A Review And A Challenge
The Social Principles of Jesus
Demand Personal Allegiance and Social Action
DAILY READINGS
First Day: The Social Mission of Christians
Ye are the salt of the earth....
Ye are the light of the
world. Mat:13,
14.
“Jesus speaks here with the
consciousness of an historic mission to the whole
of humanity. Yet it was a Nazarene carpenter speaking
to a group of Galilean peasants and fishermen.
Under the circumstances, and at the time, it was an
utterance of the most daring faith faith
in himself, faith in them, faith in what he was putting
into them, faith in faith. Jesus failed and was
crucified, first his body by his enemies, and then
his spirit by the men who bore his name. But
that failure was so amazing a success that today it
takes an effort on our part to realize that it required
any faith on his part to inaugurate the Kingdom of
God and to send out his apostolate."(7)
If the antiseptic and enlightening
influence of the sincere followers of Jesus were eliminated
from our American communities, what would be the presumable
social effects?
Second Day: The Great Initiator of the Kingdom
of God
At that season Jesus answered 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. All things have been delivered unto
me of my Father: and no one knoweth the Son,
save the Father; neither doth any know the Father,
save the Son, and he to whomsoever the Son willeth
to reveal him. Come unto me, all ye that
labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am
meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find
rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy,
and my burden is light. Mat:25-30.
This is one of the most thrilling
passages in the Bible. It has always been understood
as a call to intimate religion, as the appeal of a
personal Saviour to those who are loaded with sin and
weary of worldliness. But in fact it expresses
the sense of a revolutionary mission to society.
Jesus had the consciousness of a unique
relation to the Father, which made him the mediator
of a new understanding of God and of life .
This new insight was making a new intellectual alignment,
leaving the philosophers and scholars as they were,
and fertilizing the minds of simple people .
It is an historical fact that the brilliant body of
intellectuals of the first and second centuries was
blind to what proved to be the most fruitful and influential
movement of all times, and it was left to slaves and
working men to transmit it and save it from suppression
at the cost of their lives.
Then Jesus turns to the toiling and
heavy laden people about him with the offer of a new
kind of leadership none of the brutal self-assertion
of the Caesars and of all conquerors here, but a gentle
and humble spirit, and an obedience which was pleasure
and brought release to the soul.
These words express his consciousness
of being different, and of bearing within him the
beginnings of a new spiritual constitution of humanity.
When individuals have really come
under the new law of Christ, does Jesus make good?
Would he also make good if humanity
based its collective life on the social principles
which we have studied?
If the choice is between Cæsar and
Christ, which shall it be?
Third Day: The Kingdom of Truth
Pilate therefore entered again into
the Praetorium, and called Jesus, and said
unto him, Art thou the King of the Jews? Jesus
answered, Sayest thou this of thyself, or did others
tell it thee concerning me? Pilate answered,
Am I a Jew? Thine own nation and the chief
priests, delivered thee unto me: what hast thou
done? 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.
Pilate saith unto him, What is truth?
And when he had said this,
he went out again unto the Jews, and
saith unto them, I find no
crime in him. John 18:33-38.
All kingdoms rest on force; formerly
on swords and bayonets, now on big guns. To overthrow
them you must prepare more force, bigger guns.
Jesus was accused before Pilate of being leader of
a force revolution aiming to make him king. He
claimed the kingship, but repudiated the force.
To his mind the absence of force resistance was characteristic
of his whole undertaking. Instead, his power
was based on the appeal and attractiveness of truth.
When Pilate heard about “truth” he thought
he had a sophist before him, one more builder of metaphysical
systems, and expressed the skepticism of the man on
the street: “What is truth?” But Jesus
was not a teacher of abstract doctrine, whatever his
expounders have made of him. His mind was bent
on realities. If we substitute “reality”
for “truth” in his saying here, we shall
get near his thought.
Which is more durable, power based
on force, or power based on spiritual coherence?
Fourth Day: A Mental Transformation
I beseech you therefore, brethren, by
the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living
sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is your
spiritual service. And be not fashioned according
to this world: but be ye transformed by the
renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what
is the good and acceptable and perfect will of
God. Ro:1, 2.
In the first century the Christians
were a new social group, confronting the social order
of the Roman Empire with a new religious faith, a
revolutionary hope, and a powerful impulse of fraternity.
