PICTURE OF A PAULINE CHURCH
128. History Without and Within.-A
holiday visitor to a foreign city walks through the
streets, guidebook in hand, looking at monuments,
churches, public buildings and the outsides of the
houses, and in this way is supposed to be made acquainted
with the town; but, on reflection, he will find that
he has scarcely learned anything about it, because
he has not been inside the houses. He does not
know how the people live-not even what
kind of furniture they have or what kind of food they
eat-not to speak of far deeper matters,
such as how they love, what they admire and pursue,
and whether they are content with their lot.
In reading history one is often at
a loss in the same way. It is only the outside
of life that is made visible. It is as if the
eye were carried along the external surface of a tree,
instead of seeing a cross-section of its substance.
The pomp and glitter of the court, the wars waged
and the victories won, the changes in the constitution
and the rise and fall of administrations, are faithfully
recorded; but the reader feels that he would learn
far more of the real history of the time if he could
see for one hour what was happening beneath the roofs
of the peasant, the shopkeeper, the clergyman and the
noble.
Even in Scripture-history there is
the same difficulty. In the narrative of the
Acts of the Apostles we receive thrilling accounts
of the external details of Paul’s history; we
are carried rapidly from city to city and informed
of the incidents which accompanied the founding of
the various churches; but we cannot help wishing sometimes
to stop and learn what one of these churches was like
inside. In Paphos or Iconium, in Thessalonica
or Beroea or Corinth, how did things go on after Paul
left? What were the Christians like, and what
was the aspect of their worship?
129. Happily it is possible
to obtain this interior view of things. As Luke’s
narrative describes the outside of Paul’s career,
so Paul’s own Epistles permit us to see its
deeper aspects. They rewrite the history on
a different plane. This is especially the case
with those Epistles written at the close of his third
journey, which cast a flood of light back upon the
period covered by all his journeys. In addition
to the three Epistles already mentioned as having been
written at this time, there is another belonging to
the same part of his life-the First to
the Corinthians-which may be said to transport
us, as on a magician’s mantle, back over two
thousand years and, stationing us in mid-air above
a great Greek city, in which there was a Christian
church, to take the roof off the meeting-house of the
Christians and permit us to see what was going on
within.
130. A Christian Gathering in
Corinth.-It is a strange spectacle we witness
from this coigne of vantage. It is Sabbath evening,
but of course the heathen city knows of no Sabbath.
The day’s work at the busy seaport is over,
and the streets are thronged with gay revelers intent
on a night of pleasure, for it is the wickedest city
of that wicked ancient world. Hundreds of merchants
and sailors from foreign parts are lounging about.
The gay young Roman, who has come across to this
Paris for a bout of dissipation, drives his light chariot
through the streets. If it is near the time
of the annual games, there are groups of boxers, runners,
charioteers and wrestlers, surrounded by their admirers
and discussing their chances of winning the coveted
crowns. In the warm genial climate old and young
are out of doors enjoying the evening hour, while
the sun, going down over the Adriatic, is casting
its golden light upon the palaces and temples of the
wealthy city.
131. Meanwhile the little company
of Christians has been gathering from all directions
to their place of worship; for it is the hour of their
stated assembly. The place of meeting itself
does not rise very clearly before our view.
But at all events it is no gorgeous temple like those
by which it is surrounded; it has not even the pretensions
of the neighboring synagogue. It may be a large
room in a private house or the wareroom of some Christian
merchant cleared for the occasion.
132. Glance round the benches
and look at the faces. You at once discern one
marked distinction among them: some have the peculiar
facial contour of the Jew, while the rest are Gentiles
of various nationalities; and the latter are the majority.
But look closer still and you notice another distinction:
some wear the ring which denotes that they are free,
while others are slaves; and the latter preponderate.
Here and there among the Gentile members there is
one with the regular features of the born Greek, perhaps
shaded with the pale thoughtfulness of the philosopher
or distinguished with the self-confidence of wealth;
but not many great, not many mighty, not many noble
are there; the majority belong to what in this pretentious
city would be reckoned the foolish, the weak, the base
and despised things of this world; they are slaves,
whose ancestors did not breathe the pellucid air of
Greece but roamed in savage hordes on the banks of
the Danube or the Don.
133. But observe one thing besides
on all the faces present-the terrible traces
of their past life. In a modern Christian congregation
one sees in the faces on every hand that peculiar cast
of feature which Christian nurture, inherited through
many centuries, has produced; and it is only here
and there that a face may be seen in the lines of which
is written the tale of debauchery or crime. But
in this Corinthian congregation these awful hieroglyphics
are everywhere. “Know ye not,” Paul
writes to them, “that the unrighteous shall not
inherit the kingdom of God? Be not deceived:
neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers,
nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind,
nor thieves, nor covetous, nor extortioners shall inherit
the kingdom of God. And such were some of you.”
