IF WE SEEK THE ESSENCE OF HIS REVELATION, AND THE PURPOSE OF HIS LIFE
If we would seek the essence of Jesus’
revelation, attested both by his words and his life,
it was to bring a knowledge of the ineffable love of
God to man, and by revealing this, to instil in the
minds and hearts of men love for God, and a knowledge
of and following of the ways of God. It was also
then to bring a new emphasis of the Divine law of love the
love of man for man. Combined, it results, so
to speak, in raising men to a higher power, to a higher
life, as individuals, as groups, as one
great world group.
It is a newly sensitised attitude
of mind and heart that he brought and that he endeavoured
to reveal in all its matchless beauty a
following not of the traditions of men, but fidelity
to one’s God, whereby the Divine rule in the
mind and heart assumes supremacy and, as must inevitably
follow, fidelity to one’s fellow-men. These
are the essentials of Jesus’ revelation the
fundamental forces in his own life. His every
teaching, his every act, comes back to them. I
believe also that all efforts to mystify the minds
of men and women by later theories about him
are contrary to his own expressed teaching, and in
exact degree that they would seek to substitute other
things for these fundamentals.
I call them fundamentals. I call
them his fundamentals. What right have I to call
them his fundamentals?
An occasion arose one day in the form
of a direct question for Jesus to state in well-considered
and clear-cut terms the essence, the gist, of his
entire teachings therefore, by his authority,
the fundamentals of essential Christianity. In
the midst of one of the groups that he was speaking
to one day, we are told that a certain lawyer arose an
interpreter of, an authority on, the existing ecclesiastical
law. The reference to him is so brief, unfortunately,
that we cannot tell whether his question was to confound
Jesus, as was so often the case, or whether being
a liberal Jew he longed for an honest and truly helpful
answer. From Jesus’ remark to him, after
his primary answer, we are justified in believing
it was the latter.
His question was: “Master,
which is the great commandment in the law?”
Jesus said unto him, “Thou shalt love the Lord
thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul,
and with all thy mind. This is the first and
great commandment. And the second is like unto
it. Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.
On these two commandments hang all the law and the
prophets.”
Here we have a wonderful statement
from a wonderful source. So clear-cut is it that
any wayfaring man, though a fool, cannot mistake it.
Especially is this true when we couple with it this
other statement of Jesus: “Think not that
I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets; I am
not come to destroy, but to fulfil.” We
must never forget that Jesus was born, lived, and
died a Jew, the same as all of his disciples and
they never regarded themselves in any other light.
The basis of his religion was the religion
of Israel. It was this he taught and expounded,
now in the synagogue, now out on the hillside and by
the lake-side. It was this that he tried to teach
in its purity, that he tried to free from the hedges
that ecclesiasticism had built around it, this that
he endeavoured to raise to a still higher standard.
One cannot find the slightest reference
in any of his sayings that would indicate that he
looked upon himself in any other light except
the overwhelming sense that it was his mission to
bring in the new dispensation by fulfilling the old,
and then carrying it another great step forward, which
he did in a wonderful way both God-ward
and man-ward.
We must not forget, then, that Jesus
said that he did not come to destroy the Law and the
Prophets, but to fulfil them. We must not forget,
however, that before fulfilling them he had to free
them. The freedom-giving, God-illumined words
spoken by free God-illumined men, had, in the hands
of those not God-illumined, later on become institutionalised,
made into a system, a code. The people were taught
that only the priests had access to God. They
were the custodians of God’s favour and only
through the institution could any man, or any woman,
have access to God. This became the sacred thing,
and as the years had passed this had become so hedged
about by continually added laws and observances that
all the spirit of religion had become crushed, stifled,
beaten to the ground.
The very scribes and Pharisees themselves,
supposed to minister to the spiritual life and the
welfare of the people, became enrobed in their fine
millinery and arrogance, masters of the people, whose
ministers they were supposed to be, as is so apt to
be the case when an institution builds itself upon
the free, all-embracing message of truth given by
any prophet or any inspired teacher. It has occurred
time and time again. Christianity knows it well.
