An earnest appeal to all that enter
that Liberty. May I read to you a few words from
the eighth chapter of St. John? “Then said
Jesus to those Jews which believed on Him, If ye continue
in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed; and ye
shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you
free.”
Let us not think, my friends, that
there is anything strange about the spectacle which
we witnessed this morning. The only strange thing
that there could be about it is that anybody should
think that it is strange that men should turn aside
for half an hour from their ordinary business pursuits,
that they should come from the details of life to inquire
in regard to the principles, the everlasting principles
and purposes of life; that they should turn aside
from those things which are occupying them from day
to day and make one single hour in the week consecrated
to the service of those great things which underlie
all life-surely there is nothing very strange.
There is nothing more absolutely natural. Every
man does it in his own sort of way, in his own choice
of time. We have chosen to do it together, on
one day of the week during these few weeks which the
Christian Church has so largely set apart for special
thought and prayer and earnest attempt to approach
the God to whom we belong. It is simply as if
the stream turned back again to its fountain, that
it might refresh itself and make itself strong for
the great work that it had to do in watering the fields
and turning the wheels of industry. It is simply
as if men plodding along over the flat routine of their
life chose once in a while to go up into the mountain
top, whence they might once in a while look abroad
over their life, and understand more fully the way
in which they ought to work. These are the principles,
these are the pictures which represent that which
we have in mind as we come together for a little while
each Monday in these few weeks, in order that we may
think about things of God and try to realize the depth
of our own human life. The first thing that we
ought to understand about it is that when we turn
aside from life it is only that we go deeper into
life. This hour does not stand apart from the
rest of the hours of the week, in that we are dealing
with things in which the rest of the week has no concern.
He who understands life deeply and fully, understands
life truly; he has forever renewed his life; and if
there comes into our hearts, in the life which we
are living, a perpetual sense that life needs renewal,
a richening and refreshing, then it is in order that
we may go down into the depths and see what lies at
the root of things-things that we are perpetually
doing and thinking. It is this that brought us
together here: it is that we may open to ourselves
some newer, higher life. It is that we may understand
the life that we may live, along side of and as a
richer development of that life which we are living
from day to day, which we have been living during the
years of our life. How that idea has haunted
men in every period of their existence, how it is
haunting you, that there is some higher life which
it is possible to live! There has never been a
religion that has not started there, lifted up its
eyes and seen, afar off, what it was possible for
man to do from day to day, in contrast with the things
which men immediately and presently are. There
is not any moment of the human soul which has not
rested upon some great conception that man was a nobler
being than he was ordinarily conceiving himself to
be; that he was not destined to the things which were
ordinarily occupying his life; that he might be living
a greater and nobler life. It is because the
Christian Scriptures have laid most earnestly hold
of this idea, it is because it was represented not
simply in the words which Christ said, but in the
very being which Christ was, that we go to them to
get the inspiration and the indication, the revelation
and the enlightenment which we need. I have read
to you these few words in which Christ declares the
whole subject, the whole character of which His life
is and what His work is about to do, because it seems
to me that they strike at once the key-note of that
which we want to understand. They let us enter
into the full conception of that which the new life
which is offered to man really is. There are
two conceptions which come to every man when he is
entering upon a new life, changing his present life
to something that is different from the present life,
and being a different sort of creature and living
in a different sort of a way. The first way in
which it presents itself to him-almost
always at the beginning of every religion, perhaps-is
in the way of restraint and imprisonment. Man
thinks of every change that is to come to him as in
the nature of denial of something that he is at the
present doing and being, as the laying hold upon himself
of some sort of restraint, bringing to him something
which says: “I must not do the thing which
I am doing. I must lay upon myself restraints,
restrictions, commandments, and prohibitions.
I must not let myself be the man that I am.”
You see how the Old Testament comes before the New
Testament, the law ringing from the mountain top with
the great denials, the great prohibitions, that come
from the mouth of God. “Thou shalt not
do this, that, or the other-Thou shalt not
murder. Thou shalt not steal. Thou shalt
not commit adultery. Thou shalt not covet thy
neighbor’s goods.” That is the first
conception which comes to a man of the way in which
he is to enter upon a new life, of the way in which
the denial in his experience is to take effect.