Look at that tall, sallow-faced Greek: he has
wallowed in the mire of Circe’s swine-pens.
Look at that low-browed Scythian slave: he has
been a pickpocket and a jail-bird. Look at that
thin-nosed, sharp-eyed Jew: he has been a Shylock,
cutting his pound of flesh from the gilded youth of
Corinth.
Yet there has been a great change.
Another story besides the tale of sin is written
on these countenances. “But ye are washed,
but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified in the
name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God.”
Listen, they are singing; it is the fortieth Psalm:
“He took me from the fearful pit and from the
miry clay.” What pathos they throw into
the words, what joy overspreads their faces!
They know themselves to be monuments of free grace
and dying love.
134. The Services.-But
suppose them now all gathered; how does their worship
proceed? There was this difference between their
services and most of ours, that instead of one man
conducting them-offering their prayers,
preaching, and giving out the psalms-all
the men present were at liberty to contribute their
part. There may have been a leader or chairman;
but one member might read a portion of Scripture, another
offer prayer, a third deliver an address, a fourth
raise a hymn, and so on. Nor does there seem
to have been any fixed order in which the different
parts of the service occurred; any member might rise
and lead away the company into praise or prayer or
meditation, as he felt prompted.
135. This peculiarity was due
to another great difference between them and us.
The members were endowed with very extraordinary gifts.
Some of them had the power of working miracles, such
as the healing of the sick. Others possessed
a strange gift called the gift of tongues. It
is not quite clear what it was; but it seems to have
been a kind of tranced utterance, in which the speaker
poured out an impassioned rhapsody by which his religious
feeling received both expression and exaltation.
Some of those who possessed this gift were not able
to tell others the meaning of what they were saying,
while others had this additional power; and there
were those who, though not speaking with tongues themselves,
were able to interpret what the inspired speakers
were saying. Then again, there were members who
possessed the gift of prophecy-a very valuable
endowment. It was not the power of predicting
future events, but a gift of impassioned eloquence,
the effects of which were sometimes marvelous:
when an unbeliever entered the assembly and listened
to the prophets, he was seized with uncontrollable
emotion, the sins of his past life rose up before him,
and, falling on his face, he confessed that God was
among them of a truth. Other members exercised
gifts more like those we are ourselves acquainted
with, such as the gift of teaching or the gift of
management. But in all cases there appears to
have been a kind of immediate inspiration, so that
what they did was not the effect of calculation or
preparation, but of a strong present impulse.
136. These phenomena are so
remarkable that, if narrated in a history, they would
put a severe strain on belief. But the evidence
for them is incontrovertible; for no man, writing
to people about their own condition, invents a mythical
description of their circumstances; and besides, Paul
was writing to restrain rather than encourage these
manifestations. They show with what mighty force,
at its first entrance into the world, Christianity
took possession of the spirits which it touched.
Each believer received, generally at his baptism,
when the hands of the baptizer were laid on him, his
special gift, which, if he remained faithful to it,
he continued to exercise. It was the Holy Spirit,
poured forth without stint, that entered into the
spirits of men and distributed these gifts among them
severally as He willed; and each member had to make
use of his gift for the benefit of the whole body.
137. After the services just
described were over, the members sat down together
to a love-feast, which was wound up with the breaking
of bread in the Lord’s Supper; and then, after
a fraternal kiss, they parted to their homes.
It was a memorable scene, radiant with brotherly love
and alive with outbreaking spiritual power.
As the Christians wended their way homeward through
the careless groups of the heathen city, they were
conscious of having experienced that which eye had
not seen nor ear heard.
138. Abuses and Irregularities.-But
truth demands that the dark side of the picture be
shown as well as the bright one. There were abuses
and irregularities in the Church which it is exceedingly
painful to recall. These were due to two things-the
antecedents of the members and the mixture in the
Church of Jewish and Gentile elements. If it
be remembered how vast was the change which most of
the members had made in passing from the worship of
the heathen temples to the pure and simple worship
of Christianity, it will not excite surprise that their
old life still clung to them or that they did not clearly
distinguish which things needed to be changed and
which might continue as they had been.
139. Yet it startles us to learn
that some of them were living in gross sensuality,
and that the more philosophical defended this on principle.
One member, apparently a person of wealth and position,
was openly living in a connection which would have
been a scandal even among heathens, and, though Paul
had indignantly written to have him excommunicated,
the Church had failed to obey, affecting to misunderstand
the order. Others had been allured back to take
part in the feasts in the idol temples, notwithstanding
their accompaniments of drunkenness and revelry.