It is only by constant vigilance that religious freedom
is preserved, from which alone comes any high degree
of morality, or any degree of free and upward-moving
life among the people.
It was on account of this shameful
robbing of the people of their Divine birthright that
the just soul of Jesus, abhorring both casuistry and
oppression under the cloak of religion, gave utterance
to that fine invective that he used on several occasions,
the only times that he spoke in a condemnatory or
accusing manner: “Now do ye, Pharisee, make
clean the outside of the cup and the platter; but your
inward part is full of ravening and wickedness.
Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!
For ye are as graves which appear not, and the men
that walk over them are not aware of them....
Woe unto you also, ye lawyers! For ye lade men
with burdens grievous to be borne, and ye yourselves
touch not the burdens with one of your fingers....
Woe unto you, lawyers! For ye have taken away
the key of knowledge: ye entered not in yourselves,
and them that were entering in ye hindered.”
And here is the lesson for us.
It is the spirit that must always be kept uppermost
in religion. Otherwise even the revelation and
the religion of Jesus could be compressed into a code,
with its self-appointed instruments of interpretation,
the same as the Pharisees did the Law and the Prophets
that he so bitterly condemned, with a bravery so intrepid
and so fearless that it finally caused his death.
No, if God is not in the human soul
waiting to make Himself known to the believing, longing
heart, accessible to all alike without money and without
price, without any prescribed code, then the words
of Jesus have not been correctly handed down to us.
And then again, confirming us in the belief that a
man’s deepest soul relation is a matter between
him and his God, are his unmistakable and explicit
directions in regard to prayer.
It is so easy to substitute the secondary
thing for the fundamental, the by-thing for the essential,
the container for the thing itself. You will
recall that symbolic act of Jesus at the last meeting,
the Last Supper with his disciples, the washing of
the disciples’ feet by the Master. The
point that is intended to be brought out in the story
is, of course, the extraordinary condescension of
Jesus in doing this menial service for his disciples.
“The feet-washing symbolises the attitude of
humble service to others. Every follower of Jesus
must experience it.” One of the disciples
is so astonished, even taken aback by this menial service
on the part of Jesus, that he says: Thou shall
never wash my feet. Jesus answered him, “If
I wash thee not, thou hast no part with me.”
In Oriental countries where sandals
are worn that cover merely the soles of the feet,
it was, it is the custom of the host to offer his guest
who comes water with which to wash his feet.
There is no reason why this simple incident of humble
service, or rather this symbolic act of humble service,
could not be taken and made an essential condition
of salvation by any council that saw fit to make it
such. Things just as strange as this have happened;
though any thinking man or woman today would
deem it essentially foolish.
It is an example of how the spirit
of a beautiful act could be misrepresented to the
people. For if you will look at them again, Jesus’
words are very explicit: “If I wash thee
not, thou hast no part with me.” But hear
Jesus’ own comment as given in John: “So
after he had washed their feet, and had taken his
garments, and was set down again, he said unto them,
Know ye what I have done to you? Ye call me Master
and Lord: and ye say well; for so I am. If
I then, your Lord and Master, have washed your feet,
ye also ought to wash one another’s feet.
For I have given you an example, that ye should do
as I have done to you. Verily, verily, I say
unto you, The servant is not greater than his lord;
neither he that is sent greater than he that sent him.
If ye know these things, happy are ye if ye do them.”
It is a means to an end and not an end in itself.
The spirit that it typifies is essential; but not
the act itself.
The same could be rightly said of
the Lord’s Supper. It is an observance
that can be made of great value, one very dear and
valuable to many people. But it cannot, if Jesus
is to be our authority, and if correctly reported,
be by any means made a fundamental, an essential of
salvation. From the rebuke administered by Jesus
to his disciples in a number of cases where they were
prone to drag down his meanings by their purely material
interpretations, we should be saved from this.
