THE OLD ORDER CHANGETH
The Old order changeth, giving place
to New; and it would be well to realise this everlasting
fact before we decide that the world is waxing evil,
and the times are waxing late. And who can say
that out of the seething of the present some noble
and glorious ideals of life for men and women may
not spring?
Surely it is unwise to read in the
writing upon the wall, as so many do, only a pessimistic
presage of inevitable death. If there is writing
for students of evolution to read, then it should be
taken as a warning indication which direction to avoid
and which to take. Unrest is a sign, not of decay,
but of life. Stagnation alone gives warning of
death.
And there are a number of facts to
be faced before we can give an opinion either way.
The first of these is, that all civilised
nations are endeavouring to stamp out ignorance and
disease, and that an enormous advance in this direction
can be observed in the last fifty years. And,
taking a general view of the civilised peoples, a
far greater number of their units now lead less dreadful
and degraded lives.
And surely these indications of mankind’s
advancement are as plain as are some other signs of
decline.
The stirring up of the masses by insufficient
education is bound to produce unrest, and until the
different elements have assorted themselves into their
new places in the scheme of things, how can there
be tranquillity? All is out of balance, and has
disturbed the machinery of the country’s life,
for the time being. But if the aim has been for
enlightenment, the eventual outcome must be good.
All scum in a boiling pot rises to
the top, and makes itself seen, concealing the pure
liquid beneath, until it is skimmed off. And so
we have political demagogues shouting the untenable
fallacy that all men are equal, together with other
flamboyant nonsense; and hooligan suffragists smashing
windows. But all these are only the scum upon
the outside of a great upward movement in mankind,
and are not to be taken as the incontestable proof
of the vicious condition of the whole mass.
The spirit that is abroad, though
one of great unrest, is not one of decadence, but
of progress. But it would be folly not to admit
that there are aspects of it which presage disaster
unless directed, just as the pot will boil over if
not watched.
It may be interesting to scrutinise,
with unemotional common sense, some of the causes
of the present state of things, and perhaps from this
investigation come to some conclusions as to their
remedy or encouragement.
Nature, whether human, animal, or
vegetable, will not be hurried, or she produces the
abnormal. Until about a hundred years ago everything
seemed to be moving on with a very slow and gradual
evolution. Some things changed a little, others
it would seem, not at all. And then, after the
first quarter of the nineteenth century, Science and
Invention appeared to join hands, and, with small beginnings,
gradually assuming mammoth proportions, to revolutionise
the very universe. The result has been to make
life easy to a class which formerly had to work hard
for the bare necessities of existence. With this
came education. The lowest of the people were
taught to read and write, and the most ill-chosen
and elementary book-knowledge was flung upon unploughed
soil, unprepared for its reception. Nature was
hurried, and began to produce, not fair flowers at
once, but the abnormal and diseased. A little
knowledge is a dangerous thing.
The education these crude minds received
was not of the sort to show them their ignorance,
and implant in them a noble desire for more teaching,
so as to achieve a gradual advancement, but was just
sufficient to stir up discontent with what was, and
produce countless square pegs, clamouring to get into
round holes for which they were unfitted.
Mechanical inventions did away with
numbers of home duties, and even the meagre education
the masses then received was enough to cause them
to throw grave doubts upon the accepted religion of
the country. The timid souls were released from
the fear of hell, as a powerful factor for the determining
of their actions. The bold felt they would have
the support and sympathy of numbers of their fellows
in breaking up old beliefs, and the intelligent of
both kinds refused to swallow many of the dogmas any
longer.
Thus the bridle which, through the
Christian ages, had guided mankind, became as a mere
thread. And all these loosened steeds ran wild
and are still running wild, until enlightenment shall
come to them, and they will perceive that each individual
is responsible to God for himself.
The cry that the churches are emptying
is perhaps true; and if it is a fact, then of what
use to lament it? It would be more logical to
search for the cause. If people do not come of
their own accord, there is no law to oblige them to
do so. Consequently, if the churches wish for
their return, it is their business to provide fare
which will induce them to take this course.
Education has encouraged men and women
to think for themselves, and the religiously minded,
who would willingly remain under some guidance, have
begun to perceive how very wide apart Christ’s
beautiful teaching is from the interpretation of it
which they often receive in church; while the others,
who had never any religious aspirations at all, are
glad that the weight of public opinion and custom
no longer forces them into irksome attendance.