Those who had come out of pagan society still felt
the pull of its loose pleasures and moral maxims,
and of its idolatry. Paul here challenges them
to submit fully to the social assimilation of the
new group. It involved an intellectual renewal,
a new spiritual orientation, which must have been
searching and painful. It involved the loss of
many social pleasures, of business profit and civic
honor, and it might at any time mean banishment, torture,
and death. The altar symbol of sacrifice might
become a scarlet reality. Yet see with what triumphant
joy and assurance Paul speaks.
If a student should dedicate himself
to the creation of a Christian social order today,
would it still require an intellectual renewing?
Would it cramp him or enlarge him?
Fifth Day: The Distinctive Contribution of Christ
There was the true light, even the light
which lighteth every man, coming into the world.
He was in the world, and the world was made through
him, and the world knew him not. He came unto
his own, and they that were his own received him
not. But as many as received him, to them
gave he the right to become children of God, even to
them that believe on his name: who were born,
not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor
of the will of man, but of God. And the Word
became flesh, and dwelt among us (and we beheld his
glory, glory as of the only begotten from the
Father), full of grace and truth. For the
law was given through Moses; grace and truth came
through Jesus Christ. John 1:9-14, 17.
Here is the tragedy of the Gospel
story, seen from a long perspective and stated in
terms of Greek philosophy. The Light which lighteth
every man, the Logos through whom God had created
the kosmos, had come to this world in human
form, and been rejected. But some had received
him, and these had received a new life through him,
which made them children of God. They had discovered
in him a new kind of spiritual splendor, characterized
by “grace and truth.” Even Moses had
contributed only law to humanity; Christ was identified
with grace and truth.
How would you paraphrase the statements
of John to express the attitude of nineteen centuries
to Christ?
What has he in fact done for those who have received
him?
What would be the modern equivalent
of “grace and truth” to express the distinctive
contribution of Christ to human history?
Sixth Day: The Master of the Greatest Game
Therefore let us also, seeing we are
compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses,
lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth
so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the
race that is set before us, looking unto Jesus
the author and perfecter of our faith, who for
the joy that was set before him endured the cross,
despising shame, and hath sat down at the right hand
of the throne of God. For consider him that
hath endured such gainsaying of sinners against
himself, that ye wax not weary, fainting in your
souls. He:1-3.
The man who wrote the little treatise
from which this is quoted saw the history of humanity
summed up in the live spirits who had the power of
projection into the future. Faith is the quality
of mind which sees things before they are visible,
which acts on ideals before they are realities, and
which feels the distant city of God to be more dear,
substantial, and attractive than the edible and profitable
present. Read Hebrews 11. So he calls on
Christians to take up the same manner of life, and
compares them with men running a race in an amphitheatre
packed with all the generations of the past who are
watching them make their record. But he bids them
keep their eye on Jesus who starts them at the line
and will meet them at the goal, and who has set the
pace for good and fleet men for all time.
What is the social and evolutionary
value of the men of “faith” in the sense
of Hebrews 11?
Have we left Jesus behind us by this time?
Seventh Day: The Beginning of the Greatest Movement
in History
Now after John was delivered up, Jesus
came into Galilee, preaching the gospel of God,
and saying, The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom
of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe in the
gospel.
And passing along by the sea of Galilee,
he saw Simon and Andrew the brother of Simon casting
a net in the sea; for they were fishers.
And Jesus said unto them, Come ye after me, and I will
make you to become fishers of men. And straightway
they left the nets, and followed him. And
going on a little further, he saw James the son
of Zebedee, and John his brother, who also were in
the boat mending the nets. And straightway
he called them: and they left their father
Zebedee in the boat with the hired servants, and
went after him. Mark 1:14-20.
Here we have the beginning of organized
Christianity. This is the germinal cell of that
vast social movement of which foreign missions, the
establishment of the American Republic, and the modern
labor movement are products. It began with repentance,
faith, and self-sacrificing action, and it will always
have to advance by the same means. To those four
men Jesus was an incarnate challenge. He dared
them to come, and promised to put their lives on a
higher level. He stands over against us with the
same challenge. He points to the blackened fields
of battle, to the economic injustice and exploitation
of industry, to the paganism and sexualism of our
life. Is this old order of things to go on forever?