You will recall his teaching one day
when he spoke of himself as the bread of life that
a man may eat thereof and not die. Some of his
Jewish hearers taking his words in a material sense
and arguing in regard to them one with another said:
“How can this man give us his flesh to eat?”
Hearing them Jesus reaffirming his statement said:
“Verily, verily, I say unto you, except ye eat
of the flesh of the Son of Man, and drink his blood,
ye have not life in yourselves.... For my flesh
is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed.”
His disciples, likewise, prone here as so often to
make a literal and material interpretation of his
statements, said one to another: “This is
a hard saying; who can hear him?” Or according
to our idiom who can understand him?
Jesus asked them squarely if what he had just said
caused them to stumble, and in order to be sure that
they might not miss his real meaning and therefore
teaching, said: “It is the spirit that quickeneth;
the flesh profiteth nothing: the words that I
speak unto you, they are spirit, and they
are life.”
Try as we will, we cannot get away
from the fact that it was the words of truth that
Jesus brought that were ever uppermost in his mind.
He said, Follow me, not some one else, nor something
else that would claim to represent me. And follow
me merely because I lead you to the Father.
So supremely had this young Jewish
prophet, the son of a carpenter, made God’s
business his business, that he had come into the full
realisation of the oneness of his life with the Father’s
life. He was able to realise and to say, “I
and my Father are one.” He was able to bring
to the world a knowledge of the great fact of facts the
essential oneness of the human with the Divine that
God tabernacles with men, that He makes His abode
in the minds and the hearts of those who through desire
and through will open their hearts to His indwelling
presence.
The first of the race, he becomes
the revealer of this great eternal truth the
mediator, therefore, between God and man in
very truth the Saviour of men. “If a man
love me,” said he, “he will keep my words:
and my Father will love him, and we will come unto
him, and make our abode with him.... If ye keep
my commandments, ye shall abide in my love; even as
I have kept my Father’s commandments and abide
in his love.”
It is our eternal refusal to follow
Jesus by listening to the words of life that he brought,
and our proneness to substitute something else in
their place, that brings the barrenness that is so
often evident in the everyday life of the Christian.
We have been taught to believe in Jesus; we
have not been taught to believe Jesus.
This has resulted in a separation of Christianity
from life. The predominating motive has been
the saving of the soul. It has resulted too often
in a selfish, negative, repressive, ineffective religion.
As Jesus said: “And why call ye me, Lord,
Lord, and do not the things which I say?”
We are just beginning to realise at
all adequately that it was the salvation of the
life that he taught. When the life is redeemed
to righteousness through the power of the indwelling
God and moves out in love and in service for one’s
fellow-men, the soul is then saved.
A man may be a believer in Jesus for
a million years and still be an outcast from the Kingdom
of God and His righteousness. But a man can’t
believe Jesus, which means following his teachings,
without coming at once into the Kingdom and enjoying
its matchless blessings both here and hereafter.
And if there is one clear-cut teaching of the Master,
it is that the life here determines and with absolute
precision the life to come.
One need not then concern himself
with this or that doctrine, whether it be true or
false. Later speculations and theories are not
for him. Jesus’ own saying applies here:
“If any man will do his will he shall know of
the doctrine, whether it be of God.” He
enters into the Kingdom, the Kingdom of Heaven here
and now; and when the time comes for him to pass out
of this life, he goes as a joyous pilgrim, full of
anticipation for the Kingdom that awaits him, and
the Master’s words go with him: “In
my Father’s house are many mansions.”
By thus becoming a follower of Jesus
rather than merely a believer in Jesus, he gradually
comes into possession of insights and powers that
the Master taught would follow in the lives of those
who became his followers. The Holy Spirit, the
Divine Comforter, of which Jesus spoke, the Spirit
of Truth, that awaits our bidding, will lead continually
to the highest truth and wisdom and insight and power.
