother, good men and pious men have
applied these terms to others, good and pious as themselves. That
state of things has by no means passed away. Men, who cry down the
absurdities of Paganism in the worst spirit of the French "free-
thinkers," call others infidels and atheists, who point out,
though reverently, other absurdities which men have piled upon
Christianity. so the world goes. An idolatrous regard for the
imperfect scripture of God's word, is the apple of Atalanta, which
defeats theologians running for the hand of divine truth.
But the current notions respecting the infallible inspiration of the
Bible have no foundation in the Bible itself. Which Evangelist, which
Apostle of the New Testament, what Prophet or Psalmist of the Old
Testament, ever claims infallible authority for himself or for others?
Which of them does not in his own writings show that he was finite,
and with all his zeal and piety, possessed but a limited inspiration,
the bound whereof we can sometimes discover? Did Christ ever demand
that men should assent to the doctrines of the Old Testament, credit
its stories, and take its poems for histories, and believe equally two
accounts that contradict one another? Has he ever told you that all
the truths of his religion, all the beauty of a Christian life should
be contained in the writings of those men,who, even after his
resurrection, expected him to be a Jewish king; of men who were
sometimes at variance with one another and misunderstood his divine
teachings? Would not those modest writers themselves be confounded at
the idolatry we pay them? Opinions may change on these points, as thy
have often changed -- changed greatly and for the worse since the days
of Paul. They are changing now, and we may hope for the better; for
God makes man's folly as well as his wrath to praise Him, and
continually brings good out of evil.
Another instance of the transitoriness of doctrines, taught as
Christian, is found in those which relate to the nature and authority
of Christ. One ancient party has told us, that he is the infinite God;
another, that he is both God and man; a third, that he was a man, the
son of Joseph and Mary, -- born as we are; tempted like ourselves;
inspired , as we may be, if we will pay the price. Each of the former
parties believed its doctrine on this head was infallibly true, and
formed the very substance of Christianity, and was one of the
essential conditions of salvation, though scarce any two distinguished
teachers, of ancient or modern times, agree in their expression of
this truth.
Almost every sect, that has ever been, makes Christianity rest on the
personal authority of Jesus, and not the immutable truth of the
doctrines themselves, or the authority of God, who sent him into the
world. Yet it seems difficult to conceive any reason, why moral and
religious truths should rest for their support on the personal
authority of their revealer, any more than the truths of science on
that of him who makes them known first or most clearly, It is hard to
see why the great truths of Christianity rest on the personal
authority of Jesus, more than the axioms of geometry ret on the
personal authority of Euclid, or Archimedes. The authority of Jesus,
as of all teachers,one would naturally think, must rest on the truth
of his words, and not their truth on his authority.
Opinions respecting the nature of Christ seem to be constantly
changing. In the three first centuries after Christ, it appears, great
latitude of speculation prevailed. Some said he was God, with nothing
of human nature, his body only an illusion; others, that he was man,
with nothing of the divine nature, his miraculous birth having not
foundation in fact. In a few centuries it was decreed by councils that
he was God, thus honoring the divine element; next, that he was man
also, thus admitting the human side. For some ages the Catholic Church
seems to have dwelt chiefly on the divine nature that was in him,
leaving the human element to mystics and other heretical persons,
whose bodies served to flesh the swords of orthodox believers. The
stream of Christianity has come to us in two channels -- one within
the Church, the other without the Church -- and it is not hazarding
too much to say, that since the fourth century the true Christian life
has been out of the established Church, and not in it, but rather in
the ranks of dissenters. From the Reformation till the latter part of
the last century, we are told, the Protestant Church dwelt chiefly on
the human side of Christ, and since that time many works have been
written to show how the to - perfect Deity and perfect manhood -- were
united in his character. But, all this time, scarce any two eminent
teachers agree on these points, however orthodox they may be called.
What a difference between the Christ of John Gerson and John Calvin, -
- yet were both accepted teachers and pious men. What a difference
between the Christ of Unitarians and the Methodists -- yet may men of
both sects be true Christians and acceptable with God. What a
difference between the Christ of Matthew and John -- yet both were
disciples, and their influence is wide as Christendom and deep as the
heart of man. But on this there is not time to enlarge.
