The Conflict With Evil
The Kingdom of God Will Have to Fight for Its Advance
The great objective is the Kingdom
of God. In realizing the Reign of God on earth
three recalcitrant forces have to be brought into obedience
to God’s law: the desire for power, the
love of property, and unsocial religion. We have
studied Christ’s thought concerning these in
the foregoing chapters. The advance of the Kingdom
of God is not simply a process of social education,
but a conflict with hostile forces which resist, neutralize,
and defy whatever works toward the true social order.
The strategy of the Kingdom of God, therefore, involves
a study of the social problem of evil.
DAILY READINGS
First Day: The Consciousness of Sin in the Lord’s Prayer
And forgive us our debts,
as we also have forgiven our debtors.
And bring us not into temptation,
but deliver us from the evil
one. Mat:12,
13.
The Lord’s Prayer expresses
the very mind and spirit of the Master. It begins
with the Kingdom of God; it ends with the problem of
sin. As we stand before God, we realize that
we have loaded up our life with debts we can never
pay. We have wasted our time, and the powers of
body and soul. We have left black marks of contagion
on some whose path we have crossed. We have hurt
even those who loved us by our ill-temper, thoughtlessness,
and selfishness.
We can only ask God to forgive and
give us another chance: “Forgive us our
debts.” Looking forward we see the possibility
of fatal temptations. We know how fragile our
power of resistance is. “Lead us not into
temptation, but deliver us from evil.”
Thus the consciousness of sin is written across this
greatest of all prayers.
Is a sense of unworthiness an indication
of moral strength or of weakness?
Where do we draw the line between
a normal and abnormal sense of sin?
Second Day: Evil Embodied in Character
Either make the tree good, and its fruit
good; or make the tree corrupt, and its fruit
corrupt: for the tree is known by its fruit.
Ye offspring of vipers, how can ye, being evil, speak
good things? for out of the abundance of the heart
the mouth speaketh. The good man out of his
good treasure bringeth forth good things: and
the evil man out of his evil treasure bringeth forth
evil things. And I say unto you, that every
idle word that men shall speak, they shall give
account thereof in the day of judgment. For by
thy words thou shalt be justified, and by thy words
thou shalt be condemned. Mat:33-37.
Character is formed by action, but
after it is formed, it determines action. What
a man says and does, he becomes; and what he has become,
he says and does. An honest and clean-minded
man instinctively does what is kind and honorable.
But when a man for years has gone for profit and selfish
power, you can trust him as a general thing to do what
is underhanded and mean. Since selfish ability
elbows its way to controlling positions in business,
politics, and society, the character reactions of
such men are a force with which the Kingdom of God
must reckon. They are the personal equipment
of the kingdom of evil, and the more respectable,
well-dressed, and clever they are, the worse it is.
What man or woman of our acquaintance
would we single out as the clearest case of an evil
character?
Why do we so judge him?
Third Day: The Social Pressure of Evil
And he said unto his disciples, It is
impossible but that occasions of stumbling should
come; but woe unto him, through whom they come!
It were well for him if a millstone were hanged about
his neck, and he were thrown into the sea, rather
than that he should cause one of these little
ones to stumble. Luke 17:1, 2.
A sex story lodging in a young mind,
an invitation to companionship and a drink, a sneer
at religion which makes faith look silly such
things trip us up. They are stumbling-blocks,
like wires stretched across a path in the dark.
Just because we are social and easily influenced by
friendship, admiration, or persuasion, one man’s
suggestion or example draws the other man on.
Jesus knew that social solicitation and pressure toward
sin was inevitable. It is the price we pay for
our social nature. But, all the same, it is a
terrible thing to contaminate a soul or steer a life
toward its ruin. This saying about the millstone
is one of the sternest words ever uttered.
“Three men went out
one summer night,
No care they had or aim,
And dined and drank.
“Ere we go home
We’ll have,” they
said, “a game.”
Three girls began that summer
night
A life of endless shame,
And went through drink, disease,
and death,
As swift as racing flame.