To fill churches with worshippers drawn there largely
through hope of Heaven or fear of Hell, or because
it was considered respectable and custom bound them
to conform to its mandates, surely could not have been
very acceptable to God. And the percentage who
went truly to pour forth their love and worship, are
still pouring it forth, because it came, and comes,
from their hearts whether they attend church or no.
The modern spirit is full of what
Edmond Holmes calls the desire to ask the teacher
or person in authority for his credentials. And
if these are not entirely satisfactory, the influence
he can hope to wield will be nil.
To deplore anything that may happen
to a country, or to ourselves, is waste of time.
We should search for the reason of it, and if it proves
to be because there is some ineradicable cause, intelligence
should then be used to better the condition which
results. Worship of something glorious and beyond
ourselves will always swell the human heart, and if
the accepted forms of the religion of a country can
no longer produce this emotion, it is not because
the human heart is changing, but because there is
something in those forms which no longer fulfils its
mission.
The cry of the fear of the net of
Rome is futile also. People drift to where they
belong, and Rome seems to offer to take all spiritual
responsibility from the shoulders of her children.
It gives them an emotional satisfaction which brings
comfort to all, and amongst these any of hysterical
nature probably become far happier and better citizens
under her wing than they would otherwise have been.
No nets will catch the expanding soul which is rising
out of its paltry self into ideals nearer to God.
During the earlier days when religion
held sway in England over at least nine-tenths of
female lives, superfluous women were content as a
rule to lead grey, uneventful existences, making no
more mark on their time than if they had been flocks
of sheep. But with the breakdown of this force,
and greater freedom of ideas, they have brought themselves
into prominence the scum as a shrieking
sisterhood, and the pure elements unobtrusively, as
leaders of countless noble works.
Meanwhile, in every class of the community
the desire “to move” is felt. Travelling,
formerly the luxury of the rich, now is indulged in
by an ever-increasing company. The aspect of family
life is changed, and amusement is within the reach
of all.
It is not reasonable to suppose with
this total alteration in the view of existence, that
many things that we held beautiful and sacred should
not have gone by the board things such as
filial respect, gentle manners, chivalry, obedience.
We are undoubtedly in an unpleasant state of incompletion
as a nation to-day, but by no means in one of decadence.
And if only the two great dangers do not swamp us a
mawkish and hysterical humanitarianism, and the heedless
pursuit of pleasure as the only end the
upward tendency of progress is bound to go on.
Inventions, aided by science in all its ramifications,
have made life pleasant, and all these benefits have
come too quickly for the recipients to be prepared
to receive them with calm. Their equilibrium
is disturbed, and they are led into exaggerations,
and so the ugly side of the spirit of the Great Unrest
is born. But, underneath, the English people
are a sane, healthy stock in mind and body, and when
education has opened their minds and broadened their
understanding, they will surely allow their birthright
of common sense among the nations to have sway again.
Instead of standing aside and lamenting that times
are evil and that the nation is going down hill, it
behoves all thinking people to gather their forces
together and seriously apply themselves to consider
how they can better this condition of things.
In their daily life they can do so by setting up a
high standard of sanity and right behaviour, by the
encouragement of fine aims and high ends, by the firm
avoidance of hypocrisy and hysterical altruism, and
by intelligent explanation to those under their care
of the reason why individual responsibility is necessary
for the welfare of the community at large.
And a most important lesson for every
one to learn is the law of cause and effect.
The great rush of modern life is apt to produce an
inconsequence of action. Anything good or bad
is indulged in without time for thought as to its
result. But the law of the boomerang is immutable,
and its action goes on for ever what
we send out we receive again, sooner or later, for
good or ill.
The first principle of that great
and wonderful wave of “New Thought” which
is sweeping over America, and is beginning to find
some understanding in this country, is that the responsibility
of each individual’s well-being rests with himself,
and that his environment is the result of what his
consciousness has been able to attract to himself.
And, as no one limits us but ourselves,
as soon as a man’s consciousness begins strongly
to create in his own mind new and better conditions,
he will inevitably draw them to himself in fact.
From God there can emanate nothing but Good.
