Standing With The People
We have found two simple and axiomatic
social principles in the fundamental convictions of
Jesus: The sacredness of life and personality,
and the spiritual solidarity of men. Now confront
a mind mastered by these convictions with the actual
conditions of society, with the contempt for life
and the denial of social obligation existing, and how
will he react? How will he see the duty of the
strong, and his own duty?
DAILY READINGS
First Day: The Social Platform of Jesus
And he came to Nazareth, where he had
been brought up: and he entered, as his custom
was, into the synagogue on the sabbath day, and
stood up to read. And there was delivered unto
him the book of the prophet Isaiah. And he
opened the book, and found the place where it
was written,
The Spirit of the Lord is
upon me,
Because he anointed me to
preach good tidings to the poor:
He hath sent me to proclaim
release to the captives,
And recovering of sight to
the blind,
To set at liberty them that
are bruised,
To proclaim the acceptable
year of the Lord.
And he closed the book, and gave it
back to the attendant, and sat down: and
the eyes of all in the synagogue were fastened on him.
And he began to say unto them, To-day hath this
scripture been fulfilled in your ears. And
all bare him witness, and wondered at the words
of grace which proceeded out of his mouth: and
they said, Is not this Joseph’s son? Luke
4:16-22.
Luke evidently felt that this appearance
of Jesus in the synagogue of his home city at the
outset of his public work was a significant occasion.
The passage from Isaiah (61:1f) was doubtless one
of the favorite quotations of Jesus. He saw his
own aims summarized in it and he now announced it as
his program. Its promises were now about to be
realized. What were they? Glad tidings for
the poor, release for the imprisoned, sight for the
blind, freedom for the oppressed, and a “year
of Jehovah.” If this was an allusion to
the year of Jubilee (Le, it involved a revolutionary
“shedding of burdens,” such as Solon brought
about at Athens. At any rate, social and religious
emancipation are woven together in these phrases.
Plainly Jesus saw his mission in raising to free and
full life those whom life had held down and hurt.
“As thou didst send me into
the world, even so sent I them.” Must the
platform of Jesus be our platform and program?
Second Day: The Social Test of the Messiah
And the disciples of John told him of
all these things. And John calling unto him
two of his disciples sent them to the Lord, saying,
Art thou he that cometh, or look we for another?
And when the men were come unto him, they said,
John the Baptist hath sent us unto thee, saying,
Art thou he that cometh, or look we for another?
In that hour he cured many of diseases and plagues
and evil spirits; and on many that were blind
he bestowed sight. And he answered and said
unto them, Go and tell John the things which ye
have seen and heard; the blind receive their sight,
the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, and the
deaf hear, the dead are raised up, the poor have
good tidings preached to them. And blessed
is he, whosoever shall find no occasion of stumbling
in me. Luke 7:18-23.
Was Jesus the Coming One? He
did not quite measure up to John’s expectations.
The Messiah was to purge the people of evil elements,
winnowing the chaff from the wheat and burning it.
His symbol was the axe. Jesus was manifesting
no such spirit. Was he then the Messiah?
Jesus shifted the test to another
field. Human suffering was being relieved and
the poor were having glad news proclaimed to them.
Sympathy for the people was the assured common ground
between Jesus and John. Jesus felt that John
would recognize the dawn of the reign of God by the
evidence which he offered him.
What, then, would be proper evidence
that the reign of God is gaining ground in our intellect
and feeling?
Third Day: The Church, a Product of Social Feeling
And Jesus went about all the cities
and the villages, teaching in their synagogues,
and preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and healing
all manner of disease and all manner of sickness.
But when he saw the multitudes, he was moved with
compassion for them, because they were distressed
and scattered, as sheep not having a shepherd.
Then saith he unto his disciples, The harvest indeed
is plenteous, but the laborers are few. Pray
ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that he
send forth laborers into his harvest. And he
called unto him his twelve disciples, and gave
them authority over unclean spirits, to cast them
out, and to heal all manner of disease and all
manner of sickness. Mat:35-10:1.