Will our children, and their children, still be ground
through the hopper? Or have we faith to adventure
our life in a new order, the Kingdom of God?
Study for the Week
Has our study of the “Social
Principles of Jesus” revealed a clear and consistent
scheme of life, worthy of our respect?
I
We have seen that three convictions
were axiomatic within Jesus, so that all his reasoning
and his moral imperatives were based on them, just
as all thought and work in physics is based on gravitation.
These convictions were the sacredness of life and
personality, the solidarity of the human family, and
the obligation of the strong to stand up for all whose
life is impaired or whose place within humanity is
denied.
It can not be questioned that these
convictions were a tremendous and spontaneous force
in the spirit of Jesus. That alone suffices to
align him with all idealistic minds, to whom man is
more than matter, more than labor force, a mysterious
participant of the spiritual powers of the universe.
It aligns him with all men of solidaristic conviction,
who are working for genuine community life in village
and city, for a nation with fraternal institutions
and fraternal national consciousness, and for a coming
family of nations and races. It aligns him with
all exponents of the democratic social spirit of our
day, who feel the wrongs of the common people and
are trying to make the world juster and more fraternal.
The best forces of modern life are
converging along these lines. There is no contradiction
between them and the spirit of Jesus. On the contrary,
they are largely the product of his spirit, diffused
and organized in the Western world. He was the
initiator; we are the interpreters and agents.
Nor has he been outstripped like an early inventor
and discoverer whose crude work is honored only because
others were able to improve on it. Quite the
contrary; the more vividly these spiritual convictions
glow in the heart of any man, the more will he feel
that Jesus is still ahead, still the inspiring force.
As soon as we get beyond theory to life and action,
we know that we are dependent for the spiritual powers
in modern life on the continued influence of Jesus
Christ over the lives of others.
II
We saw in the second place that Jesus
had a social ideal, the Reign of God on earth, in
which God’s will would be done. This ideal
with him was not a Utopian and academic fancy, but
the great prize and task of life toward which he launched
all his energies. He called men to turn away from
the evil ways of the old order, and to get a mind
fit for the new. He set the able individuals
to work, and put the spirit of intense labor and devotion
into them. He proposed to effect the transition
from the old order to the new by expanding the area
of moral obligation and raising the standards of moral
relationships.
By having such a social ideal at all,
he draws away from all who are stationary and anchored
in the world as it is; from all who locate the possibility
of growth and progress in the individual only; and
from all whose desire for perfection runs away from
this world to a world beyond the grave.
By moving toward the new social order
of the Kingdom of God with such wholeness of determination,
he is the constant rebuke for all of us who are trying
to live with a “divided allegiance,” straddling
between the iniquities of force, profit, and inhumanity,
and the fraternal righteousness of the Gospel we profess
to believe. Jesus at least was no time-server,
no Mr. Facing-both-ways, no hypocrite; and whenever
we touch his elbow by inadvertence, a shiver of reality
and self-contempt runs through us.
III
We saw in the third place that Jesus
dealt with serious intelligence with the great human
instincts that go wrong.
The capacity for leadership and the
desire for it have fastened the damning institutions
of tyranny and oppression on humanity and tied us up
so completely that the rare historical chances of freedom
and progress have been like a tumultuous and brief
escape. Yet Jesus saw that ambition was not to
be suppressed, but to be yoked to the service of society.
In the past, society was allowed to advance and prosper
only if this advanced the prosperity and security
of its ruling classes. Jesus proposed that this
be reversed, so that the leaders would have to earn
power and honor by advancing the welfare of society
by distinguished service at cost to themselves.
The desire for private property has
been the chief outlet for selfish impulses antagonistic
to public welfare. To gain private wealth men
have slaughtered the forests, contaminated the rivers,
drained the fertility of the soil, monopolized the
mineral wealth of the country, enslaved childhood,
double-yoked motherhood, exhausted manhood, hog-tied
community undertakings, and generally acted as the
dog in the manger toward humanity. Jesus opposed
accumulation without moral purpose, the inhumanity
of property differences, and the fatal absorption of
money-making. Yet he was not ascetic. It
is probably safe to say that he would not be against
private property in so far as it serves the common
good, and not against public property at all.
