Is it merely a fancy that we are losing
that love for Spring which among our old forefathers
rose almost to worship? That the perpetual miracle
of the budding leaves and the returning song-birds
awakes no longer in us the astonishment which it awoke
yearly among the dwellers in the old world, when the
sun was a god who was sick to death each winter, and
returned in spring to life, and health, and glory;
when Freya, the goddess of youth and love, went forth
over the earth while the flowers broke forth under
her tread over the brown moors, and the birds welcomed
her with song? To those simpler children of a
simpler age winter and spring were the two great facts
of existence; the symbols, the one of death, the other
of life; and the battle between the two the
battle of the sun with darkness, of winter with spring,
of death with life, of bereavement with love lay
at the root of all their myths and all their creeds.
Surely a change has come over our fancies! The
seasons are little to us now!
Prose Idylls.
Past and Present. May 1.
Now see the young spring leaves burst out a-maying,
Fill with their ripening hues orchard and glen;
So though old forms pass by, ne’er shall their
spirit die,
Look! England’s bare boughs show green
leaf again.
Poems. 1849.
The Earth is the Lord’s. May 2.
The earth is holy! Can there
be a more glorious truth to carry out one
which will lead us more into all love and beauty and
purity in heaven and earth? One which must have
God’s light of love shining on it at every step.
God gives us souls and bodies exquisitely attuned
for this very purpose the aesthetic faculty,
our sensibilities to the beautiful. All events
of life, all the workings of our hearts, should point
to this one idea. As I walk the fields, the
trees and flowers and birds, and the motes of
rack floating in the sky, seem to cry to me: “Thou
knowest us! Thou knowest we have a meaning, and
sing a heaven’s harmony by night and day!
Do us justice! Spell our enigma, and go forth
and tell thy fellows that we are their brethren, that
their spirit is our spirit, their Saviour our Saviour,
their God our God!”
Letters and Memories. 1842.
The Great Question. May 3.
Is there a living God in the universe,
or is there not? That is the greatest of all
questions. Has our Lord Jesus Christ answered
it, or has He not?
Water of Life Sermons. 1866.
Our Father. May 4.
Look at those thousand birds, and
without our Father not one of them shall fall to the
ground; and art thou not of more value than many sparrows thou
for whom God sent His Son to die? . . . Ah! my
friend, we must look out and around to see what God
is like. It is when we persist in turning our
eyes inward, and prying curiously over our own imperfections,
that we learn to make a god after our own image, and
fancy that our own hardness and darkness are the patterns
of His light and love.
Hypatia, chap. xi.
Want of Sympathy. May 5.
If we do not understand our fellow-creatures
we shall never love them. And it is equally true,
that if we do not love them we shall never understand
them. Want of charity, want of sympathy, want
of good feeling and fellow-feeling what
does it, what can it breed but endless mistakes and
ignorances, both of men’s characters and
men’s circumstances?
Westminster Sermons. 1873.
A Religion. May 6.
If all that a man wants is “a
religion,” he ought to be able to make
a very pretty one for himself, and a fresh one as
often as he is tired of the old. But the heart
and soul of man wants more than that; as it is written,
“My soul is athirst for GOD, even for the living
God.” I want a living God, who cares for
men, forgives men, saves men from their sins:
and Him I have found in the Bible, and nowhere else,
save in the facts of life which the Bible alone interprets.
Sermons on the Pentateuch. 1863.
True Civilisation. May 7.
Do the duty which lies nearest to
you; your duty to the man who lives next door, and
to the man who lives in the next street. Do your
duty to your parish, that you may do your duty by
your country and to all mankind, and prove yourselves
thereby civilised men.
Water of Life Sermons. 1866.
Nature and Grace. May 8.
Why speak of the God of Nature and
the God of grace as two antithetical terms?
The Bible never in a single instance makes the distinction,
and surely if God be the eternal and unchangeable
One, and if all the universe bears the impress of
His signet, we have no right, in the present infantile
state of science, to put arbitrary limits of our own
to the revelation which He may have thought good to
make of Himself in Nature. Nay, rather, let
us believe that if our eyes were opened we should
fulfil the requirement of genius and see the universal
in the particular by seeing God’s whole likeness,
His whole glory, reflected as in a mirror in the meanest
flower, and that nothing but the dulness of our simple
souls prevents them from seeing day and night in all
things the Lord Jesus Christ fulfilling His own saying,
“My Father worketh hitherto, and I work.”