The selection of the Twelve, their
grouping by twos, and their employment as independent
messengers, was the most important organizing act of
Jesus. Out of it ultimately grew the Christian
Church. Now note what motives led to it.
Jesus was relieving social misery. He was oppressed
by the sense of it. The Greek verbs are very
inadequately rendered by “distressed and scattered.”
The first means “skinned, harried”; the
second means “flung down, prostrate.”
The people were like a flock of sheep after the wolves
are through with them. There was dearth of true
leaders. So Jesus took the material he had and
organized the apostolate for what?
The Church grew out of the social feeling of Jesus
for the sufferings of the common people.
To what extent, in your judgment,
does the Church today share the feeling of Jesus about
the condition of the people and fulfil the purpose
for which he organized the apostolate? Or has
the condition of the people changed so that their
social needs are less urgent?
Fourth Day: Jesus Took Sides
And he lifted up his eyes on his disciples,
and said, Blessed are ye poor: for yours
is the kingdom of God. Blessed are ye that hunger
now: for ye shall be filled. Blessed are
ye that weep now: for ye shall laugh.
Blessed are ye, when men shall hate you, and when
they shall separate you from their company, and reproach
you, and cast out your name as evil, for the Son
of man’s sake. Rejoice in that day,
and leap for joy: for behold, your reward is great
in heaven; for in the same manner did their fathers
unto the prophets. But woe unto you that
are rich! for ye have received your consolation.
Woe unto you, ye that are full now! for ye shall hunger.
Woe unto you, ye that laugh now for ye shall mourn
and weep. Woe unto you, when all men shall
speak well of you! for in the same manner did
their fathers to the false prophets. Luke
6:20-26.
In these Beatitudes, as Luke reports
them, Jesus clearly takes sides with the lowly.
He says God and the future are not on the side of the
rich, the satiated; the devotees of pleasure, the
people who take the popular side on everything.
Ultimately the verdict will be for those who are now
poor and underfed, who carry the heavy end of things,
and who have to stand for the unpopular side.
In the report of the Beatitudes given by Matthew (5:3-12)
the terms are less social and more spiritual, and the
contrast between the upper and lower classes is not
marked; but even there the promise of the great reversal
of things is to the humble and peaceable folk, the
hard hit and unpopular; they are to inherit the earth,
and also God’s kingdom.
Would it make Jesus a wiser teacher
and nobler figure if he had reversed his sympathies?
Fifth Day: Salvation through the Common People
In that same hour he rejoiced in the
Holy Spirit, and said, I thank thee, O Father,
Lord of heaven and earth, that thou didst hide
these things from the wise and understanding, and didst
reveal them unto babes: yea, Father; for so
it was well-pleasing in thy sight. Luke
10:21.
For behold your calling, brethren, that
not many wise after the flesh, not many mighty,
not many noble, are called: but God chose the
foolish things of the world, that he might put to shame
them that are wise; and God chose the weak things
of the world, that he might put to shame the things
that are strong; and the base things of the world,
and the things that are despised, did God choose,
yea and the things that are not, that he might
bring to nought the things that are: that
no flesh should glory before Go Cor
1:26-29.
The actual results of his work proved
to Jesus that his success was to be with the simple-minded,
and not with the pundit class. He accepted the
fact with a thrill of joy, and praised God for making
it so. Paul verified the same alignment in the
early Church. The upper classes held back through
pride of birth or education, or through the timidity
of wealth. In bringing in a new order of things,
God had to use plain people to get a leverage.
What really was it that Jesus saw
in the lowly to attract him?
