LUKE xi.
Whosoever he be of you that forsaketh
not all that he hath, he cannot be my disciple.
In order to show that these words
were not spoken to the apostles alone, but to all
Christians, we have only to turn to the 25th and 26th
verses, which run thus: “And there
went great multitudes with him, and he turned and
said unto them, If any man come to me, and hate not
his father and mother, and wife and children, and
brethren and sisters, yea and his own life also, he
cannot be my disciple.” The words were not,
then, spoken to the twelve apostles only, as if they
contained merely some rule of extraordinary piety,
which was not to be required of common Christians;
they were spoken to a great multitude; they were spoken
to warn all persons in that multitude that not one
of them could become a Christian, unless he gave himself
up to Christ body and soul. Thus declaring that
there is but one rule for all; a rule which the highest
Christian can never go beyond; and which the lowest,
if he would be a Christian at all, must make the foundation
of his whole life.
Now take the words, either of the
text or of the 26th verse, and is it possible to avoid
seeing that, on the very lowest interpretation, they
do insist upon a very high standard; that they do require
a very entire and devoted obedience? Is it possible
for any one who believes what Christ has said, to
rest contented, either for himself or for others,
with that very low and very unchristian standard which
he sees and knows to prevail generally in the world?
Is it possible for him not to wish, for himself and
for all in whose welfare he is interested, that they
may belong to the small minority in matters of principle
and practice, rather than to the large majority?
And because he so wishes, one who
endeavours to follow Christ sincerely can never be
satisfied with the excuse that he acts and thinks quite
as well as the mass of persons about him; it can never
give him comfort, with regard to any judgment or practice,
to be told, in common language, “Everybody thinks
so; everybody does so.” If, indeed, this
expression “everybody” might be taken
literally; if it were quite true, without any exception,
that “everybody thought or did so;” then
I grant that it would have a very great authority;
so great that it would be almost a mark of madness
to run counter to it. For what all men, all without
a single exception, were to agree in, must be some
truth which the human mind could not reject without
insanity, like the axioms of science, or
some action which if we did not we could not live,
as sleeping and eating; or if there be any moral point
so universally agreed upon, then it must be something
exceedingly general: as, for instance, that truth
is in itself to be preferred to falsehood; which to
dispute would be monstrous. But, once admit a
single exception, and the infallible virtue of the
rule ceases. I can conceive one single good and
wise man’s judgment and practice, requiring,
at any rate, to be carefully attended to, and his
reasons examined, although millions upon millions stood
against him. But go on with the number of exceptions,
and bring the expression “everybody,”
to its real meaning, which is only “most persons,”
“the great majority of the world;” then
the rule becomes of no virtue at all, but very often
the contrary. If in matters of morals many are
on one side and some on the other, it is impossible
to pronounce at once which are most likely to be right:
it depends on the sort of case on which the difference
exists; for the victories of truth and of good are
but partial. It is not all truth that triumphs
in the world, nor all good; but only truth and good
up to a certain point. Let them once pass this
point, and their progress pauses. Their followers,
in the mass, cannot keep up with them thus far:
fewer and fewer are those who still press on in their
company, till at last even these fail; and there is
a perfection at which they are deserted by all men,
and are in the presence of God and of Christ alone.
Thus it is that, up to a certain point,
in moral matters the majority are right; and thus
Christ’s gospel, in a great many respects, goes
along with public opinion, and the voice of society
is the voice of truth. But this, to use the expression
of our Lord’s parable, this is but half the
height of that tower whose top should reach unto heaven.
Christianity ascends a great deal higher; and therefore
so many who begin to build are never able to finish.
Christ’s disciples and the world’s disciples
work for a certain way together; and thus far the
world’s disciples call themselves Christ’s,
and so Christ’s followers seem to be a great
majority. But Christ warns us expressly that we
are not his disciples merely by going a certain way
on the same road with them. They only are His,
who follow Him to the end. They only are His,
who follow him in spite of everything, who leave all
rather than leave him. For the rest, He does
not own them. What the world can give they may
enjoy; but Christ’s kingdom is shut against them.
Speaking, then, according to Christ’s
judgment, and we must hold those to be of the world,
and not of Him, and therefore in God’s
judgment, to be the evil and not the good, who
do not make up their minds to live in His service,
and to refer their actions, words, and thoughts to
His will. Who these are it is very true that
we many times cannot know: only we may always
fear that they are the majority of society; and therefore
we are rather anxious in any individual’s case
to get a proof that he is not one of them, because,
as they are very many, there is always a sort of presumption
that any given person is of this number, unless there
is some evidence, or some presumption at any rate,
for thinking the contrary.
When we speak, then, of the good and
of the evil side in human life, in any society, whether
smaller or larger, this is what we mean,
or should mean. The evil side contains much that
is, up to a certain point, good: the good side, for
does it not consist of human beings? contains,
unhappily, much in it that is evil. Not all in
the one is to be avoided, far from it;
nor is all in the other by any means to be followed.
But still those are called evil in God’s judgment
who live according to their own impulses, or according
to the law of the society around them; and those are
to be called good, who, in their principles, whatever
may be the imperfections of their practice, endeavour
in all things to live according to the will of Christ.