Lawless and homeless, foul
they died;
Rich, loved, and praised the
men;
But when they all shall meet
with God,
And justice speaks what
then?”
Let us enumerate to our own minds
cases where others drew us into wrong, and cases where
we were a cause of evil for others. About which
do we feel sorest now? Why?
Fourth Day: Moral Laziness
No man having drunk old wine
desireth new; for he saith, The old
is good. Luke 5:39.
This is a chance remark, but a keen
observation. In wine-raising countries an expert
tongue and nice discrimination between the fifty-seven
varieties is one of the most coveted talents.
A man who would prefer some recent stuff to the celebrated
vintage of 18 , would commit intellectual
hari-kari. It is said that in some of the
celebrated vaults of France they breed spiders to
cover the bottles with webs and dust to convey the
delicious suggestion of antiquity. Jesus uses
the preference for old vintage to characterize the
conservative instinct in human nature. This is
one of the stickiest impediments to progress, one of
the most respectable forms of evil-mindedness.
“The hereditary tiger is in us all, also the
hereditary oyster and clam. Indifference is the
largest factor, though not the ugliest form, in the
production of evil” (President Hyde). Men
are morally lazy; they have to be pushed into what
is good for them, and the “pushee” is
almost sure to resent the pushing. The idea that
men ardently desire what is rational and noble is
pernicious fiction. They want to be let alone.
This is part of original sin.
Was the above written in haste, or will it stand?
Fifth Day: Satanic Frustration of Good
Another parable set he before them,
saying, The kingdom of heaven is likened unto
a man that sowed good seed in his field: but while
men slept, his enemy came and sowed tares
also among the wheat, and went away. But
when the blade sprang up and brought forth fruit,
then appeared the tares also. And the servants
of the householder came and said unto him, Sir,
didst thou not sow good seed in thy field? whence
then hath it tares? And he said unto them,
An enemy hath done this. And the servants say
unto him, Wilt thou then that we go and gather
them up? But he saith, Nay; lest haply while
ye gather up the tares, ye root up the wheat with
them. Let both grow together until the harvest:
and in the time of the harvest I will say to the
reapers, Gather up first the tares, and bind
them in bundles to burn them; but gather the wheat
into my barn. Mat:24-30.
Here we encounter the devil.
There is more in sin than our own frailty and stupidity,
and the bad influence of other individuals. There
is a permanent force of organized evil which vitiates
every higher movement and sows tares among the
grain over night. You work hard on some law to
reform the ballot or the primary in order to protect
the freedom and rights of the people, and after three
years your device has become a favorite tool of the
interests. You found a benevolent institution,
and after you are dead it becomes a nest of graft.
Even the Church of Jesus was for centuries so corrupt
that all good men felt its reform in head and members
to be the greatest desideratum in Christendom.
Evil is more durable and versatile than youth and
optimism imagine. The belief in a satanic power
of evil expresses the conviction of the permanent power
of evil. In early Christianity the belief in
the devil was closely connected with the Christian
opposition to the idolatrous and wicked social order
of heathenism. In the Apocalypse the dragon who
stands for Satan, and the beasts who stand for the
despotic Roman Empire, are in close alliance.
What are the satanic social forces today?
The parable of the tares grew
out of a personal experience. Has our observation
ever furnished anything similar?
Sixth Day: The Irrepressible Conflict
Think not that I came to send peace
on the earth: I came not to send peace, but
a sword. For I came to set a man at variance
against his father, and the daughter against her
mother, and the daughter in law against her mother
in law: and a man’s foes shall be they
of his own household. He that loveth father or
mother more than me is not worthy of me; and he
that loveth son or daughter more than me is not
worthy of me. And he that doth not take his cross
and follow after me, is not worthy of me. He that
findeth his life shall lose it; and he that loseth
his life for my sake shall find it. Mat:34-39.
Into a world controlled by sin was
launched the life of Christ. The more completely
he embodied the divine character and will, the more
certain and intense would be the conflict between
him and the powers dominating the old order.