It is as if the hands were stretched out in order
that fetters might be placed upon them. The man
says, “Let some power come that is to hinder
me from being this thing that I am.” And
the whole notion is the notion of imprisonment, restraint
So it is with all civilization. It is perfectly
possible for us to represent civilization as compared
with barbarism, as accepted by mankind, as a great
mass of restrictions and prohibitions that have been
laid upon human life, so that the freedom of life has
been cast aside, and man has entered into restricted,
restrained, and imprisoned condition. So it is
with every fulfilment of life. It is possible
for a man always to represent it to himself as if it
were the restriction, restraint, and prohibition of
his life. The man passes onward into the fuller
life which belongs to a man. He merges his selfishness
into that richer life which is offered to human kind.
He makes himself, instead of a single, selfish man,
a man of family; and it is easy enough to consider
that marriage and the family life bring immediately
restraints and prohibitions. The man may not have
the freedom which he used to have. So all development
of education, in the first place, offers itself to
man, or seems to offer itself to man, as prohibition
and imprisonment and restraint. There is no doubt
truth in such an idea. We never lose sight of
it. No other richer and fuller idea which we
come to by and by ever does away with the thought that
man’s advance means prohibition and self-denial,
that in order that man shall become the greater thing
he must cease to be the poorer and smaller thing he
has been. But yet there is immediately a greater
and fuller. When we hear those words of Jesus,
we see immediately that not the idea of imprisonment
but the idea of liberty, not the idea of restraint
but that of setting free, is the idea which is really
in His mind when he offers the fullest life to human
kind. Have you often thought of how the whole
Bible is a Book of Liberty, of how It rings with liberty
from beginning to end, of how the great men are the
men of liberty, of how the Old Testament, the great
picture which forever shines, is the emancipator,
leading forth out of imprisonment the people of God,
who were to do the great work of God in the very much
larger and freer life in which they were to live?
The prophet, the psalmist, are ever preaching and
singing about liberty, the enfranchisement of the life
of man, that man was not imprisoned in order to fulfil
himself, but shall open his life, and every new progress
shall be into a new region of existence which lie
has not touched as yet. When we turn from the
Old Testament to the New Testament, how absolutely
clear that idea is! Christ is the very embodiment
of human liberty. In His own personal life and
in everything that He did and said, He was forever
uttering the great gospel that man, in order to become
his completest, must become his freest, that what
a man did when he entered into a new life was to open
a new region in which new powers were to find their
exercise, in which he was to be able to be and do
things which he could not be and do in more restricted
life. It is the acceptance of that idea, it seems
to me, that makes us true disciples of Christ and
of that great gospel, and that transfigures everything.
When my friend turns over some new leaf, as we say,
and begins to live a new life, what shall we think
of him? I learn that he has become a Christian
man, that he is doing something, that he is working
in a way and living a life which I have not known
before. What is my impression in regard to him?
Is not your impression, as you look upon that man,
that somehow or other he has entered into a slavery
or bondage, that he has taken upon his life restrictions
and imprisonments which he did not have before?
And you think of him, perhaps, as a man who has done
a wise and prudent thing, who has done something that
is going to be for his benefit some day in some distant
and half-realized world, but as a man who, for the
present, has laid a burden and bondage upon his life.
That is never the tone of Christ; it is never the
tone of the Christian gospel. When a man turns
away from his sins and enters into energetic holiness,
when a man sacrifices his own self-indulgence and
goes forth a pure servant of his God and his fellow-men,
there is only one cry in the whole gospel of that man,
and that is the cry of freedom. As soon as he
can catch that, as soon as I can feel about my friend,
who has become a better man, that he has become a
larger and not a smaller, a freer and not a more imprisoned
man, as soon as I lift up my voice and say that the
man is free, then I understand him more fully, and
he becomes a revelation to me in the higher and richer
life which is possible for me to live. But think
of it for yourselves, for a moment, and ask what freer
life really is. Try to give a definition of liberty,
and I know not what it can be said to be except something
of this kind: Liberty is the fullest opportunity
for man to be and do the very best that is possible
for him. I know of no definition of liberty,
that oldest and dearest phrase of men, and sometimes
the vaguest also, except that. It has been perverted,
it has been distorted and mystified, but that is what
it really means: the fullest opportunity for
a man to do and be the very best that is in his personal
nature to do and to be. It immediately follows
that everything which is necessary for the full realization
of a man’s life, even though it seems to have
the character of restraint for a moment, is really
a part of the process of his enfranchisement, is the
bringing forth of him to a fuller liberty. You
see a man coming forward and offering himself as one
of the defenders of his country in his country’s
need. You see him standing at the door where
men are being received as recruits into the army of
the country. He wants liberty. He wants to
be able to do that which he cannot do in his poor,
personal isolation here at home. He wants the
badge which will give him the right to go forth and
meet the enemies of his country, and he enrolls himself
among these men. He makes himself subject to
obligations, duties, and drill. They are a part
of his enfranchisement. They are really the breaking
of the fetters upon his slavery, the sending him forth
into freedom. He is like a bit of iron or steel
that lies upon the ground. It lies neglected and
perfectly free. You see it is made by the adjustment
of the end of it so that it can be set into a great
machine and become part of a great working system.