Sixth Day: Jesus, a Man of the People
And when they drew nigh unto Jerusalem,
and came unto Bethphage, unto the mount of Olives,
then Jesus sent two disciples, saying unto them,
Go into the village that is over against you, and
straightway ye shall find an ass tied, and a colt
with her: loose them, and bring them unto
me. And if any one say aught unto you, ye
shall say, The Lord hath need of them; and straightway
he will send them. Now this is come to pass,
that it might be fulfilled which was spoken through
the prophet, saying,
Tell ye the daughter of Zion,
Behold, thy King cometh unto
thee,
Meek, and riding upon an ass,
And upon a colt the foal of
an ass.
And the disciples went, and did even
as Jesus appointed them, and brought the ass,
and the colt, and put on them their garments; and
he sat thereon. And the most part of the multitude
spread their garments in the way; and others cut
branches from the trees, and spread them in the
way. And the multitudes that went before him,
and that followed, cried saying, Hosanna to the
son of David: Blessed is he that cometh in
the name of the Lord; Hosanna in the highest.
And when he was come into Jerusalem, all the city was
stirred, saying, Who is this? And the multitudes
said, This is the prophet, Jesus, from Nazareth
of Galilee. Mat:1-11.
Here was a democratic procession!
No caparisoned charger, but a burro though
a young and frisky one, carefully selected no
military escort with a brass band and a drum major,
but a throng of peasants, shouting the psalms of their
fathers and the hope of a good time coming; no costly
rugs to carpet the way of the King, but the sweat-stained
garments of working people and branches wrenched off
by Galilaean fists. What was he, this King of
the future, ridiculous or sublime?
If Jesus is ever to make his entry
into the spiritual sovereignty of humanity, will the
social classes line up as they did at Jerusalem?
Seventh Day: The Final Test for All
But when the Son of man shall come in
his glory, and all the angels with him, then shall
he sit on the throne of his glory: and before
him shall be gathered all the nations: and he
shall separate them one from another, as the shepherd
separateth the sheep from the goats; and he shall
set the sheep on his right hand, but the goats
on the left. Then shall the King say unto them
on his right hand, Come, ye blessed of my Father,
inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the
foundation of the world: for I was hungry,
and ye gave me to eat; I was thirsty, and ye gave me
drink; I was a stranger, and ye took me in; naked,
and ye clothed me; I was sick, and ye visited
me; I was in prison, and ye came unto me.
Then shall the righteous answer him, saying, Lord,
when saw we thee hungry, and fed thee? or athirst,
and gave thee drink? And when saw we thee
a stranger, and took thee in? or naked, and clothed
thee? And when saw we thee sick, or in prison,
and came unto thee? And the King shall answer
and say unto them, Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch
as ye did it unto one of these my brethren, even
these least, ye did it unto me. Then shall he
say also unto them on the left hand, Depart from
me, ye cursed, into the eternal fire which is
prepared for the devil and his angels: for I was
hungry, and ye did not give me to eat; I was thirsty,
and ye gave me no drink; I was a stranger, and
ye took me not in; naked, and ye clothed me not;
sick, and in prison, and ye visited me not. Then
shall they also answer, saying, Lord, when saw we thee
hungry, or athirst, or a stranger, or naked, or
sick, or in prison, and did not minister unto
thee? Then shall he answer them, saying,
Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye did it not unto
one of these least, ye did it not unto me.
And these shall go away into eternal punishment:
but the righteous into eternal life. Mat:31-46.
“Whence he shall come to judge
the quick and the dead.” Think of it absolute
justice done at last, by an all-knowing Judge, where
no earthly pull of birth, wealth, learning, or power
will count, and where all masks fall! By what
code of law and what standard shall we be judged there?
Here is the answer of Jesus: Not by creed and
church questions, but by our human relations; by the
reality of our social feeling; by our practical solidarity
with our fellow-men. If we lived in the presence
of hunger, loneliness, and oppression, in the same
country with child labor, race contempt, the long
day, rack rents, prostitution, just earnings withheld
by power, the price of living raised to swell swollen
profit if we saw such things and remained
apathetic, out we go.
You and I to the right or the left?