Now it seems clear, that the notion men form about the origin and
nature of the scriptures; respecting the nature and authority of
Christ, having nothing to do with Christianity except as it aids or
its adversaries; they are not the foundation of its truths. These are
theological questions; not religious questions. Their connection with
Christianity appears accidental; for if Jesus had taught at Athens,
and not a Jerusalem if he had wrought no miracle, and none but the
human nature had ever been ascribed to him; if the Old Testament had
forever been perished at his birth, -- Christianity would still have
been the Word of God; it would have lost none of its truths. It would
be just as true, just as beautiful, just as lasting, as now it is;
though we should have lost so many a blessed word, and the work of
Christianity itself would have been, perhaps, a long time retarded.
To judge the future by the past, the former authority of the Old
Testament can never return. Its present authority cannot stand. It
must be taken for what it is worth. The occasional folly and impiety
of its authors must pass for no more than their value; -- while the
religion, the wisdom, the love, which make fragrant its leaves, will
still speak to the best hearts as hitherto, and in accents even more
divine, when Reason is allowed her rights. The ancient belief in the
infallible inspiration of each sentence of the New Testament is fast
changing; very fast. One writer, not a skeptic, but a Christian of
unquestioned piety, sweeps off the beginning of Matthew; another, of a
different church and equally religious, the end of John. Numerous
critics strike off several epistles. The Apocalypse itself it not
spared, notwithstanding its concluding curse. Who shall tell us the
work of retrenchment is to stope here; that others will not
demonstrate, what some pious hearts have long felt, that errors of
doctrine and errors of fact may be found in many parts of the record,
here and there, from the beginning of Matthew to the end of Acts? We
see how opinions have changed ever since the apostles' time; and who
shall assure us that they were not sometimes mistaken in historical,
as well as doctrinal matters; did not sometimes confound the actual
with the imaginary; and that the fancy of these pious writers never
stood in the place of their recollection?
But what if this should take place? Is Christianity then to perish out
of the heart of the nations, and vanish from the memory of the world,
like the religions that were before Abraham? It must be so, if it rest
on a foundation which a scoffer may shake, and a score of pious
critics shake down. But this is the foundation of a theology, not of
Christianity. That does not rest on the decision of Councils. It is
not to stand or fall with the infallible inspiration of a few Jewish
fishermen, who have writ their names in characters of light all over
the world. It does not continue to stand through the forbearance of
some critic, who can cut, when he will, the thread on which its life
depends. Christianity does not rest on the infallible authority of the
New Testament, It depends o this collection of books for the
historical statement of its facts. In this we do not require
infallible inspiration on the part of the writers, more than in the
record of other historical facts. To me it seems as presumptuous, on
the one hand, for the believer to claim this evidence for the truth of
Christianity, as it is absurd, on the other hand, for the skeptic to
demand such evidence to support these historical statements. I cannot
see that it depends on the personal authority of Jesus. He was the
organ through which the Infinite spoke. It is God that was manifested
in the flesh by him, on whom rests the truth which Jesus brought to
light and made clear and beautiful in his life; and if Christianity be
true, it seems useless to look for any other authority to uphold it,
as for some one to support Almighty God. So if it could be proved, --
as it cannot, -- in opposition to the greatest amount of historical
evidence ever collected on any similar point, that the gospels were
the fabrication of designing and artful men, that Jesus of Nazareth
had never lived, still Christianity would stand firm, and fear no
evil. None of the doctrines of that religion would fall to the ground;
for if true, they stand by themselves. But we should lose, -- oh,
irreparable loss! -- the example of that character, so beautiful, so
divine, that no human genius could have conceived it, as none, after
all the progress and refinement of eighteen centuries, seems fully to
have comprehended its lustrous life. If Christianity were true, we
should still think it was so, not because its record was written by
infallible pens; nor because it was lived out by an infallible
teacher, -- but that it is true, like the axioms of geometry, because
it is true, and is to be tried by the oracle God places in the breast.