But there it lies. Will you call it free?
It is bound to be nothing there. It is absolutely
separate, and with its own personality distinct and
individual and all alone. What is to make that
bit of iron a free bit of iron, to let it go forth
and do the thing which it was meant to do, but the
taking of it and the binding of it at both ends into
the structure of which it was made to be a part?
It seems to me the binding of a man,-it
seems to me that the binding of the iron is not the
yielding of its freedom. It is not merely after
finding its place within the system that it first
achieves its freedom and so joins in the music and
partakes of the courses with which the whole enginery
is filled. Is not it, then, for the first time
a free bit of iron, having accomplished all that it
was made to do when it came forth from the forge of
the master, who had this purpose in his mind?
This, then, is freedom; everything is part of the
enfranchisement of a man which helps to put him in
the place where he can live his best. Therefore
every duty, every will of God, every commandment of
Christ, every self-surrender that a man is called
upon to obey or to make-do not think of
it as if it were simply a restraint to liberty, but
think of it as the very means of freedom, by which
we realize the very purpose of God and the fulfilment
of our life. It is interesting to see how all
that is true in regard to the matter of belief, doctrine,
and opinions which we are apt to accept. How
strange it very often seems that men go to the Church,
or to one another, and say: “Must I believe
this doctrine in order that I can enter into the Church?”
“Must I believe this doctrine in order that
I may be saved?” men say, with a strange sort
of notion about what salvation is. How strange
it seems, when we really have got our intelligence
about us and know what it is to believe! To believe
a new truth, if it be really truth and we really believe
it, is to have entered into a new region, in which
our life shall find a new expansion and a new youth.
Therefore, not “Must we believe?” but “May
I believe?” is the true cry of the human creature
who is seeking for the richest fulfilment of his life,
who is working that his whole nature may find its
complete expansion and so its completest exercise.
We talk a great deal in these days and in this place
about a liberal faith. What is a liberal faith,
my friends? It seems to me that by every true
meaning of the word, by every true thought of the idea,
a liberal faith is a faith that believes much, and
not a faith that believes little. The more a
man believes, the more liberally he exercise his capacity
of faith, the more he sends forth his intelligence
into the mysteries of God, the more he understands
those things which God chooses to reveal to his creatures,
the more liberally he believes. Let yourselves
never think that you grow liberal in faith by believing
less; always be sure that the true liberality of faith
can only come by believing more. It is true,
indeed, that as soon as a man becomes eager for belief,
for the truth of God and for the mysteries with which
God’s universe is filled, he becomes all the
more critical and careful. He will hot any longer,
if he were before, be simply greedy of things to believe,
so that if any superstition comes offering itself
to him he will not gather it in indiscriminately and
believe it without evidence, without examination.
He becomes all the more critical and careful, the more
he becomes assured that belief, and not unbelief,
is the true condition of his life. The truth
that God has entered into this world in wondrous ways
and filled its life with Jesus Christ, the truth that
man has a soul and not simply a body, that he has
a spiritual need, that God cares for him and he is
to care for himself, that there is an immortal life,
and that that which we call faith is but the opening
of a gate, the pushing back of a veil,-shall
a man believe those things as imprisonments of his
nature, and shall it not make him larger? Shall
it not be the indulgence of his life when he enters
into the great certainties which so are offered to
his belief, believing them in his own way? Let
us always feel that to accept a new belief is no to
build a wall beyond which we cannot pass, but is to
open the door to a great fresh, free region, in which
our souls are to live. And just so it is when
we come to the moral things of life. The man
puts aside some sinfulness. He breaks down the
wall that has been shutting his soul out of its highest
life. He has been a drunkard, and he becomes
a sober man. He has been a cheat, and becomes
a faithful man. He has been a liar, and becomes
a truthful man. He has been a profligate, and
he becomes a pure man. What has happened to that
man? Shall he simply think of himself as one who
has crushed this passion, shut down this part of his
life? Shall he simply think of himself as one
who has taken a course of self-denial? Nay.