Kant’s statement, “The other world is
not another locality, but only another way of seeing
things,” is closely allied to the Master’s
statement: “The Kingdom of God is within
you.” And closely allied to both is this
statement of a modern prophet: “The principle
of Christianity and of every true religion is within
the soul the realisation of the incarnation
of God in every human being.”
When we turn to Jesus’ own teachings
we find that his insistence was not primarily upon
the saving of the soul, but upon the saving of the
life for usefulness, for service, here and now, for
still higher growth and unfoldment, whereby the soul
might be grown to a sufficient degree that it would
be worth the saving. And this is one of the great
facts that is now being recognised and preached by
the forward-looking men and women in our churches
and by many equally religious outside of our churches.
And so all aspiring, all thinking,
forward-looking men and women of our day are not interested
any more in theories about, explanations of, or dogmas
about Jesus. They are being won and enthralled
by the wonderful personality and life of Jesus.
They are being gripped by the power of his teachings.
They do not want theories about God they
want God and God is what Jesus brought God
as the moving, the predominating, the all-embracing
force in the individual life. But he who finds
the Kingdom of God, whose life becomes subject to
the Divine rule and life within, realises at once
also his true relations with the whole with
his neighbour, his fellow-men. He realises that
his neighbour is not merely the man next door, the
man around the corner, or even the man in the next
town or city; but that his neighbour is every man
and every woman in the world because
all children of the same infinite Father, all bound
in the same direction, but over many different roads.
The man who has come under the influence
and the domination of the Divine rule, realises that
his interests lie in the same direction as the interests
of all, that he cannot gain for himself any good that
is, any essential good at the expense of
the good of all; but rather that his interests, his
Welfare, and the interests and the welfare of all
others are identical. God’s rule, the Divine
rule, becomes for him, therefore, the fundamental
rule in the business world, the dominating rule in
political life and action, the dominating rule in the
law and relations of nations.
Jesus did not look with much favour
upon outward form, ceremony, or with much favour upon
formulated, or formal religion; and he somehow or other
seemed to avoid the company of those who did.
We find him almost continually down among the people,
the poor, the needy, the outcast, the sinner wherever
he could be of service to the Father, that is, wherever
he could be of service to the Father’s children.
According to the accounts he was not always as careful
in regard to those with whom he associated as the
more respectable ones, the more respectable classes
of his day thought he should be. They remarked
it many times. Jesus noticed it and remarked
in turn.
We find him always where the work
was to be done friend equally of the poor
and humble, and those of station truly friend
of man, teaching, helping, uplifting. And then
we find him out on the mountain side in
the quiet, in communion to keep his realisation
of his oneness with the Father intact; and with this
help he went down regularly to the people, trying
to lift their minds and lives up to the Divine ideal
that he revealed to them, that they in turn might
realise their real relations one with another, that
the Kingdom of God and His righteousness might grow
and become the dominating law and force in the world “Thy
Kingdom come, Thy Will be done on earth as it is in
Heaven.”
It is this Kingdom idea, the Divine
rule, the rule of God in all of the relations and
affairs of men on earth that is gripping earnest men
and women in great numbers among us today. Under
the leadership of these thinking, God-impelled men
and women, many of our churches are pushing their
endeavours out into social service activities along
many different lines; and the result is they are calling
into their ranks many able men and women, especially
younger men and women, who are intensely religious,
but to whom formal, inactive religion never made any
appeal.
When the Church begins actually to
throw the Golden Rule onto its banner, not in theory
but in actual practice, actually forgetting self in
the Master’s service, careless even of her own
interests, her membership, she thereby calls into
her ranks vast numbers of the best of the race, especially
among the young, so that the actual result is a membership
not only larger than she could ever hope to have otherwise,
but a membership that commands such respect and that
exercises such power, that she is astounded at her
former stupidity in being shackled so long by the
traditions of the past. A new life is engendered.
There is the joy of real accomplishment.
We are in an age of great changes.