If it rest on the personal authority of Jesus alone, then there is no
certainty of its truth, if he were ever mistake in the smallest
matter, as some Christians have thought he was, in predicting his
second coming.
These doctrines respecting the scriptures have often changed, and are
but fleeting. Yet men lay much stress on them. Some cling to these
notions as if they were Christianity itself. It is about these and
similar points that theological battles are fought from age to age.
Men sometimes use worst the choicest treasure God bestows. This is
especially true of the use men make of the Bible. Some men have
regarded it as the heathen their idol, or the savage his fetish. They
have subordinated Reason, Conscience, and Religion to this. Thus have
they lost half the treasure it bears in its boom. No doubt the time
will come when its true character shall be felt. Then it will be seen,
that, amid all the contradictions of the Old Testament; its legends so
beautiful as fictions, so appalling as facts; amid its predictions
that have never been fulfilled; amid the puerile conceptions of God,
which sometimes occur, and the cruel denunciations that disfigure both
Psalm and Prophecy, there is a reverence for man's nature, a sublime
trust in God, and a depth of piety rarely felt in these cold northern
hearts of ours. Then the devotion of is authors, the loftiness of
their aim, and the majesty of their life, will appear doubly fair, and
Prophet and Psalmist will warm our hearts as never before. Their voice
will cheer the young and sanctify the gray-headed; will charm us in
the toil of life, and sweeten the cup Death gives us, when he comes to
shake off this mantle of flesh. Then will it be seen, that the words
of Jesus are music of heaven, sung in an earthy voice, and the echo of
these words in John and Paul owe their efficacy to their truth and
their depth, and to no accidental matter connected therewith. Then can
the Word, -- which was in the beginning and now is, -- find access to
the innermost heart of man, and speak these as now it seldom speaks.
Then shall the Bible, -- which is a whole library of the deepest and
most earnest thoughts and feelings an piety and love, ever recorded in
human speech, -- be read oftener than ever before, not with
Superstition, but with Reason, Conscience, and Faith fully active.
Then shall it sustain men bowed down with many sorrows; rebuke sin;
encourage virtue; sow the world broad-cast and quick with the seed of
love, that man may reap a harvest for life everlasting.
With all the obstacles men have thrown in its path, how much has the
Bible done for mankind. No abuse has deprived us of all its blessings.
You trace its path across the world from the day of Pentecost to this
day. As a river springs up in the heart of a sandy continent, having
its father in the skies and its birth- place in distant, unknown
mountains; as the stream rolls on, enlarging itself, making in that
arid waste a belt of verdure, wherever it turns its way; creating palm
groves and fertile plains, where the smoke of the cottager curls up at
even-tide, and marble cities send the gleam of their splendor far into
the sky; -- such has been the course of the Bible on the earth.
Despite of idolaters bowing to the dust before it, it has made a
deeper mark on the world than the rich and beautiful literature of all
the heathen. The first book of the Old Testament tells man he is made
in the image of God; the first of the New Testament gives us the
motto, Be perfect as your Father in heaven. Higher words were never
spoken. How the truths of the Bible have blest us. There is not a boy
on all the hills of New England; not a girl born in the filthiest
cellar which disgraces a capital in Europe, and cries to God against
the barbarism of modern civilization; not a boy or a girl all
Christendom through, but their lot is made better by that great book.
Doubtless the time will come when men shall see Christ also as he is.
Well might he still say: "Have I been so long with you, and yet
hast thou not known me?" No! we have made him an idol, have bowed
the knee before him, saying, "Hail, king of the Jews;"
called him "Lord, Lord!" but done not he things which he
said. The history of the Christian world might well be summed up in
one word of the evangelist -- "and there they crucified
him," for there has never been an age when men did not crucify
the Son of God afresh. But if error prevail for a time and grow old in
the world, truth will triumph at the last, and then we shall see the
Son of God as he is. Lifted up he shall draw all nations unto him.
Then will men understand the Word of Jesus, which shall not pass away.