They excused themselves with the plea that they no
longer ate the feast in honor of the gods, but only
as an ordinary meal, and argued that they would have
to go out of the world if they were not sometimes
to associate with sinners.
140. It is evident that these
abuses belonged to the Gentile section of the Church.
In the Jewish section, on the other hand, there were
strange doubts and scruples about the same subjects.
Some, for instance, revolted with the loose behavior
of their Gentile brethren, had gone to the opposite
extreme, denouncing marriage altogether and raising
anxious questions as to whether widows might marry
again, whether a Christian married to a heathen wife
ought to put her away, and other points of the same
nature. While some of the Gentile converts were
participating in the idol feasts, some of the Jewish
ones had scruples about buying in the market the meat
which had been offered in sacrifice to idols, and
looked with censure on their brethren who allowed
themselves this freedom.
141. These difficulties belonged
to the domestic life of the Christians; but, in their
public meetings also, there were grave irregularities.
The very gifts of the Spirit were perverted into
instruments of sin; for those possessed of the more
showy gifts, such as miracles and tongues, were too
fond of displaying them, and turned them into grounds
of boasting. This led to confusion and even uproar;
for sometimes two or three of those who spoke with
tongues would be pouring forth their unintelligible
utterances at once, so that, as Paul said, if any
stranger had entered their meeting, he would have
concluded that they were all mad. The prophets
spoke at wearisome length, and too many pressed forward
to take part in the services. Paul had sternly
to rebuke these extravagances, insisting on the
principle that the spirits of the prophets were subject
to the prophets, and that, therefore, the spiritual
impulse was no apology for disorder.
142. But there were still worse
things inside the Church. Even the sacredness
of the Lord’s Supper was profaned. It seems
that the members were in the habit of taking with
them to church the bread and wine which were needed
for this sacrament; but the wealthy brought abundant
and choice supplies and, instead of waiting for their
poorer brethren and sharing their provisions with
them, began to eat and drink so gluttonously that
the table of the Lord actually resounded with drunkenness
and riot.
143. One more dark touch must
be added to this sad picture. In spite of the
brotherly kiss with which their meetings closed, they
had fallen into mutual rivalry and contention.
No doubt this was due to the heterogeneous elements
brought together in the Church; but it had been allowed
to go to great lengths. Brother went to law with
brother in the heathen courts instead of seeking the
arbitration of a Christian friend. The body
of the members was split up into four theological
factions. Some called themselves after Paul himself.
These treated the scruples of the weaker brethren
about meats and other things with scorn. Others
took the name of Apollonians from Apollos, an
eloquent teacher from Alexandria, who visited Corinth
between Paul’s second and third journeys.
These were the philosophical party; they denied the
doctrine of the resurrection, because it was absurd
to suppose that the scattered atoms of the dead body
could ever be united again. The third party
took the name of Peter, or Cephas, as in their Hebrew
purism they preferred to call him. These were
narrow-minded Jews, who objected to the liberality
of Paul’s views. The fourth party affected
to be above all parties and called themselves simply
Christians. Like many despisers of the sects
since then, who have used the name of Christian in
the same way, these were the most bitterly sectarian
of all and rejected Paul’s authority with malicious
scorn.
144. Inferences.-Such
is the checkered picture of one of Paul’s churches
given in one of his own Epistles; and it shows several
things with much impressiveness. It shows, for
instance, how exceptional, even in that age, his own
mind and character were, and what a blessing his gifts
and graces of good sense, of large sympathy blended
with conscientious firmness, of personal purity and
honor, were to the infant Church. It shows that
it is not behind but in front that we have to look
for the golden age of Christianity. It shows
how perilous it is to assume that the prevalence of
any ecclesiastical usage at that time must constitute
a rule for all times. Everything of this kind
was evidently at the experimental stage. Indeed,
in the latest writings of Paul we find the picture
of a very different state of things, in which the
worship and discipline of the Church were far more
fixed and orderly. It is not for a pattern of
the machinery of a church we ought to go back to this
early time, but for a spectacle of fresh and transforming
spiritual power. This is what will always attract
to the Apostolic Age the longing eyes of Christians;
the power of the Spirit was energizing in every member,
the tides of fresh emotion swelled in every breast,
and all felt that the dayspring of a new revelation
had visited them; life, love, light were diffusing
themselves everywhere. Even the vices of the
young Church were the irregularities of abundant life,
for the lack of which the lifeless order of many a
subsequent generation has been a poor compensation.