Advancing knowledge necessitates changes. And
may I say a word here to our Christian ministry, that
splendid body of men for whom I have such supreme admiration?
One of the most significant facts of our time is this
widespread inclination and determination on the part
of such great numbers of thinking men and women to
go directly to Jesus for their information of, and
their inspiration from him. The beliefs and the
voice of the laymen, those in our churches and those
out of our churches, must be taken into account and
reckoned with. Jesus is too large and too universal
a character to be longer the sole possession, the
property of any organisation.
There is a splendid body of young
men and young women numbering into untold thousands,
who are being captured by the personality and the
simple direct message of Jesus. Many of these
have caught his spirit and are going off into other
lines of the Master’s service. They are
doing effective and telling work there. Remember
that when the spirit of the Christ seizes a man, it
is through the channel of present-day forms and present-day
terms, not in those of fifteen hundred, or sixteen
hundred, or even three hundred years ago.
There is a spirit of intellectual
honesty that prevents many men and women from subscribing
to anything to which they cannot give their intellectual
assent, as well as their moral and spiritual assent.
They do not object to creeds. They know that
a creed is but a statement, a statement of a man’s
or a woman’s belief, whether it be in connection
with religion, or in connection with anything else.
But what they do object to is dogma, that unholy thing
that lives on credulity, that is therefore destructive
of the intellectual and the moral life of every man
and every woman who allows it to lay its paralysing
hand upon them, that can be held to if one is at all
honest and given to thought, only through intellectual
chicanery.
We must not forget also that God is
still at work, revealing Himself more fully to mankind
through modern prophets, through modern agencies.
His revelation is not closed. It is still going
on. The silly presumption in the statement therefore “the
truth once delivered.”
It is well occasionally to call to
mind these words by Robert Burns, singing free and
with an untrammelled mind and soul from his heather-covered
hills:
Here’s freedom to him
that wad read,
Here’s freedom
to him that wad write;
There’s nane ever feared
that the truth should be heared
But them that
the truth wad indict.
It is essential to remember that we
are in possession of knowledge, that we are face to
face with conditions that are different from any in
the previous history of Christendom. The Christian
church must be sure that it moves fast enough so as
not to alienate, but to draw into it that great body
of intellectually alive, intellectually honest young
men and women who have the Christ spirit of service
and who are mastered by a great purpose of accomplishment.
Remember that these young men and women are now merely
standing where the entire church will stand in a few
years. Remember that any man or woman who has
the true spirit of service has the spirit of Christ and
more, has the religion of the Christ.
Remember that Jesus formulated no
organisation. His message of the Kingdom was
so far-reaching that no organisation could ever possibly
encompass it, though an organisation may be, and has
been, a great aid in actualising it here on earth.
He never made any conditions as to through whom, or
what, his truth should be spread, and he would condemn
today any instrumentality that would abrogate to itself
any monopoly of his truth, just as he condemned those
ecclesiastical authorities of his day who presumed
to do the same in connection with the truth of God’s
earlier prophets.
And so I would say to the Church beware
and be wise. Make your conditions so that you
can gain the allegiance and gain the help of this
splendid body of young men and young women. Many
of them are made of the stock that Jesus would choose
as his own apostles. Among the young men will
be our greatest teachers, our great financiers, our
best legislators, our most valuable workers and organisers
in various fields of social service, our most widely
read authors, eminent and influential editorial and
magazine writers as well as managers.
Many of these young women will have
high and responsible positions as educators.
Some will be heads and others will be active workers
in our widely extended and valuable women’s
clubs. Some will have a hand in political action,
in lifting politics out of its many-times low condition
into its rightful state in being an agent for the
accomplishment of the people’s best purposes
and their highest good. Some will be editors
of widely circulating and influential women’s
magazines. Some will be mothers, true mothers
of the children of others, denied their rights and
their privileges. Make it possible for them,
nay, make it incumbent upon them to come in, to work
within the great Church organisation.
It cannot afford that they stay out.