Then shall we see and love the divine life that he lived. How vast has
his influence been. How his spirit wrought in the hearts of his
disciples, rude, selfish, bigoted, as at first they were. How it has
wrought in the world. His words judge the nations. The wisest son of
man has not measured their height. They speak to what is deepest in
profound men; what is holiest in good men; what is divinest in
religious men. They kindle anew the flame of devotion in hearts long
cold. They are Spirit and Life. His truth was not derived from Moses
and Solomon; but the light of God shone through him, not colored, not
bent aside. His life is the perpetual rebuke of all time since. It
condemns ancient civilization; it condemns modern civilization. Wise
men we have since had, and good men; but this Galilean youth strode
before the world whole thousands of years, -- so much of Divinity was
in him. His words solve the questions of the present age. In him the
Godlike and the Human met and embraced, and a divine Life was born.
Measure him by the world's greatest sons; -- how poor they are. Try
him by the best of men, -- how little and low hey appear. Exalt him as
much as we may, we shall yet, perhaps, come short of the mark. But
still was he not our brother; the son of man, as we are; the Son of
God, like ourselves? His excellence, was it not human excellence? His
wisdom,love, piety, -- sweet and celestial as they were, -- are they
not what we also may attain? In him, as in mirror, we may se the image
of God, and go on from glory to glory, till we are changed into the
same image, led by the spirit which enlightens the humble. Viewed in
this way, how beautiful is the life of Jesus. Heaven has come down to
earth, or rather, earth has become heaven. The Son of God, come of
age, has taken possession of his birthright. The brightest revelation
is this, -- of what is possible for all men, if not now at least
hereafter. How pure is his spirit, and how encouraging its words.
"Lowly sufferer," he seems to say, "see how I bore the
cross. Patient laborer, be strong; see how I toiled for the unthankful
and the merciless. Mistaken sinner, see of what thou art capable. Rise
up, and be blessed."
But if, as some early Christians began to do, you take a heathen view,
and make him a God, the Son of God in a peculiar and exclusive sense
-- much of the significance of his character is gone. His virtue has
no merit; his love no feeling; his cross no burthen; his agony no
pain. His death is an illusion; his resurrection but a show. For if he
were not a man, but a god, what are all these thing; what his words,
his life, his excellence of achievement? -- It is all nothing, weighed
against the illimitable greatness of Him who created the worlds and
fills up all time and space! Then his resignation is no lesson; his
life not model; his death no triumph to you or me, -- who are not
gods, but mortal men, that know not what a day shall bring forth, and
walk by faith "dim sounding on our perilous way." Alas, we
have despaired of man, and so cut off his brightest hope.
In respect of doctrines as well as forms we see all is transitory.
"Every where is instability and insecurity." Opinions have
changed most, on points deemed most vital. Could we bring up a
Christian teacher of any age, -- from the sixth to the fourteenth
century, for example, though a teacher of undoubted soundness of
faith, whose word filled the churches of Christendom, clergymen would
scarce allow him to kneel at their altar, or sit down with them at the
Lord's table. His notions of Christianity could not be expressed in
our forms; nor could our notions be made intelligible to his ears. The
questions of his age, those on which Christianity was thought to
depend, -- questions which perplexed and divided the subtle doctors,
-- are no questions to us. The quarrels which then drove wise men mad,
now only excite a smile or a tear, as we are disposed to laugh or weep
at the frailty of man. We have other straws of our own to quarrel for.
Their ancient books of devotion do not speak to us; their theology is
a vain word. To look back but a short period, the theological
speculations of our fathers during the last two centuries; their
"practical divinity;" even the sermons written by genius and
piety, are, with rare exceptions, found unreadable; such a change is
there in the doctrines.
Now who shall tell us that the change is to stop here? That this sect
or that, or even all sects united, have exhausted the river of life,
and received it all in their canonized urns, so that we need draw no
more out of the eternal well, but get refreshment nearer at hand? Who
shall tell us that another age will not smile at our doctrines,
disputes, and unchristian quarrels about Christianity, and make wide
the mouth at men who walked brave in orthodox raiment, delighting to
blacken the names of heretics, and repeat again the old charge
"he hath blasphemed"? Who shall tell us they will not weep
at the folly of all such as fancied Truth shone only into the
contracted nook of their school, or sect, or coterie? Men of other
times may look down equally on the heresy-hunters, and men hunted for
heresy, and wonder at both. The men of all ages before us, were quite
as confident as we, that their opinion was truth; that their notion
was Christianity and the whole thereof. The men who lit the fires of
persecution, from the first martyr to Christian bigotry down to the
last murder of the innocents, had no doubt their opinion was divine.