Study for the Week
No one can turn from a frank reading
of the Gospels without realizing that Jesus had a
deep fellow-feeling, not only for suffering and handicapped
individuals, but for the mass of the poorer people
of his country, the peasants, the fishermen, the artisans.
He declared that it was his mission to bring glad
tidings to this class; and not only glad words, but
happy realities. Evidently the expectation of
the coming Reign of God to his mind signified some
substantial relief and release to the submerged and
oppressed. Our modern human feeling glories in
this side of our Saviour’s work. Art and
literature love to see him from this angle.
I
His concern for the poor was the necessary
result of the two fundamental convictions discussed
by us in the previous chapters. If he felt the
sacredness of life, even in its humble and hardworn
forms, and if he felt the family unity of all men
in such a way that the sorrows of the poor were his
sorrows, then, of course, he could not be at ease while
the people were “skinned and prostrate,”
“like sheep without a shepherd.”
Wherever any group has developed real solidarity, its
best attention is always given to those who are most
in need. “The whole have no need of a physician,”
said Jesus; the strong can take care of themselves.
So he cast in his lot with the people
consciously. He slept in their homes, healed
their diseases, ate their bread, and shared his own
with them. He gave them a faith, a hope of better
days, and a sense that God was on their side.
Such a faith is more than meat and drink. In turn
they rallied around him, and could not get enough
of him. “The common people heard him gladly.”
Furthermore, the feeling of Jesus
for “the poor” was not the sort of compassion
we feel for the hopelessly crippled in body or mind.
His feeling was one of love and trust. The Galilaean
peasants, from whom Peter and John sprang, were not
moróns, or the sodden dregs of city slums.
They were the patient, hard-working folks who have
always made up the rank and file of all peoples.
They had their faults, and Jesus must have known them.
But did he ever denounce them, or call them “offspring
of vipers”? Did he ever indicate that their
special vices were frustrating the Kingdom of God?
They needed spiritual impulse and leadership, but their
nature was sound and they were the raw material for
the redeemed humanity which he strove to create.
II
There is one more quality which we
shall have to recognize in the attitude of Jesus to
“the poor.” He saw them over against
“the rich.” Amid all the variations
of human society these two groups always reappear those
who live by their own productive labor, and those
who live on the productive labor of others whom they
control. Practically they overlap and blend, but
when our perspective is distant enough, we can distinguish
them. In Greek and Roman society, in medieval
life, and in all civilized nations of today barring,
of course, our own we can see them side
by side. Each conditions the other; neither would
exist without the other. Each class develops
its own moral and spiritual habits, its own set of
virtues and vices. Some of us were born in the
upper class, some in the lower; and in college groups
the majority come from the border line. By instinct,
by the experiences of life, or by national reflection,
we usually give our moral allegiance to one or the
other, and are then apt to lean to that side in every
question arising.
Now, Jesus took sides with the group
of toil. He stood up for them. He stood
with them. We can not help seeing him with his
arm thrown in protection about the poor man, and his
other hand raised in warning to the rich. If
we are in any doubt about this, we can let his contemporaries
decide it for us. Plainly the common people claimed
him as their friend. Did the governing classes
have the same feeling for him? It seems hard to
escape the conclusion that Jesus was not impartial
between the two. Was he nevertheless just?
To the aesthetic sense, and also to a superficial moral
judgment, the upper classes are everywhere more congenial
and attractive. To the moral judgment of Jesus,
as we shall see more fully in a later chapter, there
was something disquieting and dangerous about the spiritual
qualities of “the rich,” and something
lovable and hopeful about the qualities of the common
man. Was he right? This is a very important
practical question for all who are disposed to follow
his moral leadership.
The perception that Jesus championed
the people can be found throughout literature and
art. Our own Lowell has expressed it in his “Parable”
in which he describes Jesus coming back to earth to
see “how the men, my brethren, believe in me.”
“Have ye founded your
thrones and altars, then,
On the bodies and souls of
living men?
And think ye that building
shall endure,
Which shelters the noble and
crushes the poor?