Like ambition and the property instinct,
the religious impulse may go wrong, and subject society
to its distortions or tyranny. Jesus always stood
for an ethical and social outcome of religion.
He sought to harness the great power of religion to
righteousness and love. With a mind so purely
religious we might expect that he would make all earthly
and social interests subservient to personal religion.
The fact that he reversed it, seems clear proof that
he was socially minded and that the Kingdom of God
as a right social organism was the really vital thing
to him.
IV
We have seen, finally, that Jesus
had a deep sense of the sin and evil in the world.
Human nature is frail; men of evil will are powerful;
organized evil is in practical control. Consequently
social regeneration involves not only growth but conflict.
The way to the Kingdom of God always has been and
always will be a via dolorosa. The cross
is not accidental, but is a law of social progress.
These conceptions together seem to
shape up into a consistent conception of social life.
It is not the modern scientific scheme, but a religious
view of life. But it blends incomparably better
with modern science than the scholastic philosophy
or theology of an age far nearer to us than Jesus.
It is strange how little modern knowledge has to discount
in the teachings of Jesus. As Romanes once pointed
out,(8) Plato followed Socrates and lived amidst a
blaze of genius never since equalled; he is the greatest
representative of human reason in the direction of
spirituality unaided by revelation; “but the
errors in the dialogues reach to absurdity in reason
and to sayings shocking to the moral sense.”
The writer of this little book has
come back to an intensive study of Jesus at intervals
of years, and every time it was like a fresh revelation,
leaving a sense of mental exhilaration and a new sense
of joy in truth. Never was there a feeling that
Jesus was exhausted and had nothing more to say.
For a true valuation of his intellectual
contribution to mankind we must remember that we have
not a page of his own writing. We are dependent
on the verbal memory of his disciples; so far as we
know, nothing was written down for years. The
fragments which survived probably had to stand the
ordeal of translation from the Aramaic to the Greek.
Simply from the point of view of literature, it is
an amazing thing that anything characteristic in Jesus
survived at all. But it did. His sayings
have the sparkle of genius and personality; the illustrations
and epigrams which he threw off in fertile profusion
are still clinchers; even his humor plays around them.
Critics undertake to fix on the genuine sayings by
internal evidence. Only a mind of transcendent
originality could win its way to posterity through
such obstructions.
But we ought not to forget the brevity
of our material when we try to build up a coherent
conception of his outlook on society. There is
little use in stickling on details. The main
thing is the personality of Jesus, his religious and
ethical insight into the nature and needs of the social
life of mankind, the vital power of religious conviction
which he was able to put behind righteousness, and
the historical force which he set going through history.
From the indirect influences which
Jesus Christ set in motion, no man or woman or child
in America can escape. We live on him. Even
those who attack the Christian Church, or who repudiate
what they suppose Christ to stand for, do so with
spiritual weapons which they have borrowed from him.
But it does make a great difference whether the young
men and women of our day give their conscious and
intelligent allegiance to Christianity or hold aloof
in misunderstanding. Without them the Christian
movement will mark time on old issues. With them
it will dig new irrigation channels and string the
wires for new power transmission.
In return, Christianity can do more
for students than they themselves are likely to realize
in youth. Men grow tired. Their moral enthusiasm
flags. Scientific sociology may remain academic,
cold, and ineffective. We need inspiration, impulse,
will power, and nothing can furnish such steady accessions
of moral energy as living religion. Science and
the Christian faith combined are strong. Those
who succeed in effecting a combination of these two
without insincerity or cowardice are the coming leaders.
If a student’s mind has given
inward consent to the teachings of Jesus in this course
of study, that constitutes an appeal for personal
discipleship. Can we go with Christ in living
out these principles, and meanwhile draw on his spiritual
wealth to build up our growing life? If there
is a student who can not at present affirm all that
the Christian Church holds concerning the nature of
Christ, why should he not approach him as the earliest
disciples did, by personal love and obedience, following
him and cooperating with him in the business of the
Kingdom of God, and arriving in time at full faith
in his Messiahship? A great and firm faith is
the product and prize of a lifetime of prayer and loving
action. “Light is sown to the righteous.”