The contest about transubstantiation, and the immaculate purity of the
Hebrew and Greek texts of the scriptures, was waged with a bitterness
unequalled in these days. The Protestant smiles at one, the Catholic
at the other, and men of sense wonder at both. It might teach us a
lesson, at least of forbearance. No doubt, an age will come, in which
ours shall be reckoned a period of darkness -- like the sixth century
-- when men groped for the wall but stumbled and fell, because they
trust a transient notion, not an eternal truth; an age when temples
were full of idols, set up by human folly, an age in which Christian
light had scarce begun to shine into men's hearts. But while this
changed goes on; while one generation of opinions passes away, and
another rises up; Christianity itself, that pure Religion, which
exists eternal in the constitution of the soul and the mind of God, is
always the same. The Word that was before Abraham, in the very
beginning, will not change, for that word is Truth. From this Jesus
subtracted nothing; to this he added nothing. But he came to reveal it
as the secret of God, that cunning men could not understand, but which
filled the souls of men meek and lowly of heart. This truth we ow to
God; the revelation thereof to Jesus, our elder brother, God's chosen
son.
To turn away from the disputes of the Catholics and the Protestants,
of the Unitarian and the Trinitarian, of Old School and New School,
and come to the plain words of Jesus of Nazareth, Christianity is a
simple thing; very simple. It is absolute, pure Morality; absolute,
pure Religion; the love of man; the love of God acting without let or
hindrance. The only creed it lays down is the great truth which
springs up spontaneous in the holy heart -- there is a God. Its
watchword is, be perfect as your Father in Heaven. The only form it
demands is a divine life; doing the best thing, in the best way, from
the highest motives; perfect obedience to the great law of God. Its
sanction is the voice of God in your heart; the perpetual presence of
Him, who made us and the stars over our head; Christ and the Father
abiding within us. All this is very simple; a little child can
understand it; very beautiful, the loftiest mind can find nothing so
lovely. Try it by Reason, Conscience, and Faith -- things highest in
man's nature -- we see no redundance, we feel no deficiency. Examine
the particular duties it enjoins; humility, reverence, sobriety,
gentleness, charity, forgiveness, fortitude, resignation, faith, and
active love; try the whole extent of Christianity so well summed up in
the command, "Thou shalt love he Lord they God with all thy
heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind -- thou shalt love
thy neighbor as thyself;" and is there anything therein that can
perish? No, the very opponents of Christianity have rarely found fault
with the teachings of Jesus. The end of Christianity seems to be to
make all men one with God as Christ was one with Him; to bring them to
such a state of obedience and goodness, that we shall think divine
thoughts and feel divine sentiments, and so keep the law of God by
living a life of truth and love. Its means are Purity and Prayer;
getting strength from God and using it for our fellow men as well as
ourselves. It allows perfect freedom. It does not demand all men to
_think_ alike, but to think uprightly, and get as near as possible to
the truth; not all men to _live_ alike, but to live holy, and get as
near as possible to a life perfectly divine. Christ set up no pillars
of Hercules, beyond which men must not sail the sea in quest of truth.
He says, "I have many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear
them now ... Greater works than these shall ye do." Christianity
lays no rude hand on the sacred peculiarity of individual genius and
character. But there is no Christian sect which does not fetter a man.
It would make all men think alike, or smother their conviction in
silence. Were all men Quakers or Catholics, Unitarians or Baptists,
there would be much less diversity of thought, character, and life;
less of truth active in the world than now. But Christianity gives us
the largest liberty of the sons of God, and were all men Christians
after the fashion of Jesus, this variety would be a thousand times
greater than now; for Christianity is not a system of doctrines, but
rather a method of attaining oneness with God. It demands, therefore,
a good life of piety within, of purity without, and gives the promise
that who does God's `will, shall know of God's doctrine.
