’As
we have therefore opportunity, let us do good
unto
all. . . .’ GAL. vi 10.
’As we have therefore’ that
points a finger backwards to what has gone before.
The Apostle has been exhorting to unwearied well-doing,
on the ground of the certain coming of the harvest
season. Now, there is a double link of connection
between the preceding words and our text; for ‘do
good’ looks back to ‘well-doing,’
and the word rendered ‘opportunity’ is
the same as that rendered ‘season.’
So, then, two thoughts arise ’well-doing’
includes doing good to others, and is not complete
unless it does. The future, on the whole, is the
season of reaping; the present life on the whole is
the season of sowing; and while life as a whole is
the seed-time, in detail it is full of opportunities,
openings which make certain good deeds possible, and
which therefore impose upon us the obligation to do
them. If we were in the habit of looking on life
mainly as a series of opportunities for well-doing,
how different it would be; and how different we should
be!
Now, this injunction is seen to be
reasonable by every man, whether he obeys it or not.
It is a commonplace of morality, which finds assent
in all consciences, however little it may mould lives.
But I wish to give it a particular application, and
to try to enforce its bearing upon Christian missionary
work. And the thought that I would suggest is
just this, that no Christian man discharges that elementary
obligation of plain morality, if he is indifferent
to this great enterprise. ’As we have an
opportunity, let us do good to all.’ That
is the broad principle, and one application is the
duty of Christian men to diffuse the Gospel throughout
the world.
I. Let me ask you to look at the obligation
that is thus suggested.
As I have said, well-doing is the
wider, and doing good to others the narrower, expression.
The one covers the whole ground of virtue, the other
declares that virtue which is self-regarding, the culture
which is mainly occupied with self, is lame and imperfect,
and there is a great gap in it, as if some cantle
had been cut out of the silver disc of the moon.
It is only full-orbed when in well-doing, and as a
very large constituent element of it, there is included
the doing good to others. That is too plain to
need to be stated. We hear a great deal to-day
about altruism. Well, Christianity preaches that
more emphatically than any other system of thought,
morals, or religion does. And Christianity brings
the mightiest motives for it, and imparts the power
by which obedience to that great law that every man’s
conscience responds to is made possible.
But whilst thus we recognise as a
dictate of elementary morality that well-doing must
necessarily include doing good to others, and feel,
as I suppose we all do feel, when we are true to our
deepest convictions, that possessions of all sorts,
material, mental, and all others, are given to us
in stewardship, and not in absolute ownership, in order
that God’s grace in its various forms may fructify
through us to all, my present point is that, if that
is recognised as being what it is, an elementary dictate
of morality enforced by men’s relationships to
one another, and sealed by their own consciences,
there is no getting away from the obligation upon
all Christian men which it draws after it, of each
taking his share in the great work of imparting the
gospel to the whole world.
For that gospel is our highest good,
the best thing that we can carry to anybody.
We many of us recognise the obligation that is devolved
upon us by the possession of wealth, to use it for
others as well as for ourselves. We recognise,
many of us, the obligation that is devolved upon us
by the possession of knowledge, to impart it to others
as well as ourselves. We are willing to give
of our substance, of our time, of our effort, to impart
much that we have. But some of us seem to draw
a line at the highest good that we have, and whilst
responding to all sorts of charitable and beneficent
appeals made to us, and using our faculties often
for the good of other people, we take no share and
no interest in communicating the highest of all goods,
the good which comes to the man in whose heart Christ
rests. It is our highest good, because it deals
with our deepest needs, and lifts us to the loftiest
position. The gospel brings our highest good,
because it brings eternal good, whilst all other benefits
fade and pass, and are left behind with life and the
dead flesh. It is our highest good, because if
that great message of salvation is received into a
heart, or moulds the life of a nation, it will bring
after it, as its ministers and results, all manner
of material and lesser benefit. And so, giving
Christ we give our best, and giving Christ
we give the highest gift that a weary world can receive.