And in this view the characters of
Jacob and Esau are, as it seems to me, full of instruction;
and above all to us here. For I have often observed
that the early age of an individual bears a great resemblance
to the early age of the human race, or of any particular
nation; so that the characters of the Old Testament
are often more suited, in a Christian country, for
the instruction of the young than for those of more
advanced years. To Christian men, looking at Jacob’s
life, with the faults recorded of it, it is sometimes
strange that he should be spoken of as good.
But it seems that in a rude state of society, where
knowledge is very low, and passion very strong, the
great virtue is to be freed from the dominion of the
prevailing low principle, to see and resolve that
we ought and will live according to knowledge, and
not according to passion or impulse. The knowledge
may be very imperfect, and probably is so: the
practice may in many respects offend against knowledge,
and probably will do so: yet is a great step taken;
it is the virtue of man, in such a state of
society, to follow, though imperfectly, principle,
where others follow instinct, or the opinion of their
fellows. It is the great distinguishing mark,
in such a state of things, between the good and the
evil; for this reason, amongst many others, that it
is the virtue, under such, circumstances, of the hardest
attainment.
Now, the Scripture judgment of Jacob
and Esau, should be in an especial manner the basis
of our judgment with regard to the young. None
can doubt, that amongst the young, when they form
a society of their own, the great temptation is to
live by impulse, or according to the opinion of those
around them. It is like a light breaking in upon
darkness, when a young person is led to follow a higher
standard, and to live according to God’s will.
Esau, in his faults and amiable points alike, is the
very image of the prevailing character amongst boys;
sometimes violently revengeful, as when Esau looked
forward with satisfaction to the prospect of his father’s
death, because then we should be able to slay his
brother Jacob; sometimes full of generosity, as when
Esau forgot all his grounds of complaint against his
brother, and received him on his return from Mesopotamia
with open arms; but habitually careless,
and setting the present before the future, the lower
gratification before the higher, as when Esau sold
his birth-right for a mess of pottage. And the
point to be noted is, that, because of this carelessness,
this profaneness or ungodliness, as it is truly called
in the New Testament, Esau is distinguished from those
who were God’s people; the promises were not
his, nor yet the blessing. This is remarkable,
because Esau’s faults, undoubtedly were just
the faults of his age: he was no worse than the
great majority of those around him; he lived as we
should say, in our common language, that it was natural
for him to live. He had, therefore, precisely
all those excuses which are commonly urged for the
prevailing faults of boys; yet it is quite certain
that the Scripture holds him out as a representative
of those who were not on the side of God,
If the Scripture has so judged of
Esau and Jacob, it must be the model for our judgments
of those whose circumstances, on account of their
belonging to a society consisting wholly of persons
young in age, greatly resemble the circumstances of
the early society of the world. I lay the stress
on the belonging to a society wholly formed of young
persons; for the case of young persons brought up at
home, is extremely different; and their circumstances
would be best suited by a different scriptural example.
But here, with you, I am quite sure that the great
distinguishing mark between good and evil, is the endeavouring,
or not endeavouring, to rise above the carelessness
of the society of which you are members; the determining,
or not determining, to judge of things by another
rule than that of school morality or honour; the trying,
or not trying, to please God, instead of those around
you: for the notions and maxims of a society
of young persons are like the notions and maxims of
men in a half-civilized age, a strange mixture of right
and wrong; or rather wrong in their result, although
with some right feeling in them, and therefore as
a guide, false and mischievous. That it is natural
to follow these maxims, is quite obvious: they
are the besetting sin of your particular condition;
and it is always according to our corrupt nature to
follow our besetting sin. It is quite natural
that you should be careless, profane, mistaking evil
for good, and good for evil; but salvation is not
for those who follow their nature, but for those in
whom God’s grace has overcome its evil; it is
for those, in Christ’s language, who take up
their cross and follow him; that is, for those who
struggle against their evil nature, that they may gain
a better nature, and be born, not after the flesh,
but after the Spirit of God.
What is to be said to this? or what
qualification, or compromise, is to be made in it?
The words of the text will authorize us, at any rate,
to make none: their language is not that of indulgent
allowance; but it is a call, a loud and earnest, even
a severe, call, it may be, in the judgment of our
evil nature, to shake off the weight that
hangs about us; to deliver our hearts from the dominion
of that which cannot profit, and to submit them to
Christ alone. This is God’s judgment, this
is Christ’s word; and we cannot and dare not
qualify it. They are evil, for God and Christ
declare it, who judge and live after the maxims of
the society around them, and not after Christ; they
are evil who are careless; they are evil who live
according to their own blind and capricious feelings,
now hot, now cold; they are evil who call evil good,
and good evil, because they have not known the Father
nor Christ. This, and nothing less, we say, lest
we should be found false witnesses of God: but
if this language, which is that of Scripture, seem
harsh, to any one, oh! let him remember how soon he
may change it into the language of the most abundant
mercy, of the tenderest love; that if he calls upon
God, God is ready to hear; that if he seeks to know
and to do God’s will, God will be found by him,
and will strengthen him; that it is true kindness
not to disguise from him his real danger, but earnestly
to conjure him to flee from it, and to offer our humblest
prayers to God, for him and ourselves, that our judgments
and our practice may be formed only after his example.