It is suicidal to keep them out. Any other type
of organisation that did not look constantly to commanding
the services of the most capable and expert in its
line would fall in a very few months into the ranks
of the ineffectives. A business or a financial
organisation that did not do the same would go into
financial bankruptcy in even a shorter length of time.
By attracting this class of men and women into its
ranks it need fear neither moral nor financial bankruptcy.
But remember, many men and women of
large calibre are so busy doing God’s work in
the world that they have no time and no inclination
to be attracted by anything that does not claim their
intellectual as well as their moral assent. The
Church must speak fully and unequivocally in terms
of present-day thought and present-day knowledge, to
win the allegiance or even to attract the attention
of this type of men and women.
And may I say here this word to those
outside, and especially to this class of young men
and young women outside of our churches? Changes,
and therefore advances in matters of this kind come
slowly. This is true from the very nature of
human nature. Inherited beliefs, especially when
it comes to matters of religion, take the deepest hold
and are the slowest to change. Not in all cases,
but this is the general rule.
Those who hold on to the old are earnest,
honest. They believe that these things are too
sacred to be meddled with, or even sometimes, to be
questioned. The ordinary mind is slow to distinguish
between tradition and truth especially
where the two have been so fully and so adroitly mixed.
Many are not in possession of the newer, the more advanced
knowledge in various fields that you are in possession
of. But remember this in even a dozen
years a mighty change has taken place except
in a church whose very foundation and whose sole purpose
is dogma.
In most of our churches, however,
the great bulk of our ministers are just as forward-looking,
just as earnest as you, and are deeply desirous of
following and presenting the highest truth in so far
as it lies within their power to do so. It is
a splendid body of men, willing to welcome you on
your own grounds, longing for your help. It is
a mighty engine for good. Go into it. Work
with it. Work through it. The best men in
the Church are longing for your help. They need
it more than they need anything else. I can assure
you of this I have talked with many.
They feel their handicaps. They
are moving as rapidly as they find it possible to
move. On the whole, they are doing splendid work
and with a big, fine spirit of which you know but
little. You will find a wonderful spirit of self-sacrifice,
also. You will find a stimulating and precious
comradeship on the part of many. You will find
that you will get great good, even as you are able
to give great good.
The Church, as everything else, needs
to keep its machinery in continual repair. Help
take out the worn-out parts but not too
suddenly. The Church is not a depository, but
an instrument and engine of truth and righteousness.
Some of the older men do not realise this; but they
will die off. Respect their beliefs. Honest
men have honest respect for differences of opinion,
for honest differences in thought. Sympathy is
a great harmoniser. “Differences of opinion,
intellectual distinctions, these must ever be separation
of mind, but unity of heart.”
I like these words of Lyman Abbott.
You will like them. They are spoken out of a
full life of rich experience and splendid service.
They have, moreover, a sort of unifying effect.
They are more than a tonic: “Of all characters
in history none so gathers into himself and reflects
from himself all the varied virtues of a complete
manhood as does Jesus of Nazareth. And the world
is recognising it.... If you go back to the olden
time and the old conflicts, the question was, ’What
is the relation of Jesus Christ to the Eternal?’
Wars have been fought over the question, ‘Was
he of one substance with the Father?’ I do not
know; I do not know of what substance the Father is;
I do not know of what substance Jesus Christ is.
What I do know is this that when I look
into the actual life that I know about, the men and
women that are about me, the men and women in all
the history of the past, of all the living beings
that ever lived and walked the earth, there is no one
that so fills my heart with reverence, with affection,
with loyal love, with sincere desire to follow, as
doth Jesus Christ....
“I do not need to decide whether
he was born of a virgin. I do not need to decide
whether he rose from the dead. I do not need to
decide whether he made water into wine, or fed five
thousand with two loaves and five small fishes.