Glaucus. 1855.
Wisdom the Child of Goodness. May 9.
Goodness rather than talent had given
her a wisdom, and goodness rather than courage a power
of using that wisdom, which to those simple folk seemed
almost an inspiration.
Two Years Ago, chap. ii. 1857.
Rule of Life. May 10.
Two great rules for the attainment
of heavenly wisdom are simple enough “Never
forget what and where you are,” and “Grieve
not the Holy Spirit.”
MS. Letter. 1841.
Music the Speech of God. May 11.
Music there is something
very wonderful in music. Words are wonderful
enough, but music is more wonderful. It speaks
not to our thoughts as words do, it speaks straight
to our hearts and spirits, to the very core and root
of our souls. Music soothes us, stirs us up;
it puts noble feelings into us; it melts us to tears,
we know not how; it is a language by itself, just
as perfect, in its way, as speech, as words; just as
divine, just as blessed. Music has been called
the speech of angels; I will go farther, and call
it the speech of God Himself.
The old Greeks, the wisest of all
the heathen, made a point of teaching their children
music, because, they said, it taught them not to be
self-willed and fanciful, but to see the beauty of
order, the usefulness of rule, the divineness of law.
Good News of God Sermons. 1859.
Facing Realities. May 12.
The only comfort I can see in the
tragedies of war is that they bring us all face to
face with the realities of human life, as it has been
in all ages, giving us sterner and yet more loving,
more human, and more divine thoughts about ourselves,
and our business here, and the fate of those who are
gone, and awakening us out of the luxurious, frivolous,
and unreal dream (full nevertheless of hard judgments)
in which we have been living so long, to trust in
a living Father who is really and practically governing
this world and all worlds, and who willeth that none
should perish.
Letters and Memories. 1855.
Street Arabs. May 13.
One has only to go into the streets
of any great city in England to see how we, with all
our boast of civilisation, are yet but one step removed
from barbarism. Is that a hard word? Only
there are the barbarians round us at every
street corner grown barbarians, it may be,
now all but past saving, but bringing into the world
young barbarians whom we may yet save, for God wishes
us to save them. . . . Do not deceive yourselves
about the little dirty, offensive children in the street.
If they be offensive to you, they are not to Him
who made them. “Take heed that ye despise
not one of these little ones: for I say unto you,
their angels do always behold the face of your Father
which is in heaven.”
All Saints’ Day Sermons. 1871.
Fellowship of Sorrow. May 14.
How was He,
The blessed One, made perfect? Why, by grief
The fellowship of voluntary grief
He read the tear-stained book of poor men’s
souls,
As we must learn to read it. Lady! lady!
Wear but one robe the less forego one meal
And thou shalt taste the core of many tales,
Which now flit past thee, like a minstrel’s
songs,
The sweeter for their sadness.
Saint’s Tragedy, Act
ii. Scene .
Heaven and Hell. May 15.
Heaven and hell the spiritual
world are they merely invisible places in
space which may become visible hereafter? or are they
not rather the moral world of right and wrong?
Love and righteousness is not that the
heaven itself wherein God dwells? Hatred and
sin is not that hell itself, wherein dwells
all that is opposed to God?
Water of Life Sermons.
The Awfulness of Life. May 16.
Our hearts are dull, and hard, and
light, God forgive us! and we forget continually what
an earnest, awful world we live in a whole
eternity waiting for us to be born, and a whole eternity
waiting to see what we shall do now we are born.
Yes, our hearts are dull, and hard, and light.
And therefore Christ sends suffering on us, to teach
us what we always gladly forget in comfort and prosperity what
an awful capacity of suffering we have; and more,
what an awful capacity of suffering our fellow-creatures
have likewise. . . .
We sit at ease too often in a fool’s
paradise, till God awakens us and tortures us into
pity for the torture of others. And so, if we
will not acknowledge our brotherhood by any other
teaching, He knits us together by the brotherhood
of suffering.
All Saints’ Day Sermons. 1871.
Hope and Fear. May 17.
Every gift of God is good, and given
for our happiness, and we sin if we abuse it.
To use your fancy to your own misery is to abuse it
and to sin. The realm of the possible was given
to man to hope and not to fear in.
Letters and Memories. 1842.
Cry of the Heart and Reason. May 18.