In an age of corruption, as all ages are, Jesus stood and looked up to
God. There was nothing between him and the Father of all; no old word,
be it of Moses or Esaias, of a living Rabbi or Sanhedrim of Rabbis; no
sin or perverseness of the finite will. As the result of this virgin
purity of soul and perfect obedience, the light of God shone down into
the very deeps of his soul, bringing all of the Godhead which flesh
can receive. He would have us do the same; worship with nothing
between us and God; act, think feel, live, in perfect obedience to
Him; and we never are _Christians_ as he was the _Christ_, until we
worship, as Jesus did, with no mediator, with nothing between us and
the Father of all. He felt that God's word was in him; that he was one
with God. He told what he saw -- the Truth; he lived what he felt -- a
life of Love. The truth he brought to light must have been always the
same before the eyes of all-seeing God, nineteen centuries before
Christ, or nineteen centuries after him. A life supported by the
principle and quickened by the sentiment of religion, if true to both,
is always the same thing in Nazareth or New England. Now that divine
man received these truths from God; was illumined more clearly by
"the light that lighteneth every man"; combined or involved
all the truths of Religion and Morality in his doctrine, and made them
manifest in his life. Then his words and example passed into the
world, and can no more perish than the stars be wiped out of the sky.
The truths he taught; his doctrines respecting man and God; the
relation between man and man, and man and God, with the duties that
grow out of that relation, are always the same, and can never change
till man ceases to be man, and creation vanishes into nothing. No;
forms and opinions change and perish; but the Word of God cannot fail.
The form Religion takes, the doctrines wherewith she is girded, can
never be the same in any two centuries or two men; for since the sum
of religious doctrines is both the result and the measure of a man's
total growth in wisdom, virtue, and piety, and since men will always
differ in these respects, so religious _doctrines_ and _forms_ will
always differ, always be transient, as Christianity goes forth and
scatters the seed she bears in her hand. But the _Christianity_ _holy_
_men_ _feel_ _in_ _the_ _heart_ -- the Christ that is born within us,
is always the same thing to each soul that feels it. This differs only
in degree and not in kind, from age to age and man to man; there is
something in Christianity which no sect from the "Ebionites"
to the "latter day saints" ever entirely overlooked. This is
that common Christianity, which burns in the hearts of pious men.
Real Christianity gives men new life. It is the growth and perfect
action of the Holy Spirit God puts into the sons of men. It makes us
outgrow any form, or any system of doctrines we have devised, and
approach still closer to the truth. It would lead us to take what help
we can find. It would make the Bible our servant, not our master. It
would teach us to profit by the wisdom and piety of David and Solomon;
but not to sin their sins, nor bow to their idols. it would make us
revere the holy words spoken by "godly men of old," but
revere still more the word of God spoken through Conscience, Reason,
and Faith, as the holiest of all. It would not make Christ the despot
of the soul, but the brother of all men. It would not tell us, that
even he had exhausted the fulness of God, so that He could create none
greater; for with Him "all things are possible," and neither
Old Testament or New Testament ever hints that creation exhausts the
creator. Still less would it tell us, the wisdom, the piety the love,
the manly excellence of Jesus, was the result of miraculous agency
alone, but, that it was won, like the excellence of humbler men, by
faithful obedience to Him who gave his Son such ample heritage. It
would point to him as our brother, who went before, like he good
shepherd, to charm us with the music of his words, and with he beauty
of his life to tempt us up the steeps of mortal toil, within the gate
of Heaven. It would have us make the kingdom of God on earth, and
enter more fittingly the kingdom on high. It would lead us to form
Christ in the heart, on which Paul laid such stress, and work out our
salvation by this. For it is not so much by the Christ who lived so
blameless and beautiful eighteen centuries ago, that we are saved
directly, but by the Christ we form in our hearts and live out in our
daily life,that we save ourselves, God working with us, both to will
and to do.