He accepted this fight, not only for himself but for
his followers. It would follow them up into the
intimacies of their homes. Any faith that takes
the Kingdom of God seriously, has its fight cut out
for it. Unless we accept our share of it, we
are playing with our discipleship. But when the
fight is for the Kingdom of God, those who dodge,
lose; and those who lose, win.
Which involves more conflict, a life
set on the Kingdom of God on earth, or a faith set
on the life to come?
Does the idea of a fighting faith attract us?
Would this serve as a _"__substitute for war__"__?_
Seventh Day: Militant Gentleness
But I say unto you, Love your enemies,
and pray for them that persecute you; that ye
may be sons of your Father who is in heaven:
for he maketh his sun to rise on the evil and the good,
and sendeth rain on the just and the unjust. Mat:44, 45.
Render to no man evil for evil.
Take thought for things honorable in the sight
of all men. But if thine enemy hunger, feed him;
if he thirst, give him to drink: for in so
doing thou shalt heap coals of fire upon his head.
Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with
good. Ro:17, 20, 21.
Jesus answered, My kingdom is not of
this world: if my kingdom were of this world,
then would my servants fight, that I should not
be delivered to the Jews: but now is my kingdom
not from hence. Pilate therefore said unto
him, Art thou a king then? Jesus answered,
Thou sayest that I am a king. To this end have
I been born, and to this end am I come into the
world, that I should bear witness unto the truth.
Every one that is of the truth heareth my voice. John
18:36, 37.
When we call out the militant spirit
in religion, we summon a dangerous power. It
has bred grimness and cruelty. Crusaders and inquisitors
did their work in the name of Jesus, but not in his
spirit. We must saturate ourselves with the spirit
of our Master if our fighting is to further his Kingdom.
Hate breeds hate; force challenges force. Only
love disarms; only forgiveness kills an enemy and
leaves a friend. Jesus blended gentleness and
virility, forgiving love and uncompromising boldness.
He offered it as a mark of his Kingdom that his followers
used no force to defend him. Wherever they have
done so, the Kingdom of heaven has dropped to the level
of the brutal empires. His attack is by the truth;
whoever is won by that, is conquered for good.
Force merely changes the form of evil. When we
“overcome evil with good,” we eliminate
it.
What did Paul mean by saying that
acts of kindness to an enemy heap coals of fire on
his head?
How about moral crusades that aim
to put joint-keepers and pimps in prison?
Study for the Week
All great religious teachers have
had a deep sense of the power of evil in human life.
Jesus apparently was not interested in the philosophical
question of the origin of evil, but accepted the fact
of evil in a pragmatic way, and saw his own life as
a conflict with sin and wrong.
Some facts, as we have seen, were
clearly written in his consciousness: the frailty
of our will; the consolidation of evil in men of bad
character and the automatic output of lies and distortions
coming from such; the power of social pressure by
which the weak are made to trip and fall; and the
pervasive satanic power of evil which purposely neutralizes
the efforts leading toward the Reign of God.
The fact that Jesus realized evil
in individuals and society, that he reckoned with
it practically, and that he set himself against it
with singleness of purpose, constitutes another of
his social principles. Any view of life which
blurs the fact of evil would have seemed to him an
illusion. He would have foretold failure for any
policy based on it. His great social problem
was redemption from evil. Every step of approach
toward the Kingdom of God must be won by conflict.
Modern science explains evil along
totally different lines, but as to the main facts
it agrees with the spiritual insight of Jesus.
Psychology recognizes that the higher desires are
usually sluggish and faint, while the animal appetites
are strong and clamorous. Our will tires easily
and readily yields to social pressure. In many
individuals the raw material of character is terribly
flawed by inheritance. So the young, with a maximum
of desire and a minimum of self-restraint, slip into
folly, and the aging backslide into shame. Human
nature needs a strong reenforcement to rouse it from
its inherited lethargy and put it on the toilsome upward
track. It needs redemption, emancipation from
slavery, a breaking of bonds.