A living God, a true God, a real God,
a God worthy of the name, a God who is working for
ever, everywhere, and in all; who hates nothing that
He has made, forgets nothing, neglects nothing; a
God who satisfies not only the head but the heart,
not only the logical intellect but the highest reason that
pure reason which is one with the conscience and moral
sense! For Him we cry out, Him we seek, and if
we cannot find Him we know no rest.
Water of Life Sermons. 1867.
Speaking the Truth in Love. May 19.
Whenever we are tempted to say more
than is needful, let us remember St. John’s
words (in the only sermon we have on record of his),
“Little children, love one another,” and
ask God for His Holy Spirit, the spirit of love, which,
instead of weakening a man’s words, makes them
all the stronger in the cause of truth, because they
are spoken in love.
How difficult it is to distinguish
between the loving tact, which avoids giving
offence to a weaker brother, and the fear of man, which
bringeth a snare!
MS. Letter. 1842.
Peasant Souls. May 20.
. . . Dull boors
See deeper than we think, and hide within
Those leathern hulls unfathomable truths,
Which we amid thought’s glittering mazes lose.
They grind among the iron facts of life,
And have no time for self-deception.
Saint’s Tragedy, Act
iii. Scene i.
Death and Everlasting Life. May 21.
Do not rashly count on some sudden
radical change happening to you as soon as you die
to make you fit for heaven. There is not one
word in the Bible which gives us reason to suppose
that we shall not be in the next world the same persons
that we have made ourselves in this world. . . .
What we sow here we shall reap there. And it
is good for us to know and face this. Anything
is good for us, however unpleasant it may be, which
drives us from the only real misery, which is sin and
selfishness, to the only true happiness, which is
the everlasting life of Christ, a pure, loving, just,
generous, useful life of goodness.
Good News of God Sermons.
Science and Virtue. May 22.
Science is great; but she is not the
greatest. She is an instrument and not a power beneficent
or deadly, according as she is wielded by the hand
of virtue or vice. But her lawful mistress, the
only one which can use her aright, the only one under
whom she can truly grow and prosper and prove her
divine descent, is Virtue, the likeness of Almighty
God.
Roman and Teuton. 1860.
A Child’s Heart. May 23.
“I saw at last! I found
out that I had been trying for years which was stronger,
God or I; I found out I had been trying whether I could
not do well enough without Him; and there I found
that I could not could not! I felt
like a child who had marched off from home, fancying
it can find its way, and is lost at once. I
did not know that I had a Father in heaven who had
been looking after me, when I fancied I was looking
after myself. I don’t half believe it now.”
. . . And so the old heart passed away from
Thomas Thurnall, and instead of it grew up the heart
of a little child.
Two Years Ago, chap. xxviii. 1857.
Self-Security. May 24.
Strange it is how mortal man, “who
cometh up and is cut down like the flower,”
can harden himself into a stoical security, and count
on the morrow which may never come. Yet so it
is, and perhaps if it were not so no work would get
done on earth at least by the many who know
not that God is guiding them, while they fancy they
are guiding themselves.
Two Years Ago, chap. i.
There is a Providence which rules
this earth, whose name is neither Political Economy
nor Expediency, but the Living God, who makes every
right action reward, and every wrong action punish,
itself.
History Lecture, Cambridge. 1866.
Loss and Gain. May 25.
“He has yet to learn what losing
his life to save it means, Amyas. Bad men have
taught him (and I fear these Anabaptists and Puritans
at home teach little else) that it is the one great
business of every man to save his own soul after he
dies; every one for himself; and that that, and not
divine self-sacrifice, is the one thing needful, and
the better part which Mary chose.”
“I think,” said Amyas,
“men are enough inclined to be selfish without
being taught that.”
Westward Ho! chap. vii. 1854.
The Law of Righteousness. May 26.
What if I had discovered that one
law of the spiritual world, in which all others were
contained, was Righteousness? and that disharmony with
that law, which we call unspirituality, was not being
vulgar, or clumsy, or ill-taught, or unimaginative,
or dull; but simply being unrighteous? that righteousness,
and it alone, was the beautiful, righteousness the
sublime, the heavenly, the God-like ay,
God Himself?
Hypatia, chap. xxvii. 1852.
Human and Divine Love. May 27.