It is self-indulgence that a man has really entered
upon. It is an indulgence of the deepest part
of his own nature, not of his unreal nature. He
has risen and shaken himself like a lion, so that
the dust has fallen from his mane, and all the great
range of that life which God gave him to live lies
before him. This is the everlasting inspiration.
This is the illumination. I don’t wonder
that men refuse to give up evil if it simply seems
to them to be giving up the evil way, and no vision
opens before them of the thing that they may be and
do. I don’t wonder that, if the negative,
restricting, imprisoning conception of the new life
is all that a man gets hold of, he lingers again and
again in the old life. But just as soon as the
great world opens before him then it is like a prisoner
going out of the prison door. Is there no lingering?
Does not the baser part of him cling to the old prison,
to the ease and the provision for him, to the absence
of anxiety and of energy? I think there can hardly
be a prisoner who, with any leap of heart, goes out
of the prison door, when his term is finished, and
does not even look into that black horror where he
has been living, cast some lingering, longing look
behind. He comes to the exigencies, to the demands
of life, to the necessity of making himself once more
a true man among his fellow-men. But does he
stop? He comes forth, and if there be the soul
of a man in him still, he enters into the new life
with enthusiasm, and finds the new powers springing
in him to their work. And if it be so with every
special duty, then with that great thing which you
and I are called upon to do-the total acceptance
by our nature of the will of God, the total acceptance
by our nature of the mastery of Jesus Christ.
Oh! how this world has perverted words and meanings,
that the mastery of Jesus Christ should seem to be
the imprisonment and not the enfranchisement of the
soul! When I bring a flower out of the darkness
and set it in the sun, and let the sunlight come streaming
down upon it, and the flower knows the sunlight for
which it was made and opens its fragrance and beauty;
when I take a dark pebble and put it into the stream
and let the silver water go coursing down over it
and bringing forth the hidden color that was in the
bit of stone, opening the nature that is in them, the
flower and stone rejoice. I can almost hear them
sing in the field and in the stream. What then?
Shall not man bring his nature out into the fullest
illumination, and surprise himself by the things that
he might do? Oh! the littleness of the lives
that we are living! Oh! the way in which we fail
to comprehend, or when we do comprehend, deny to ourselves
the bigness of that thing which it is to be a man,
to be a child of God! Sometimes it dawns upon
us that we can see it opening into the vision of these
men and women in the New Testament. Sometimes
there opens to us the picture of this thing that we
might be, and then there are truly the trial moments
of our life. Then we lift up ourselves and claim
our liberty or, dastardly or cowardly, slink back
into the sluggish imprisonment in which we have been
living. How does all this affect that which we
are continually conscious of, urging upon ourselves
and upon one another? How does it affect the
whole question of a man’s sins? Oh! these
sins, the things we know so well! As we sit here
and stand here one entire hour, as we talk in this
sort of way, everybody knows the weaknesses of his
own nature, the sins of his own soul. Don’t
you know it? What shall we think about those
sins? It seems to me, my friends, that all this
great picture of the liberty into which Christ sets
man, in the first place does one thing which we are
longing to see done in the world. It takes away
the glamour and the splendor from sin. It breaks
that spell by which men think that the evil thing is
the glorious thing. If the evil thing be that
which Christ has told us that the evil thing is-which
I have no time to tell you now-if every
sin that you do is not simply a stain upon your soul,
but is keeping you out from some great and splendid
thing which you might do, then is there any sort of
splendor and glory about sin? How about the sins
that you did when you were young men? How can
you look back upon those sins and think what your
life might have been if it had been pure from the beginning,
think what you might have been if from the very beginning
you had caught sight of what it was to be a man?
And then your boy comes along. What are the men
in this town doing largely in many and many a house,
but letting their boys believe that the sins of their
early life are glorious things, except that those
things which they did, the base and wretched things
that they were doing when they were fifteen and twenty
and twenty-five and thirty years old, are the true
career of a human nature, are the true entrance into
human life? The miserable talk about sowing wild
oats, about getting through the necessary conditions
of life before a man comes to solemnity! Shame
upon any man who, having passed through the sinful
conditions and habits and dispositions of his earlier
life, has not carried out of them an absolute shame
for them, that shall let him say to his boy, by word
and by every utterance of his life within the house
where he and the boy live together, “Refrain,
for they are abominable things!” To get rid
of the glamour of sin, to get rid of the idea that
it is a glorious thing to be dissipated instead of
being concentrated to duty, to get rid of the idea
that to be drunken and to be lustful are true and
noble expressions of our abounding human life, to
get rid of any idea that sin is aught but imprisonment,
is to make those who come after us, and to make ourselves
in what of life is left for us, gloriously ambitious
for the freedom of purity, for a full entrance into
that life over which sin has no dominion. And
yet, at the same time, don’t you see that while
sin thus becomes contemptible when we think about
the great illustration of the will of God and Jesus
Christ, don’t you see how also it puts on a new
horror? That which I thought I was doing in the
halls of my imprisonment I have really been doing
within the possible world of God in which I might have
been free. The moment I see what life might have
been to me, then any sin becomes dreadful to me.