Take all that away, and still he stands the one transcendent
figure toward whom the world has been steadily growing,
and whom the world has not yet overtaken even in his
teachings.... I do not need to know what is his
metaphysical relation to the Infinite. I say it
reverently I do not care. I know for
me he is the great Teacher; I know for me he is the
great Leader whose work I want to do; and I know for
me he is the great Personality, whom I want to be
like. That I know. Theology did not give
that to me, and theology cannot get it away from me.”
And what a basis as a test of character
is this twofold injunction this great fundamental
of Jesus! All religion that is genuine flowers
in character. It was Benjamin Jowett who said,
and most truly: “The value of a religion
is in the ethical dividend that it pays.”
When the heart is right towards God we have the basis,
the essence of religion the consciousness
of God in the soul of man. We have truth in the
inward parts. When the heart is right towards
the fellow-man we have the essential basis of ethics;
for again we have truth in the inward parts.
Out of the heart are the issues of
life. When the heart is right all outward acts
and relations are right. Love draws one to the
very heart of God; and love attunes one to all the
highest and most valued relationships in our human
life.
Fear can never be a basis of either
religion or ethics. The one who is moved by fear
makes his chief concern the avoidance of detection
on the one hand, or the escape of punishment on the
other. Men of large calibre have an unusual sagacity
in sifting the unessential from the essential as also
the false from the true. Lincoln, when replying
to the question as to why he did not unite himself
with some church organisation, said: “When
any church will inscribe over its altar, as its sole
qualification of membership, the Saviour’s condensed
statement of the substance of both law and gospel:
Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart,
and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and thy
neighbour as thyself, that church shall I join with
all my heart and soul.”
He was looked upon by many in his
day as a non-Christian by some as an infidel.
His whole life had a profound religious basis, so deep
and so all-absorbing that it gave him those wonderful
elements of personality that were instantly and instinctively
noticed by, and that moved all men who came in touch
with him; and that sustained him so wonderfully, according
to his own confession, through those long, dark periods
of the great crisis, The fact that in yesterday’s
New York paper Sunday paper I
saw the notice of a sermon in one of our Presbyterian
pulpits Lincoln, the Christian shows
that we have moved up a round and are approaching
more and more to an essential Christianity.
Similar to this statement or rather
belief was that of Emerson, Jefferson, Franklin, and
a host of other men among us whose lives have been
lives of accomplishment and service for their fellow-men.
Emerson, who said: “A man should learn
to detect and watch that gleam of light which flashes
across his mind from within, more than the lustre of
the firmament of bards and sages. Yet he dismisses
without notice his thought, because it is his.
In every work of genius we recognise our own rejected
thoughts. They come back to us with a certain
alienated majesty.” Emerson, who also said:
“I believe in the still, small voice, and that
voice is the Christ within me.” It was he
of whom the famous Father Taylor in Boston said:
“It may be that Emerson is going to hell, but
of one thing I am certain: he will change the
climate there and emigration will set that way.”
So thought Jefferson, who said:
“I have sworn eternal hostility to every form
of tyranny over the minds of men.” And as
he, great prophet, with his own hand penned that immortal
document the Declaration of American Independence one
can almost imagine the Galilean prophet standing at
his shoulder and saying: Thomas, I think it well
to write it so. Both had a burning indignation
for that species of self-seeking either on the part
of an individual or an organisation that would seek
to enchain the minds and thereby the lives of men
and women, and even lay claim to their children.
Yet Jefferson in his time was frequently called an
atheist and merely because men in those
days did not distinguish as clearly as we do today
between ecclesiasticism and religion, between formulated
and essential Christianity.
So we are brought back each time to
Jesus’ two fundamentals and these
come out every time foursquare with the best thought
of our time. The religion of Jesus is thereby
prevented from being a mere tribal religion.
It is prevented from being merely an organisation that
could possibly have his sanction as such that
is, an organisation that would be able to say:
This is his, and this only. It makes it have a
world-wide and eternal content. The Kingdom that
Jesus taught is infinitely broader in its scope and
its inclusiveness than any organisation can be, or
that all organisations combined can be.