Compare the simpleness of Christianity, as Christ sets it forth on the
Mount, with what is sometimes taught and accepted in that honored
name; and what a difference. One is of God; one is of man. There is
something in Christianity which sects have not reached; something that
will not be won, we fear, by theological battles, or the quarrels of
pious men; still we may rejoice that Christ is preached in any way.
The Christianity of sects, of the pulpit, of society, is ephemeral --
a transitory fly. It will pass off and be forgot. Some new form will
take its place, suited to the aspect of the changing times. Each will
represent something of the truth; but no one the whole. It seems the
whole race of man is needed to do justice to the whole of truth, as
"the whole church, to preach the whole gospel." Truth is
entrusted for the time to a perishable Ark of human contrivance.
Though often shipwrecked, she always comes safe to land, and is not
changed by her mishap. That pure ideal Religion which Jesus saw on the
mount of his vision, and lived out in the lowly life of a Galilean
peasant; which transforms his cross into an emblem of all that is
holiest on earth; which makes sacred the ground he trod, and is
dearest to the best of men, most true to what is truest int them,
cannot pass away. Let men improve never so far in civilization, or
soar never so high on the wings of Religion and Love, they can never
outgo the flight of truth and Christianity. It will always be above
them. It is as if we were to fly towards a Star, which becomes larger
and more bright the nearer we approach, till we enter and are absorbed
in its glory.
If we look carelessly on the ages that have gone by, or only on the
surfaces of things as they come up before us, there is reason to fear;
for we confound the truth of God with the word of man. So at a
distance the cloud and the mountain seem the same. When the drift
changes with he passing wind, an unpractised eye might fancy the
mountain itself was gone. But the mountain stands to catch the clouds,
to win the blessing they bear, and send it down to moisten the
fainting violet, to form streams which gladden valley and meadow, and
sweep on at last to the sea in deep channels, laden with fleets. Thus
the forms of the church, the creeds of sects, the conflicting opinions
of teachers, float round the sides of the Christian mount, and swell
and toss, and rise and fall, and dart their lightening, and roll their
thunder, but they neither make nor mar the mount itself. Is loft
summit far transcends the tumult; knows nothing of the storm which
roars below; but burns with rosy light at evening and at morn; gleams
in the splendors of the midday sun; sees his light when the long
shadows creep over plain and moorland, and all night long has its head
in the heavens, and is visited by troops of stars which never set, nor
veil their face to ought so pure and high.
Let then the Transient pass, fleet as it will, and may God send us
some new manifestation of the Christian faith, that shall stir men's
hearts as they were never stirred; some new Word, which shall teach us
what we are, and renew us all in the image of God; some better life,
that shall fulfill the Hebrew prophecy, and pour out the spirit of God
on young men and maidens, and old men and children; which shall
realize the Word of Christ, and give us the comforter, who shall
reveal all needed things. There are Simeons enough in the cottages and
Churches of New England, plain men and pious women, who wait for the
Consolation, and would die in gladness, if their expiring breath could
stir quicker the wings that bear him on. There are men enough, sick
and "bowed down, in no wise able to lift up themselves," who
would be healed could they kiss the hand of their Saviour, or touch
but the hem of his garment; men who look up and are not fed, because
they ask bread from heaven and water from the rock, not traditions or
fancies, Jewish or heathen, or new or old; men enough who, with
throbbing hearts, pray for the spirit of healing to come upon the
waters, which other than angels have long kept in trouble; men enough
who have lain long time sick of theology, nothing bettered by man
physicians, and are now dead, too dead to bury their dead, who would
come out of their graves at eh glad tidings. God send us a real
religious life, which shall pluck blindness out of the heart, and make
us better fathers, mothers, and children; a religious life, that shall
go with us where we go, and make every home the house of God, every
act acceptable as a pray. We would work for this, and pray for it,
though we wept tears of blood while we prayed.
Such, then, is the Transient, and such the Permanent in Christianity.