Have you ever thought of how the world has stood in
glory and honor before the sinless humanity of Jesus
Christ? If any life could prove, if any argument
could show on investigation to-day that Jesus did
one sin in all his life, that the perfect liberty which
was his perfect purity was not absolutely perfect,
do you realize what a horror would seem to fall down
from the heavens, what a constraint and burden would
be laid upon the lives of men, how the gates of men’s
possibilities would seem to close in upon them?
It is because there has been that one life which,
because absolutely pure from sin, was absolutely free;
it is because man may look up and see in that life
the revelation and possibility of his own; it is because
that life, echoing the great cry throughout the world
that man everywhere is the son of God, offers the
same purity-and so the same freedom-to
all mankind; it is for that reason that a man rejoices
to cling to, to believe in, however impure his life
is, the perfect purity, the sinlessness of the life
of Jesus. When you sin, my friends, it is a man
that sins, and a man is a child of God; and for a
child of God to sin is an awful thing, not simply
for the stain that he brings into the divine nature
that is in him, but for the life from which it shuts
him out, for the liberty which he abandons, for the
inthrallment which it lays upon the soul. There
is one thing that people say very carelessly that always
seems to me to be a dreadful thing for a man to say.
They say it when they talk about their lives to one
another, and think about their lives to themselves,
and by and by very often say it upon their death-bed
with the last gasp, as though their entrance into
the eternal world had brought them no deeper enlightenment.
One wonders what is the revelation that comes to them
when they stand upon the borders of the other side
and are in the full life and eternity of God.
The thing men say is, “I have done the very
best I can.” It is an awful thing for a
man to say. The man never lived, save he who
perfected our humanity, who ever did the very best
he could. You dishonor your life, you not simply
shut your eyes to certain facts, you not simply say
an infinitely absurd and foolish thing, but you dishonor
your human life if you say that you have done in any
day of your life or in all the days of your life put
together, the very best that you could, or been the
very best man that you could be. You! what are
you? Again I say, The child of God, and this
which you have been, what is it? Look over it,
see how selfish it has been, see how material it has
been, how it has lived in the depths when it might
have lived on the heights, see how it has lived in
the little narrow range of selfishness when it might
have been as broad as all humanity, nay, when it might
have been as the God of humanity. Don’t
dare to say that in any day of your life, or in all
your life together, you have done the best that you
could. The Pharisee said it when he went up into
the temple, and all the world has looked on with mingled
pity and scorn at the blindness of the man who stood
there and paraded his faithfulness; while all the
world has bent with a pity that was near to love,
a pity that was full of sympathy because man recognized
his condition and experience, for the poor creature
grovelling upon the pavement, unwilling and unable
even to look upon the altar, but who, standing afar
off, said, “God be merciful to me a sinner!”
Whatever else you say, don’t say, “I have
been the very best I could.” That means
that you have not merely lived in the rooms of your
imprisonment, but that you have been satisfied to
count them the only possible rooms of your life, and
that the great halls of your liberty have never opened
themselves before you. Shall not they open themselves
somehow to us to-day, my friends? Shall we not
turn away from this hour and go back into our business,
into our offices, into the shops, into the crowded
streets, bearing new thoughts of the lives that we
might live, feeling the fetters on our hands and feet,
feeling many things as fetters which we have thought
of as the ornament and glory of our life, determined
to be unsatisfied forever until these fetters shall
be stricken off and we have entered into the full
liberty which comes to those alone who are dedicated
to the service of God, to the completion of their own
nature, to the acceptance of the grace of Christ,
and to the attainment of the eternal glory of the
spiritual life, first here and then hereafter, never
hereafter, it may be, except here and now, certainly
here and now, as the immediate, pressing privilege
and duty of our lives? So let us stand up on
our feet and know ourselves in all the richness and
in all the awfulness of our human life. Let us
know ourselves children of God, and claim the liberty
which God has given to every one of his children who
will take it. God bless you and give some of you,
help some of us, to claim, as we have never claimed
before, that freedom with which the Son makes free!