Remember, too, that the impartation
of this highest good is one of the main reasons why
we ourselves possess it. Jesus Christ can redeem
the world alone, but it cannot become a redeemed world
without the help of His servants. He needs us
in order to carry into all humanity the energies that
He brought into the midst of mankind by His Incarnation
and Sacrifice; and the cradle of Bethlehem and the
Cross of Cavalry are not sufficient for the accomplishment
of the purpose for which they respectively came to
pass, without the intervention and ministry of Christian
people. It was for this end amongst others, that
each of us who have received that great gift into
our hearts have been enriched by it. The river
is fed from the fountains of the hills, in order that
it may carry verdure and life whithersoever it goes.
And you and I have been brought to the Cross of Christ,
and made His disciples, not only in order that we
ourselves might be blessed and quickened by the gift
unspeakable, but in order that through us it may be
communicated, just as each particle when leavened
in the mass of the dough communicates its energy to
its adjacent particle until the whole is leavened.
I am afraid that indifference to the
communication of the highest good, which marks sadly
too many Christian professors in all ages, and in this
age, is a suspicious indication of a very slight realisation
of the good for themselves. Luther said that
justification was the article of a standing or a falling
church. That may be true in the region of theology,
but in the region of practical life I do not know that
you will find a test more reliable and more easy of
application than this, Does a man care for spreading
amongst his fellows the gospel that he himself has
received? If he does not, let him ask himself
whether, in any real sense, he has it. ‘Well-doing’
includes doing good to others, and the possession
of Christ will make it certain that we shall impart
Him.
II. Notice the bearing of this
elementary injunction upon the scope of the obligation.
‘Let us do good to all men.’
It was Christianity that invented the word ‘humanity’;
either in its meaning of the aggregate of men or its
meaning of a gracious attitude towards them.
And it invented the word because it revealed the thing
on which it rests. ‘Brotherhood’ is
the sequel of ‘Fatherhood,’ and the conception
of mankind, beneath all diversities of race and culture
and the like, as being an organic whole, knit together
by a thousand mystical bands, and each atom of which
has connection with, and obligations to, every other that
is a product of Christianity, however it may have
been in subsequent ages divorced from a recognition
of its source. So, then, the gospel rises above
all the narrow distinctions which call themselves
patriotism and are parochial, and it says that there
is ’neither circumcision nor uncircumcision,
Jew nor Greek, Barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free,’
but all are one. Get high enough up upon the
hill, and the hedges between the fields are barely
perceptible. Live on the elevation to which the
Gospel of Jesus Christ lifts men, and you look down
upon a great prairie, without a fence or a ditch or
a division. So my text comes with profound significance,
‘Let us do good to all,’ because all are
included in the sweep of that great purpose of love,
and in the redeeming possibilities of that great death
on the Cross. Christ has swept the compass, if
I may say so, of His love and work all round humanity;
and are we to extend our sympathies or our efforts
less widely? The circle includes the world; our
sympathies should be as wide as the circle that Christ
has drawn.
Let me remind you, too, that only
such a world-wide communication of the highest good
that has blessed ourselves will correspond to the proved
power of that Gospel which treats as of no moment diversities
that are superficial, and can grapple with and overcome,
and bind to itself as a crown of glory, every variety
of character, of culture, of circumstance, claiming
for its own all races, and proving itself able to lift
them all. ‘The Bread of God which came
down from heaven’ is an exotic everywhere, because
it came down from heaven, but it can grow in all soils,
and it can bring forth fruit unto eternal life everywhere
amongst mankind. So ‘let us do good to
all.’
And then we are met by the old objection,
’The eyes of a fool are in the ends of the earth.
Keep your work for home, that wants it.’
Well! I am perfectly ready to admit that in Christian
work, as in all others there must be division of labour,
and that one man’s tastes and inclinations will
lead him to one sphere and one form of it; and another
man’s to another; and I am quite ready, not
to admit, but strongly to insist, that, whatever happens,
home is not to be neglected. ‘All men’
includes the slums in England as well as the savages
in Africa, and it is no excuse for neglecting either
of these departments that we are trying to do something
in the other. But it is not uncharitable to say
that the objection to which I am referring is most
often made by one or other of two classes, either
by people who do not care about the Gospel, nor recognise
the ‘good’ of it at all, or by people who
are ingenious in finding excuses for not doing the
duty to which they are at the moment summoned.
The people that do the one are the people that do the
other. Where do you get your money from for home
work? Mainly from the Christian Churches.
Who is it that keeps up missionary work abroad?