I
Evangelism is the attack of redemptive
energy in the sphere of personal life. It comes
to a man shamed by the sense of guilt and baffled by
moral failure, and rouses him to a consciousness of
his high worth and eternal destiny. It transmits
the faith of the Christian Church in a loving and
gracious God who is willing to forgive and powerful
to save. It teaches a man to pray, curing his
soul by affirming over and over a triumphant faith,
and throwing it open to mysterious spiritual powers
which bring joy, peace, and strength beyond himself.
It sets before him a code of moral duty to quicken
and guide his conscience. It puts him inside of
a group of like-minded people who exercise social
restraint and urge him on.
When all this is wisely combined,
it constitutes a spiritual reenforcement of incomparable
energy. It acts like an emancipation. It
gives a sense of freedom and newness. The untrained
observer sees it mainly in those cases where the turn
has come in some dramatic form and where the contrast
between the old and new life is most demonstrable.
But the saving force is at work even when it seeps
in through home influences so quietly that the beneficiary
of it does not realize what a great thing has been
done for him.
The saving force has to attack the
powers in possession. Only those who have helped
in wresting men free from sin can tell what a stiff
fight it often is. Here is an intellectual professional
man who goes off for a secret spree about once in
sixty days; a respectable woman who has come under
the opium habit; a boy who is both a cigarette fiend
and sexually weak; a man who domineers and cows his
wife and family; a woman who has reduced her husband
to slavery to supply her expensive tastes; a girl who
shirks all work and throws the burden of her selfish
life on a hard-worked mother; a college man whose
parents are straining all their resources and using
up their security for old age to keep him at college,
and who gambles complete the catalogue
for yourself. To make these individuals over
into true citizens of the Kingdom of God and loyal
fellow-workers of their fellow-men means constructive
conflict of a high order. It has been done.(4)
II
The problem of evil becomes far more
complicated when evil is socialized. The simplest
and most familiar form of that is the boys’ gang.
Here is a group of young humans who get their fun
and adventure by pulling the whiskers of the law.
They idealize vice and crime. Leadership in their
group is won by proficiency in profanity, gambling,
obscenity, and slugging. The gang assimilates
its members; there is regimentation of evil.
It acts as a channel of tradition; the boy of fifteen
teaches the boy of twelve what he has learned from
the boy of eighteen.
How is the problem of evil affected
when the powers of human society, which usually restrain
the individual from vice and rebellion, are used to
urge him into it? Should the strategy of the Kingdom
of God be adjusted to that situation? It is not
enough to win individuals away from the gangs.
Can the gang spirit itself be christianized and used
to restrain and stimulate the young for good?
Has this been done, and where, and how? Is Christian
institutional work sufficient to cope with the problem?
What readjustments in the recreational and educational
outfit of our American communities are needed to give
a wholesome outlet to the spirit of play and adventure,
and to train the young for their life work? Would
such an outfit do the work without personal leadership
inspired by religion?
Christian evangelism in the past has
not had an adequate understanding of the power of
the group. In what connections has the Church
shown a true valuation of the social factor in sin
and redemption? At what points has its strategy
been ineffective in dealing with socialized evil?
What contributions can social science make to the
efficiency of evangelism? Would a correct scientific
analysis of the constructive and disintegrating forces
in society be enough to do saving work?
III
The bad gangs of the young are usually
held together by a misdirected love of play and adventure.
The dangerous combinations of adults are consolidated
by “the cohesive power of plunder.”
That makes them a far more difficult proposition.
Any local attack on saloons and vice
resorts furnishes a laboratory demonstration of socialized
evil. The object of both kinds of institutions
is to make big profit by catering to desires which
induce men to spend freely. Music and sociability
are used as a bait. The people who profit by
this trade are held together by the fear of a common
danger. Since the community uses political means
of curbing or suppressing the vice business, the vice
group goes into politics to prevent it. It seeks
to control the police, the courts, the political machines
by sharing part of its profits. Lawyers, officials,
newspaper proprietors, and real estate men are linked
up and summoned like a feudal levy in case of danger.