Believe me that he who has been led
by love to a human being to understand the mystery
of that divine love which fills all heaven and earth,
and concentrates itself into an articulate manifestation
in the person of Christ, will soon begin to find that
he cannot enter into the perfect bliss of that truth
without going further, and seeing that the human heart
requires some standing-ground for its affection, even
for the love of wife and child, deeper and surer than
that love, namely, in utter loyalty, resignation,
adoring affection to Him in whom all loveliness is
concentrated. It is a great mystery. It
is a hard lesson.
Letters and Memories. 1847.
A High Finish. May 28.
A high artistic finish is important
for more reasons than for the mere pleasure it gives.
There is something sacramental in perfect metre and
rhythm. They are outward and visible signs (most
seriously we speak as we say it) of an inward and
spiritual grace, namely, of the self-possessed and
victorious temper of one who has so far subdued nature
as to be able to hear that universal sphere-music of
hers, speaking of which Mr. Carlyle says, that “all
deepest thoughts instinctively vent themselves in
song.”
Miscellanies. 1849.
Our Prayers. May 29.
There can be no objection to praying
for certain special things. God forbid!
I cannot help doing it, any more than a child in the
dark can help calling for its mother. Only it
seems to me that when we pray, “Grant this day
that we run into no kind of danger,” we ought
to lay our stress on the “run” rather
than on the “danger,” to ask God not to
take away the danger by altering the course of nature,
but to give us light and guidance whereby to avoid
it.
Letters and Memories. 1860.
Clearing Showers. May 30.
When a stream is swelled by a flood,
a shower of rain clears it. So in trouble,
when the heart is turbid from the world’s admixtures,
and the stirring up of the foul particles which will
lie at the bottom, nothing but the pure dew of heaven
can restore its purity, when God’s spirit comes
down upon it like a gentle rain!
MS. 1843.
Vineyards in Spring. May 31.
Look at the rows of vines, or what
will be vines when the summer comes, but are now black,
knotted and gnarled clubs, without a sign of life in
the seemingly dead stick. One who sees that sight
may find a new beauty and meaning in the mystic words,
“I am the Vine, ye are the branches.”
It is not merely the connection between branch and
stem common to all trees; not merely the exhilarating
and seemingly inspiring properties of the grape, which
made the very heathen look upon it as the sacred and
miraculous fruit, the special gift of God; not merely
the pruning out of the unfruitful branches, to be
burned as firewood not merely these, but
the seeming death of the Vine, shorn of all its beauty,
its fruitfulness, of every branch and twig which it
had borne the year before, and left unsightly and
seemingly ruined, to its winter sleep; and then bursting
forth again by an irresistible inward life into fresh
branches, spreading and trailing far and wide, and
tossing their golden tendrils to the sky. This
thought surely the emblem of the living
Church, springing from the corpse of the dead Christ,
who yet should rise to be alive for evermore enters
into, it may be forms an integral part of, the meaning
of that prophecy of all prophecies.
Prose Idylls. 1864.
SAINTS’ DAYS, FASTS, & FESTIVALS.
MAY 1.
St. Philip and St. James, Apostles and Martyrs.
Christ’s cross says still, and
will say to all Eternity, “Wouldst thou be good?
Wouldst thou be like God? Then work and dare,
and if need be, suffer for thy fellow-men.”
On the Cross Christ consecrated, and as it were offered
to the Father in His own body, all loving actions,
unselfish actions, merciful actions, heroic actions,
which man has done or ever will do. From Him,
from His spirit, their strength came; and therefore
He is not ashamed to call them brethren. He is
the King of the noble army of martyrs; of all who
suffer for love and truth and justice’ sake;
and to all such He says, thou hast put on My likeness;
thou hast suffered for My sake, and I too have suffered
for thy sake, and enabled thee to suffer likewise,
and in Me thou too art a Son of God, in whom the Father
is well pleased.
Sermons.
Feast of the Ascension.
“Lo, I am with you always,”
said the Blessed One before He ascended to the Father.
And this is the Lord who we fancy is gone away far
above the stars till the end of time! Oh, my
friends, rather bow your heads before Him at this
moment! For here He is among us now, listening
to every thought of our poor simple hearts.
He is where God is, in whom we live, and move, and
have our being, and that is everywhere. Do you
wish Him to be any nearer?
National Sermons.
. . . Oh, my Saviour!
My God! where art Thou? That’s but a tale
about Thee,
That crucifix above it does but show Thee
As Thou wast once, but not as Thou art now. . . .
Saint’s Tragedy, Act iv. Scene i.