“With gates of silver
and bars of gold
Ye have fenced my sheep from
their Father’s fold;
I have heard the dropping
of their tears
In heaven these eighteen hundred
years.
“Then Christ sought
out an artisan,
A low-browed, stunted, haggard
man,
And a motherless girl, whose
fingers thin,
Pushed from her faintly want
and sin.
“These set he in the
midst of them,
And as they drew back their
garment-hem
For fear of defilement, “Lo,
here,” said he,
‘The images ye have
made of me.’ "
III
We shall get the historical setting
for Christ’s championship of the people by going
back to the Old Testament prophets. They were
his spiritual forebears. He nourished his mind
on their writings and loved to quote them. Now,
the Hebrew prophets with one accord stood up for the
common people and laid the blame for social wrong on
the powerful classes. They underlined no other
sin with such scarlet marks as the sins of injustice,
oppression, and the corruption of judges. But
these are the sins which bear down the lowly, and
have always been practiced and hushed up by the powerful.
“Hear this word, ye kine of Bashan, that oppress
the poor, that crush the needy.... Ye trample
upon the poor, and take exactions from him of wheat;
... ye that afflict the just, that take a bribe, and
that turn aside the needy in the gate from their right....
For three transgressions of Israel, yea, for four,
I will not turn away the punishment thereof; because
they have sold the righteous for silver, and the needy
for a pair of shoes; they that pant after the dust
of the earth on the head of the poor” (Amos
4:1; 5:11-12; 2:6-7). Micah describes the strong
and crafty crowding the peasant from his ancestral
holding and the mother from her home by the devices
always used for such ends, exorbitant interest on
loans, foreclosure in times of distress, “seeing
the judge” before the trial, and hardness of
heart toward broken life and happiness (Micah 2:1-2;
2:9; 3:1-2). We cannot belittle the moral insight
of that unique succession of men. Their spiritual
force is still hard at work in our Christian civilization,
especially in the contribution which the Jewish people
are making to the labor movement.
IV
Among the Greeks and Romans political
and literary life was so completely dominated by the
aristocratic class that no such succession of champions
of the common man could well arise. Yet some of
the men of whom posterity thinks with most veneration
were upper-class champions of the common people Solon,
for instance, Manlius, and the Gracchi.
In recent centuries the vast forces
of social evolution seem to have set in the direction
toward which Jesus faced. Since the Reformation
the institutions of religion have been more or less
democratized. The common people have secured
some participation in political power and have been
able to use it somewhat for their economic betterment.
They share much more fully in education than formerly.
Before the outbreak of the Great War it seemed safe
to anticipate that the working people would secure
an increasing share of the social wealth, the security,
the opportunities for health, for artistic enjoyment,
and of all that makes life worth living. Today
the future is heavily clouded and uncertain; but our
faith still holds that even the great disaster will
help ultimately to weaken the despotic and exploiting
forces, and make the condition of the common people
more than ever the chief concern of science and statesmanship.
Jesus was on the side of the common
people long before democracy was on the ascendant.
He loved them, felt their worth, trusted their latent
capacities, and promised them the Kingdom of God.
The religion he founded, even when impure and under
the control of the upper classes, has been the historical
basis for the aspirations of the common people and
has readily united with democratic movements.
His personality and spirit has remained an impelling
and directing force in the minds of many individuals
who have “gone to the people” because
they know Jesus is with them. In fact we can
look for more direct social effectiveness of Jesus
in the future, because the new historical interpretation
of the Bible helps us to see him more plainly amid
the social life of his own people.
V
So we must add a third social principle
to the first two. The first was that life and
personality are sacred; the second that men belong
together; the third is that the strong must stand
with the weak and defend their cause. In his
description of the Messianic Judgment, Jesus proposed
to recognize as his followers only those who had responded
to the call of human need and solidarity. He
created the apostleship and therewith the germ of
the Church in order to serve the people whose needs
he saw and felt.