Drugstores, doctors, chauffeurs, messenger boys, and
all kinds of people are used to bring in trade and
make it secure. The exploded fictions of alcoholism
are kept circulating. Like a tape-worm in the
intestines, these articulated and many-jointed parasitic
organizations of vice make our communities sick, dirty,
and decadent.
We have learned to read the sordid
trail of the drink and vice traffic in American communities.
There is another kind of organized evil, even more
ancient, pervasive, and deadly, which few understand,
though it has left a trail sufficiently terrible.
Wherever we look in the history of
the older nations, we see an alignment of two fundamental
classes. The one is born to toil, stunted by toil,
and gets its class characteristics by toil. The
other is characterized by the pleasures and arts of
leisure, is physically and mentally developed by leisure,
and proud and jealous of its leisure. This class
is always class-conscious; its groups, however antagonistic,
always stand together against the class of toil.
Its combination of leisure and wealth is conditioned
on the power of taking tribute from the labor of many.
In order to do this with safety, it must control political
power, the military outfit, the power of making, interpreting
and executing the laws, and the forces forming public
opinion.
Before the advent of industrialism
and political democracy, it secured its income by
controlling the land and the government of nations;
and the effects of its control can be read in the
condition of the rural population of Russia, Austria,
Eastern Germany, Italy, France before the Revolution,
England, and especially Ireland. The development
of industry has changed the problem of economic and
political control; but the essentials remain, as we
can see in the condition of industrial communities
and the history of labor legislation.
The fundamental sin of all dominant
classes has been the taking of unearned incomes.
Political oppression has always been a corollary of
economic parasitism, a means to an end. The combination
of the two constitutes the largest and most continuous
form of organized evil in human history.
Jesus used the illustration of pegs
maliciously driven into the path to make men stumble
and fall. It would require some illustration drawn
from modern machinery to express the wholesale prostration
of bodies and souls where covetousness has secured
continuous power and has been able to get in its full
work. Anyone who has ever looked with human understanding
at the undersized and stupid peasants of countries
ruled by their landlord class, or at the sordid homes
and pleasures of miners or industrial workers where
some corporation feared neither God nor the law, ought
to get a comprehension of the power of evil that has
rested like an iron yoke on humanity.
We think most readily of the children
of the poor as a product of exploitation; underfed
and overstimulated, cut off from the clean pleasures
of nature, often tainted with vice before knowledge
has come, and urged along by the appetites and cruel
selfishness of older persons, they are a standing
accusation against society itself.(5) Jesus would have
felt that the children of the rich are an even worse
product of exploitation than the poor. When “society”
plays, it burns up the labor of thousands like fireworks.
The only possible justification for the aggregations
of wealth is that the rich are to act as the trustees
and directors of the wealth of society; but their
children except in conspicuous and fine
exceptions are put out of contact with the
people whom they must know if they are to serve them,
so that it takes heroic effort on the part of noble
exceptions to get in contact with the people once
more, and to discover how they live. In all nations
the atmosphere of the aristocratic groups drugs the
sense of obligation, and possesses the mind with the
notion that the life and labor of men are made to play
tennis with. The existence of great permanent
groups, feeding but not producing, dominating and
directing the life of whole nations according to their
own needs, may well seem a supreme proof of the power
of evil in humanity.
IV
If evil is socialized, salvation must
be socialized. The organization of the Christian
Church is a recognition of the social factor in salvation.
It is not enough to have God, and Christ, and the Bible.
A group is needed, organized on Christian principles,
and expressing the Christian spirit, which will assimilate
the individual and gradually make him over into a
citizen of the Kingdom of God. Salvation will
rarely come to anyone without the mediation of some
individual or group which already has salvation.
It may be very small and simple. “Where
two or three are gathered in my name, there am I in
the midst of them.” That saying recognizes
that an additional force is given to religion by its
embodiment in a group of believers. Professor
Royce has recently reasserted in modern terms the
old doctrine that “there is no salvation outside
of the Church,” calling the Church “the
beloved community.” Of course the question
is how intensively Christian the Church can make its
members. That will depend on the question how
Christian the Church itself is, and there’s the
rub.