As we gather the wisdom of life, and find that while
we move from knowledge to knowledge, we are also advancing
from mystery to mystery, many of us will be ready and
glad to join in the highest affirmation of faith about
Jesus Christ, in whom we have learned to see God.
“If Jesus Christ is
a man,
And only a man, I say
That of all mankind I cleave
to him,
And to him I cleave alway.
“If Jesus Christ is
a God,
And the only God, I swear
I will follow him through
heaven and hell,
The earth, the sea, and the
air.”
RICHARD WATSON
GILDER.
If Christianity henceforth is to discharge
its full energy in the regeneration of social life,
it especially needs the allegiance of college men
and women who have learned to understand to some degree
the facts and laws of human society. The development
of what is called “Social Christianity”
or “the social gospel,” is a fusion between
the new understanding created by the social sciences,
and the teachings and moral ideals of Christianity.
This combination was inevitable; it has already registered
social effects of the highest importance; if it can
win the active minds of the present generation of
college students, it will swing a part of the enormous
organized forces of the Christian Church to bear on
the social tasks of our American communities, and that
will help to create the nobler America which we see
by faith.
Christians have never fully understood
Christianity. A purer comprehension of its tremendous
contents is always necessary. Think what it would
signify to a local community if all sincere Christian
people in it should interpret their obligation in
the social terms which we have been using; if they
should seek not only their own salvation, but the reign
of God in their own town; if they should cultivate
the habit of seeing a divine sacredness in every personality,
should assist in creating the economic foundations
for fraternal solidarity, and if, as Christians, they
should champion the weak in their own community.
We need a power of renewal in our American communities
that will carry us across the coming social transition,
and social Christianity can supply it by directing
the plastic force of the old faith of our fathers
to the new social tasks.
Jesus was the initiator of the Kingdom
of God. It is a real thing, now in operation.
It is within us, and among us, gaining ground in our
intellectual life and in our social institutions.
It overlaps and interpenetrates all existing organizations,
raising them to a higher level when they are good,
resisting them when they are evil, quietly revolutionizing
the old social order and changing it into the new.
It suffers terrible reverses; we are in the midst
of one now; but after a time it may become apparent
that a master hand has turned the situation and laid
the basis of victory on the wrecks of defeat.
The Kingdom of God is always coming; you can never
lay your hand on it and say, “It is here.”
But such fragmentary realizations of it as we have,
alone make life worth living. The memories which
are still sweet and dear when the fire begins to die
in the ashes, are the memories of days when we lived
fully in the Kingdom of Heaven, toiling for it, suffering
for it, and feeling the stirring of the godlike and
eternal life within us. The most humiliating
and crushing realization is that we have betrayed our
heavenly Fatherland and sold out for thirty pieces
of silver. We often mistake it. We think
we see its banner in the distance, when it is only
the bloody flag of the old order. But a man learns.
He comes to know whether he is in God’s country,
especially if he sees the great Leader near him.
Suggestions for Thought and Discussion
I. The Social Principles of Jesus
1. Sum up the social principles
of Jesus which we have worked out in this course.
2. Do they seem incisive?
Would they demand far-reaching social changes?
What changes?
3. What conceptions acquired
in philosophical and social science studies connect
fruitfully with the principles of Jesus? Do any
scientific conceptions conflict with the essential
ideas of Jesus?
II. Social Salvation
1. What is your frank estimate
of the value of the social principles of Jesus as
a religious and ethical basis for the regeneration
of society?
2. Does the spiritual development
of modern life tend toward the position of Jesus or
away from it?
3. What opportunities and methods
does modern life offer for carrying out these principles
in our social order?
4. If society cannot be saved
under the spiritual leadership of Jesus, how can it
be saved?
III. The Leader
1. As this course proceeded,
has our respect or reverence for Jesus Christ increased
or diminished? In what ways?
2. Would it be possible to join
the forward Christian forces in working for the Kingdom
of God even if the theological questions are still
unsolved in our minds?
3. What seem now the best methods
of carrying out these principles in our own community
and in the world?
IV. For Special Discussion
1. Does the salvation of society
seem to make the salvation of the individual unnecessary
or trivial? Have you lost interest in it?
2. How should social and personal salvation connect?
3. What would a loyal religious
dedication to Christ and Christianity mean to our
scientific social intelligence?
4. What would it mean to the course of our life?