It is the individual’s own action which brings
his punishment, or reward. If this fundamental
principle could be investigated by responsible scientists,
unhampered by theological influences, and with no
prejudice as to the idea’s being regarded as
a mere culte, its exactness could perhaps be
mathematically proved beyond a cavilling doubt.
Possibly then the doctrine might be allowed to be
taught in the public schools, to the everlasting benefit
of the growing race.
To say the least of it, it would inculcate
an immense self-respect.
There should not be, and I believe
there is not, any law which can prevent the lowest
in the land from rising to the highest place if
he is fitted for it. It is the ceaseless cry
of the unfit unit for some situation above his capabilities,
which is a distressing feature of modern life.
But, even in this, the spirit shown in the desire to
rise is good; while if he had the will to fit himself
for what he aspires to, it would be splendid and great.
And these are the men and women who succeed, no matter
what avocations they may be engaged in. The others,
the shouters, only hamper the wheels of progress and
fall eventually as the dust in the ruts.
Formerly there was a hard line drawn
between “gentlemen” and common men.
And there were all sorts of things that, however bad
he might be, a “gentleman” did not do;
or if he did commit these actions, his punishment
was swift. He was obliged to face the ordeal of
a duel, or he received the cut direct from his own
class.
These ideas of behaviour, accompanied
by the responsibility for the welfare of numbers of
tenants upon his property responsibility
very often nobly sustained produced in
the old English aristocrat a very fine specimen indeed.
And from him downwards in all the social classes,
a high tone of honour was maintained. But now
the democratic idea is sweeping away these classes
and these standards. The State is taking the
power for good from the individual, and the machine
is crushing the man; so it behooves all serious thinkers
more than ever to use their logical common sense to
supply the place once occupied by the old ideals.
Nothing is so arrogant as ignorance and
loud shouting ever concealed an empty pate.
Part of the crude spirit of the Great
Unrest of to-day manifests itself by the effort of
those beneath to demonstrate in words that
they are the equals of those above them. And,
pitiful and ridiculous as this is, the spirit arose
in good. It is because those underneath desire
to be the equals of those above them, that they use
the only means their limited understandings provide
them with, to try to obtain their ends. You never
hear of numbers of people shouting that they are the
equals of the tramp in the street!
So it shows that even in this, the
Great Unrest is an uplifting force. And when
reason and education have directed its current, surely
we may hope that we shall arise again as a nation,
like a giant refreshed with wine.
The study of the atavism of races,
the study of heredity, the study of the influence
of the welfare of the mother upon her unborn child,
are all useful and expanding studies for ordinary
thinking minds, and are quite within the scope of
the average intelligence. But the modern hatred
of all restraint another failing born in
the good of desire for freedom makes it
difficult to preach any course of action which would
involve curtailment of time or pleasure.
You often hear people say about some
misfortune, “Just as I expected, such and such
happened,” and they do not stop to realise that
their expectancy helped the thing which they feared,
to materialise. No one can deny the force of
imagination. Its existence has been abundantly
proved. For instance, there was a case which was
in the newspapers some time ago, of the guard on a
Russian train who believed he was locked into the
cold-storage van, and wrote a letter describing how
he was being frozen to death. And he was actually
found dead in the morning, although the temperature
of the car had never gone below freezing point!
People will readily credit this, but
will ridicule the idea that their own imaginations
are daily helping or hindering their own and others’
lives.
Marconi demonstrated that messages
can be transmitted by wireless telegraphy, and his
discovery became a thing of commercial value.
So it was believed in as nothing marvellous, but merely
as a new departure of science. Yet the numberless
proofs of other currents beyond our actual sight which
manifest themselves each day in every life, and influence
it, are unconsidered quantities, if not actually denied.
But there they are; and though, as
the demonstration of an exact science, they are laughed
to scorn, their force is unconsciously admitted in
a hundred cant phrases, such as, “He was under
an evil influence,” “She makes
you feel better because she is so cheerful,”
etc., etc. Both these things here
alluded to as forces are intangible, and yet are real
proofs of the power of imagination.
This shows how tremendously important
it is never to allow our imagination to run into prognostications
of evil, either in predictions for our country, for
ourselves, or for our friends. Each unit should
try to help the great force for good by sending forth
strong positive thoughts for its upliftment.