The Church is the permanent social
factor in salvation. But it has cause to realize
that many social forces outside its immediate organization
must be used, if the entire community is to be christianized.
In the earliest centuries Christianity
was practically limited to the life within the Church.
Being surrounded by a hostile social order, and compelled
to fence off its members, it created a little duplicate
social order within the churches where it sought to
realize the distinctively Christian social life.
Its influence there was necessarily restricted mainly
to individual morality, family life, and neighborly
intercourse, and here it did fundamental work in raising
the moral standards. On the other hand, it failed
to reorganize industry, property, and the State.
Even if Christians had had an intelligent social and
political outlook, any interference with the Roman
Empire by the low-class adherents of a forbidden religion
was out of the question. When the Church was recognized
and favored under Constantine and his successors, it
had lost its democratic composition and spirit, and
the persons who controlled it were the same sort of
men who controlled the State.
The early age of the Church has had
a profound influence in fixing the ideals and aims
of later times. The compulsory seclusion and confinement
of the age of persecution are supposed to mark the
mission of the Church. As long as the social
life in our country was simple and rural, the churches,
when well led, were able to control the moral life
of entire communities. But as social organization
became complex and the solidarity of neighborhood
life was left behind, the situation got beyond the
institutional influence of the churches. Evidently
the fighting energies of Christianity will have to
make their attack on broader lines, and utilize the
scientific knowledge of society, which is now for the
first time at the command of religion, and the forces
set free by political and social democracy. We
can not restrict the modern conflict with evil to the
defensive tactics of a wholly different age. Wherever
organized evil opposes the advance of the Kingdom
of God, there is the battle-front. Wherever there
is any saving to be done, Christianity ought to be
in it. The intensive economic and sociological
studies of the present generation of college students
are a preparation for this larger warfare with evil.
These studies will receive their moral dignity and
religious consecration when they are put at the service
of Jesus Christ and the Kingdom of God.
Suggestions for Thought and Discussion
I. The Natural Drift
1. If left alone, which way do
we tend? Does a normal and sound individual need
spiritual reinforcement to live a good life?
2. How do you account for the
fact that the noblest movements are so easily debased?
II. Jesus and Human Sin
1. Did Jesus take a friendly
or a gloomy view of human nature? How did the
fact of sin in humanity impress him?
2. Why did he condemn so sternly
those who caused the weak to stumble? Estimate
the relative force of the natural weakness of human
nature, and of the pressure of socialized evil, when
individuals go wrong.
3. Do you agree with the exposition
in the Daily Reading for the Fourth Day? Do men
want to be let alone? Is this an evidence of sinful
tendency?
4. What personal experiences
of Jesus prompted the parable of the tares?
Was the conception of Satan in Jewish religion of individual
or social origin? When did it have political
significance?
III. The Irrepressible Conflict
1. Why did Jesus foresee an inevitable
conflict if the Kingdom of God was to come? Has
history borne him out?
2. Does mystical religion involve
a man in conflict? Does ascetic religion?
Which books him for more conflict with social evil a
life set on the Kingdom of God on earth, or a faith
set on the life to come?
3. What form does the conflict
with evil take in our personal life? What reinforcement
does the Christian religion as a spiritual faith offer
us? What personal experience have we of its failure
or its effectiveness?
4. What is meant by evil being
socialized? In what ways does this increase the
ability of evil to defend and propagate itself?
5. What are the most dangerous
forms of organized evil today? How do they work?
6. What are the most disastrous
“stumbling blocks” today for working people?
For business men? For students?
7. The Church sings many militant
hymns. Is the Church as a whole a fighting force
today?
IV. For Special Discussion
1. How should an individual go
about it to fight concrete and socialized evils in
a community?
2. How can a church get into
the fight? Should the Church go into politics?
Why, or why not?
3. Would Christianity be just
as influential as a social power of salvation if the
Christian Church did not exist?
4. Will the fight against evil
ever be won? If not, is it worth fighting?