Mainly the Christian Churches. There is a vast
deal of unreality in that objection. Just think
of the disproportion between the embarrassment of
riches in our Christian appliances here in England
and the destitution in these distant lands. Here
the ships are crammed into a dock, close up against
one another, rubbing their yards upon each other; and
away out yonder on the waters there are leagues of
loneliness, where never a sail is seen. Here,
at home, we are drenched with Christian teaching,
and the Churches are competing with each other, often
like rival tradespeople for their customers; and away
out yonder a man to half a million is considered a
fair allowance. ‘Let us do good to all.’
III. Lastly, note the bearing
of this elementary precept on the occasions that rise
for the discharge of the duty.
‘As we have opportunity.’
As I have already said, the Christian way to look
at our circumstances is to regard them as openings
for the exercise of Christian virtue, and therefore
summonses to its discharge. And if we regarded
our own position individually, so we should find that
there were many, many doors that had long been opened,
into which we had been too blind or too lazy, or too
selfishly absorbed in our own concerns, to enter.
The neglected opportunities, the beckoning doors whose
thresholds we have never crossed, the good that we
might have done and have not done these
are as weighty to sink us as the positive sins, the
opportunities for which have appealed to our worse
selves.
But I desire to say a word, not only
about the opportunities offered to us individually,
but about those offered to England for this great
enterprise. The prophet of old represented the
proud Assyrian conqueror as boasting, ’My hand
hath gathered as a nest the riches of the peoples
. . . and there was none that moved the wing, or opened
the mouth, or peeped.’ It might be the
motto of England to-day. It is not for nothing
that we and our brethren across the Atlantic, the inheritors
of the same faith and morals and literature, and speaking
the same tongue, have had given to us the wide dominion
that we possess, I know that England has not climbed
to her place without many a crime, and that in her
’skirts is found the blood of poor innocents,’
but yet we have that connection, for good or for evil,
with subject races all over the earth. And I ask
whether or not that is an opportunity that the Christian
Church is bound to make use of. What have we
been intrusted with it for? Commerce, dominion,
the impartation of Western knowledge, literature, laws?
Yes! Is that all? Are you to send shirting
and not the Gospel? Are you to send muskets that
will burst, and gin that is poison, and not Christianity?
Are you to send Shakespeare, and Milton, and modern
science, and Herbert Spencer, and not Evangelists and
the Gospels? Are you to send the code of English
law and not Christ’s law of love? Are you
to send godless Englishmen, ’through whom the
name of God is blasphemed amongst the Gentiles,’
and are you not to send missionaries of the Cross?
A Brahmin once said to a missionary, ’Look here!
Your Book is a good Book. If you were as good
as your Book you would make India Christian in ten
years.’
Brethren! the European world to-day
is fighting and scrambling over what it calls the
unclaimed corners of the world; looking upon all lands
that are uncivilised by Western civilisation either
as markets, or as parts of their empire. Is there
no other way of looking at the heathen world than
that? How did Christ look at it? He was moved
when He saw the multitudes as ‘sheep having
no shepherd.’ Oh! if Christian men, as
members of this nation, would rise to the height of
Christ’s place of vision, and would look at
the world with His eyes, what a difference it would
make! I appeal to you, Christian men and women,
as members of this nation, and therefore responsible,
though it may be infinitesimally, for what this nation
is doing in the distant corners of the world, and
urge on you that you are bound, so far as your influence
goes, to protest against the way of looking at these
heathen lands as existing to be exploited for the
material benefit of these Western Powers. You
are bound to lend your voice, however weak it may be,
to the protests against the savage treatment of native
races against the drenching of China with
narcotics, and Africa with rum; to try to look at
the world as Christ looked at it, to rise to the height
of that great vision which regards all men as having
been in His heart when He died on the Cross, and refuses
to recognise in this great work ’Barbarian,
Scythian, bond or free.’ We have awful responsibilities;
the world is open to us. We have the highest
good. How shall we obey this elementary principle
of our text, unless we help as we can in spreading
Christ’s reign? Blessed shall we be if,
and only if, we fill the seed-time with delightful
work, and remember that well-doing is imperfect unless
it includes doing good to others, and that the best
good we can do is to impart the Unspeakable Gift to
the men that need it.