Think, for a moment, under what a
terrible shadow the soul of Christian man has lain
for these many hundred years! Ever since the
doctrine of original sin was forced upon his belief,
his soul has come into the world handicapped by millions
of thought-currents expecting it to do evil, unless
continuously controlled and curtailed and punished
into a semblance of good! It cannot be wondered
at, then, that sometimes these forces become too strong
for it, and it does fall into sin. But what an
insult to God, the source of all love and beauty and
holiness, to suppose He would permit a tarnished atom
of Himself to reach the exquisite world He has created!
All who wish for enlightenment upon
this subject, and as to how they should view their
children and their race, should read Edmond Holmes’s
masterly work upon elementary education, “What
Is, and What Might Be.”
We cannot stop the force which our
own action, in giving education to the lowest people,
has put in motion, and which has produced, from their
status upward, the “Great Unrest.”
We can hardly even hope to control it; but we can
and must do all in our power to guide and direct it
into channels for the good and glory of our dear country,
making it, as the fire Prometheus stole from heaven,
an incentive to noble actions and great ends.
Could not the people with large influence,
who are interested in this matter, band together and
discuss some scheme for the sending out of lecturers
all over England who would explain, with common sense
entirely stripped of all politics or religion, to the
rising generation, the vast importance of individual
responsibility the duty of all citizens the
glory of helping the great force aright? Explanations,
in a practical and simple form, would do more than
a thousand laws, or all the thunders from the pulpit
or the platform. If the children in every school
could be made to feel they are all little men and
women, full of God’s gift of a soul, able and
willing to help the raising of their country, they
would soon graft a new spirit into their homes.
They would respond as readily as do the hundreds of
brave men who volunteer for active service, and probable
death, to reinforce a fire-brigade, or a life-boat’s
crew. Children are so wise when their fine instincts
are appealed to.
If only this fundamental principle
could be understood that each individual
has in this life, or some former one, attracted to
himself the exact environment that he is now in and
that it lies only with himself whether he remains
in it, or lifts himself out of it, there would be
no more class hatred, no more railing against hard
luck and injustice, but a steady increase of betterment
all over the world.
The unfortunate thing is, that nearly
all writers and talkers and lecturers, who are enthusiasts,
and therefore really believe in what they are preaching,
have so little common sense.
They carry away their readers or audiences
for the moment upon the current of their own divine
enthusiasm, but when their utterances come to be measured
by the cold light of fact, the logical conclusions
are so faulty, that the whole, which contained many
thoughts of great and beautiful worth, is dismissed
as the ravings of a dreamer, and ceases to have any
effect.
The main attribute of any religion,
of any ethical teaching, of any principle to
be of use to men and women at the present stage of
their development must be incontestable
common sense. Ridiculous sentimentality should
be ruthlessly crushed, and investigation of the meaning
of Nature should be strenuously encouraged. And
with clear eyes we should try to see the truth.
Let those born fighters who like fighting for fighting’s
sake, and who now wage war against windmills, being
armed with prejudice and false conceptions of man’s
place in relation to God, turn their belligerent powers
to the demolition of the double-headed Hydra, Hypocrisy
and Deceit.
It is the duty of every true man and
woman at this hour of their country’s day to
begin to think, to weigh for himself or herself
the meanings of the signs of the times, to use their
critical faculties, to face facts honestly, unhampered
by prudery, convention, or the doctrines of the Church.
And then they will see for themselves that the Great
Unrest is a force, the direction of which, for good
or ill, lies in their own hands. And according
to the way they fulfil the responsibility entailed
upon them in this matter, they or their children will
reap the reward, or pay the price. The Great Unrest
in its seething is still molten metal, which can be
poured into what mould we will.
To call this Great Unrest a sign of
decadence and a presage of destruction, would be as
fallacious as to say that electricity is an entirely
mischievous force. Both are mischievous when undirected,
and both are glorious when used for good.
The test of the expansion of man’s
soul is the extent of its outlook. The puny spirit
sees an hour or two ahead; the more advanced probably
conceives plans to benefit himself and his loved ones
day by day. The developed soul desires the good
of his country. But the soul that is infinite
and emancipated sees into eternity and demands of God
the regeneration of humanity.