How does this concern college men
and women? By our opportunities and equipment
we rank with the strong. Disciplined intellect
is armor and sword. Many of us have inherited
social standing and some wealth; it may not be much,
but it raises us above the terrible push of immediate
need. What relation do we propose to have with
the great mass of men and women who were born without
the chances which have fallen to us without exertion?
Do we propose to serve them or to ride on them?
Will we seek to gain some form of power by means of
which we can live in plenty, with only slight and
pleasurable exertion? In that case we can hardly
return to our fellow-men in work as much as we take
from them in enjoyment and luxury. We shall be
part of that dead weight which has always bent the
back of the poor. Is that an honorable ambition?
Or do we propose to enter the working team of humanity
and to hold up our end? Our end ought to be heavier
than the average because we have had longer and better
training. “To whomsoever much is given,
of him shall much be required.”
The moral problem for college communities
is accentuated when we remember that few students
pay fully for what they get. Whether our institutions
are supported from taxation or from endowments, a large
part of their incomes are derived from the annual
labor of society; tuitions pay only a fraction of
the running expenses and of the interest on the plant.
Even if a student pays all charges, he is in part
a pensioner on the public. The working people
in the last resort support us; the same people who
are often so eager for education, and who can not
get it. Some of them would feel rich if they
had the leavings of knowledge which we throw to the
floor and tread upon in our spirit of surfeit.
To take our education at their hands and use it to
devise ways by which we can continue to live on them,
seems disquieting even to a pagan conscience.
It ought to be insufferable to a sense of social responsibility
trained under Christian influences.
Here is a test for college communities
more searching than the physical test of athletics,
or the intellectual tests of scholarship. Do we
feel our social unity with the people who work for
their living, and do we propose to use our special
privileges and capacities for their social redemption?
“When wilt Thou save
the people?
O God of Mercy, when?
Not kings and lords, but nations,
Not thrones and crowns, but
men.
Flowers of Thy heart, O God,
are they.
Let them not pass like weeds
away,
Let them not fade in sunless
day!
God save the people!” EBENEZER
ELLIOTT.
Suggestions for Thought and Discussion
I. The Partisanship of Jesus
1. Did Jesus really take sides with the poor?
Prove it.
2. Try to prove the other side.
3. Which would be safer evidence:
single sayings, or the total impression of his life
and teachings?
4. What do you conclude regarding the attitude
of Jesus?
II. The Church and the People
1. What motives led Jesus to
organize and send out the twelve? What was the
historical significance of that action?
2. When and how did the Church
lose its working class character?
3. Does the Church today share
Jesus’ feelings about the condition of the people?
Sum up evidence for and against.
4. What is the true function
of the Church in society so far as the poor are concerned?
III. Standing up for the People Today
1. Is it a superficial or profound
test to range a man according to his sympathy with
the common people?
2. What does it involve to stand
up for the people today? How does it differ from
charity and relief work?
3. Name some men and women in
our own times who seem to have stood up for them most
wisely and effectively.
4. What are the vices of social reformers?
IV. The Concern of College Men and Women
1. How can college men and women
make a just return for their special opportunities?
2. What movements in college
and university life in recent years are in line with
this social principle of Jesus?
3. What part have the university
students of Russia, Austria, Germany, and England
taken in social movements? Have American students
ever taken a similar interest in working class movements?
If not, why not?
V. For Special Discussion
1. Is it an advantage or disadvantage
to Christianity that it began among the working class?
What effects did that have on its ethical points of
view and its impulses?
2. Why did the regeneration of
ancient society have to come through the lowly?
Will it have to come the same way today?
3. Is it ethical to live without
productive labor? Is it morally tolerable to
enjoy excessive leisure purchased by the excessive
toil of others?
4. Is there any clear conviction
on this question in the Christian Church today?
5. Is the fact that a person
has sprung from the working-class a guarantee that
he will have the working-class sympathies?
6. Who seem to have more natural
democratic feeling, the men or the women of the upper
classes?