FELLOWSHIP WITH THE UNSEEN
Religion is man’s fellowship
with the Unseen, and it would seem that bishops and
various crank divines are determined that such a belief
shall be discouraged. Man’s nature has upon
it the Hall Marks of Heaven. Woven into man’s
anatomical texture we find faculties that transcend
this world, that are for ever intent upon the waves
that beat upon us from another shore. He sees
the coastline of another world to which he commits
his dead. We call such people Mystics, Catholics,
Seers, etc. They are the people who have
had touch with the Unseen. After all, the people
with actual personal experience of spiritual power,
who shape their lives by their experience are the
real assets of belief.
Man may or may not be sprung from
the beast, he may or may not have been raised from
slime. Man’s spirit did not arise in slime,
that at all events came from a race of flame.
Dust will not account for everything.
The Church in its greatest office
of all, the Communion Service, claims to worship in
union with “Angels and Archangels and with all
the Company of Heaven.” Having proclaimed
this tremendous fact the Church, for the most part
leaves it, and bishops view any further annunciation
of the fact with suspicion and sometimes with threats.
On one solemn day in the year the
Church invokes S. Michael and all Angels. S.
Michael’s Mass as it is still called. The
old teaching of the Church bids us lift our eyes to
behold those more intimate intelligences which stand
nearer the Great and Central Mystery. When a soldier
stumbles by chance upon one of those higher beings
he is regarded as the victim of hallucination, of
superstition or drink or all of them. A chaplain
with dull German Protestantism obscuring his view of
spiritual things treats him as some unclean thing.
Dissent in England for years has been synonymous with
pro-Germanism. It has been at war with the historic
creed of Christendom. It was better for their
aims that angels should not exist.
Before dull German Protestantism with
its gross materialism raised the plentiful crop of
sects in England, our country was known through Europe
as “Merrie England.” Our people loved
the festival of S. Michael. S. Michael’s
Mass was a red letter day. The Communion and Inter-Communion
of earth with heaven was emphasized. Families
met that day to pray and feast, lovers plighted their
troth, gatherings of relatives and friends was the
rule, joy was the key-note. Then dissent raised
its ugly head, dissent that had its birth in Germany.
These kill-joys got the upper hand. The recognition
of the Christ-Mass, Christmas and the Michael-Mass,
Michaelmas, was put down by law. Dissent has never
hesitated to use compulsion when it lay ready to hand
to enforce materialism. So belief in angels well
nigh ceased to exist. To-day the revival comes
from actual experience rather than from church teaching.
The antagonism to such belief amounts to unreasonable
heights of folly. Luther has so long occupied
the place of Christ that dissent has forgotten what
Christ taught us in regard to angels. We ignore
the fact that He claimed to have seen angels, and
to have had their help and ministration. When
politics mix with religion, spirituality dies, there
is no vision, for there is little belief and less sincerity.
No wonder the soldier’s vision of angels strikes
them as something altogether beyond the pale of belief.
It is time that our “spiritual
fathers” and other stepfathers began to give
us a lead in spiritual things. We are burdened
with bishops who play to the gallery and the cheaper
press, who would rather take a confirmation service
in a coal-pit than in a consecrated shrine of prayer,
for the simple reason that “Confirmation in a
Coal-pit” gets a flaming advertisement in every
paper. Their vision is set on notoriety:
the spiritual vision recedes. How can they have
sympathy with those who pierce the boundary line that
separates this world from a higher plane?
Men who have spent their lives on
office seeking can never be seers or priests.
Parsons who beat the political drum may rise to power
political, never to the power spiritual. The vision
glorious is to those who face duty, self-sacrifice,
and see in them the Divine Call, who believe in the
sacrifice of the Gospel rather than its comfort.
The charlatan must not dominate the Christian in our
spiritual pastors, if it do, then such are not qualified
to minister in spiritual things.