What is of absolute value never changes; we may cling round it and
grow to it forever. No one can say his notions shall stand. But we may
all say, the Truth, as it is in Jesus, shall never pass away. Yet
there are lays some even religious men, who do not see the permanent
element, so they rely on the fleeting; and, what is also an evil,
condemn others for not doing the same. They mistake a defence of the
Truth for an attack upon the Holy of Holiest; the removal of a
theological error for the destruction of all religion. Already men of
the same sect eye one another with suspicion, and lowering brows that
indicate a storm, and, like children who have fallen out in their
play, call hard names. Now, as always, there is a collision between
these two elements. The question puts itself to each man, "Will
you cling to what is perishing, or embrace what is eternal?" This
question each must answer for himself.
My friends, if you receive the notions about Christianity, which
chance to be current in your sect or church, solely because they are
current, and thus accept the commandment of men instead of God's truth
-- there will always be enough to commend you for soundness of
judgment, prudence, and good sense; enough to call you Christian for
that reason. But it this is all you rely upon, alas for you. The
ground will shake under your feet if you attempt to walk uprightly and
like men. You will be afraid of very new opinion, lets it shake down
your church; you will fear "lest if a fox go up, he will break
down your stone wall." The smallest contradiction in the New
Testament or Old Testament; the least disagreement between the Law and
the Gospel; any mistake of the Apostles, will weaken your faith. It
shall be with you "as when a hungry man dreameth, and behold, he
eateth; but he awaketh, and his soul is empty."
If, on the other hand, you take the true Word of God, and live out
this, nothing shall harm you. Men may mock, but their mouthfuls of
wind shall be blown back upon their own face. If the master of the
house were called Beelzebub, it matters little what name is given to
the household. The name Christian, given in mockery, will last till
the world go down. He that loves God and man, and lives in accordance
with that love, needs not fear what man can do to him. His Religion
comes to him in his hour of sadness, it lays its hand on him when he
has fallen among thieves, and raise him up, heals, and comforts him.
If he is crucified, he shall rise again.
My friends, you this day receive, with the usual formalities, the man
you have chosen to speak to you on the highest of all themes, -- what
concerns your life on earth; you lie in heave. It is a work for which
no talents, no prayerful diligence, no piety, is too great; an office,
that would dignify angels, if worthily filled. In the eyes of this man
be holden, that he _cannot_ discern between the perishing and the
true, you will hold him guiltless of all sin in this; but look for
light where it can be had; for his office will then be of no use to
you. But if he sees the truth, and is scared by worldly motives, and
_will_ not tell it, alas for him! If the watchman see the foe coming
and blow not the trumpet, the blood of the innocent is on him.
Your own conduct and character, the treatment you offer this young
man, will is some measure influence him. The hearer affects the
speaker. There were some places where even Jesus "did not many
mighty works, because of their unbelief." Worldly motives -- not
seeming such -- sometimes deter good men from their duty. Gold and
Ease have, before now, enervated noble minds. Daily contact with men
of low aims takes down the ideal of life, which a bright spirit casts
out of itself. Terror has sometimes palsied tongues that, before, were
eloquent as the voice of Persuasion. But thereby Truth is not holden.
She speaks in a thousand tongues, and with a pen of iron graves her
sentence on the rock forever. You may prevent the freedom of speech in
this pulpit if you will. You may hire you servants to preach as you
bid; to spare your vices and flatter your follies; to prophecy smooth
things, and say, It is peace, when there is no peace. Yet is so doing
you weaken and enthrall yourselves. And alas for that man who consents
to think one thing in his closet, and preach another in his pulpit.
God shall judge him in his mercy not man in his wrath. But over his
study and over his pulpit might be writ -- EMPTINESS; on his canonical
robes, on his forehead and right hand -- DECEIT, DECEIT.
But, on the other hand, you may encourage you brother to tell you the
truth. Your affection will then be precious to him; your prayers of
great price. Every evidence of your sympathy will go to baptize him
anew to Holiness and Truth. You will then have his best words, his
brightest thoughts, and his most hearty prayers. He may grow old in
your service, blessing and blest. He will have . . . ."The
sweetest, best of consolation, . . . . . .The thought, that he has
given, . . . . . .To serve the cause of Heaven, . . . . The freshness
of his early inspiration."
Choose as you will choose; but weal or woe depends upon your choice.
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