See eee itn iiaet f Tf ie i vi eas Pa Ta eee : =. Sr ae > acta es ana —— tS > peabs 3 : See oe es ye Ros ES erie he ENA SWS SAS 08 : ZZ OF PRINEES K Ko MEX \ 3, APR 19° 227 : ~ A 8 eae her, John at: he a A new pproach f Tb Getta Rae J f % * ive te } “' 2 ae $i TON rie nd bey PROFESSOR JOHN CLARK ARCHER IN ARABIAN GARB A NEW APPROACH IN MISSIONARY EDUCATION ~ APR 1S 327° La, OGICAL seu o = = = © A Parish Project By JOHN CLARK ARCHER Author of: Mystical Elements in Mohammed; China in the Local Parish, etc. MISSIONARY EDUCATION MOVEMENT OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA NEW YORK PROEBSSOS JOHN CLARK ARCHER, B.D., Ph.D., is head of the Department of Missions in Yale University, and Li- brarian of the Day Missions Library. He has served in the Christian ministry at home, and as an educational missionary in India. During the World War he served with the Y.M.C.A. as director of educa- tional work among the British and Indian troops in Mesopotamia. He has traveled in all the major Asiatic mission fields. His work at Yale is mainly in Comparative Re- ligion, the History of Mohammedanism, and Missionary Education. COPYRIGHT, 1926, BY MISssIONARY EpUCATION MovEMENT OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA Printed in the United States of America To THE REV. ROY MARTIN HOUGHTON, D.D. AND His PARISHIONERS OF THE CHURCH OF THE REDEEMER NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT II. IIT. IV. CONTENTS Preface . THE SUBJECT The Question of “Missions’—A Definition — The Open Mind—Essential Religion—Religious Origins—Development of Religions—The Com- plex Character of Religion—The Fruits of Vari- ous Religions—Our Motive. ORGANIZATION OF THE PROGRAM A Director—A Secretary—Organization Meet- ing—A Survey—Schedule—Reference Library —The Program. PROJECTS General Proicctla Masans Byoiecen hdver tion Project—Woman and Home Life Project— Marriage Project—Afternoon Visit Project— Games and Child Life Project. THE GRAND PROJECT . : Preparation in Generate Finances Committers —Dramatizations—Stories—The Public Reciter —Project Program and Schedule. ix 13 70 88 143 ILLUSTRATIONS FACING PAGE Portrait of Professor Archer Frontispiece Dr. Watson L. Phillips in the rdle of Mohammed . 96 The Masjid al-jawwab CN ae DBT Nl Ret ard an Mohammed and his grandsons, Hasan and Hussein 106 An Arab village school SER oC SN OA RU ha 8 SAMAR Le TEPER CATE (ily yi okies ss Ltr a ponihevakee OUNLeeT LNRM GM NG i ee PORIRUA MATETIY SAU Cg Him ei ae gi Teer Ni UR UMT ARN a Na ea PERU ALAS E SE TOST AMI CMG e Sig) fal bia) gre Oe nae a eae Hunouse in vlosiem lands: oh) 9 se ok . 148 Mere MEME A CAL GW Cpt, rN ation sk AN arc ealnguanen LC) MSU TERDO CCEA 08 a 8a, Tee Pea nihinrann pia git y diay memetaroiseritor WK erbala ot i. Vay ch woe eye PREFACE It is the author’s hope and desire that these words may serve as the reader’s introduction to this book. If so, this preface will offer the reader a statement of fact, an explanation, and an appeal. A statement of fact. The world is not Christian. Among a billion and a half people over the earth only five hundred and fifty millions are nominally Chris- tian, and much of the “Christianity” of the world is defective. Among the four hundred millions of Chinese only three millions are nominally of the total Christian community. Several strong faiths are in competition with Chris- tianity for the allegiance of men. Here and there these rival faiths are gaining in the contest. The Christian population of Japan is estimated as less today in pro- portion to the total population than it was in the early days of the Church in Japan. Not only are certain non-Christian gains being registered in various areas of the earth, but the mis- sionary enterprise as such has lost its momentum of late in some of its phases conte in some of its fields of operation. An explanation. This book raises again the ques- tion of “missions,”’ and suggests a new approach to the study of the non-Christian faiths and to the faiths themselves with which we deal in the furtherance of Christian missions. It cannot be demonstrated that the non-Christian religions are meeting the needs of men. Is it possible for Christianity to meet their needs? It is perfectly obvious in the light of impres- 1x x PREFACE sive facts that more attention than ever must be given to this question. An appeal. The appeal is frankly in behalf of the book, that it may have a fair reading. The attempt is made here to combine a discussion of the philosophy of the situation with the practical demonstration of the issues involved. The reader is asked to consider first of all the underlying theory of missions in the light of the present situation. A serious chapter greets him, therefore, at the outset, in which the author seeks to show “what it’s all about.’”’ It is a long chapter, but is divided for the reader’s convenience into sections with headings to indicate the contents. Without this chapter the rest of the book would have little value for the accomplishment of its purpose. For that matter, the chapter itself would have little value without its companion materials. The book must stand or fall as a whole. The projects in this book deal mostly with aspects of Mohammedanism, although the principles set forth in the book are applicable to the interpretation of any faith or field. May we add a brief statement about Islam? We begin our study and work with a traditional prejudice against the Moslem and his faith. We should take pains to rid ourselves of this disadvantage. We still labor under the Crusader complex. The mind that was in Europe when the armies of the Cross were battling at the walls of Antioch, Acre, and Jerusalem, or defending themselves at Tours and Vienna against the bearers of the Crescent still lingers in us, the heirs of Europe. PREFACE xi We are to some extent victims also of the notion that the Turk is altogether unspeakable and that the Arab is merely a Near Eastern trader and hard-fisted in the bargain. It will surprise us to learn many good things about both men. Certainly the world, especially our Western world, would have been much the poorer in thought and life had the Arabs not been for cen- turies the custodians and distributors of culture. Then, too, we have the impression that Islam is adamant, unchanging, and defiant, and that we waste good time and effort in any attempt to dislodge a despicable host entrenched in a rocky, isolated fastness. We have taken all too little account of the true situa- tion. These are likely the three major elements in our traditional prejudice. Let us dismiss them, or at least open our minds to a reéxamination of them as we pro- ceed with our present study of things Islamic. This book is dedicated to the pastor and people of the Church of the Redeemer of New Haven, Con- necticut, at whose invitation the projects as presented in these pages were undertaken, and with whose co- operation they were carried through in the interest of their own local program of missionary education and for the sake of whatever value their work might have for the Christian Church at large. That the book finds its way to the larger parish is due to the generous and appreciative interest of the Missionary Education Movement. Joun CLARK ARCHER New Haven, Connecticut August, 1926 A NEW APPROACH IN MISSIONARY EDUCATION I THE SUBJECT HIS book deals with the subject of mission- ary education in the local church and parish. The term “missionary education” means in this connection the education of the local parish in matters relative and vital to the Church Universal. We pro- ceed on the assumption that distinct obligation rests upon each local church to share in the spread of the gospel of Christ throughout the earth, and that each group of Christians “at home” may not properly look upon a smaller parish than the whole world. It is not, however, merely a matter of obligation to the world parish; in these pages great emphasis is laid upon the remarkable results in education and outlook which come to the local church from its missionary educa- tional work. For convenience we are adopting in this book a procedure which sets the Church in “foreign” lands over against the Church “at home,” although the method of the book is applicable to any form of “mis- sions,’ home or foreign, to use passing terms. We accept and hold to the idea that definite further re- sponsibility rests upon the home constituency of Chris- tians to support and prosecute the foreign missionary enterprise, and that they should be appropriately edu- cated for the task. In this we do not deny that Christian work both at home and abroad is essentially a common enterprise. Whatever border-line there is, 13 14 MISSIONARY EDUCATION lies rather between Christian and non-Christian than between West and East, or home and foreign. But we do maintain that certain lands and peoples are foreign to us and not easily understood, and so we aim to bring these lands and peoples as much as possible into the home consciousness. Nor do we deny that light will break out of the East and must be taken account of. Indeed, it seems to us that further Western mis- sionary effort in the Orient is warranted only if it be in the spirit and with the methods of cooperation be- tween West and East, especially between the Western Church and the Eastern. THE QUEsTION oF “MuissIoNns” It becomes evident after one gets something of the true perspective that the whole question of “‘missions” must be raised. And what a complex and comprehen- sive question it is, involving as it does things historical, psychological, theological, and much more besides. This book attempts to indicate the variety and extent of the situation. It deals, therefore, with the theo- retical as well as with the practical. It is futile to discuss missionary methods without considering most seriously the very problem of the missionary enterprise in itself. What is it, after all, that we should try to do under the present circumstances, and why should we try to do it? Itis proper to ask what and why, either before or in connection with how. And so the reader is asked to give serious attention to all phases of the problem as the book sets before him (1) the theory of mis- sionary education—the philosophy of it, so to speak; THE SUBJECT 15 (2) the organization of a parish-wide program; (3) materials and methods of missionary education. Among the materials unusual space is given to things Islamic, in consideration of the fact that because of the importance of the subject in the world’s life today many churches are studying Islam, and for the further reason that the author has just finished the presenta- tion of a Moslem Project in New Haven. These ma- terials, therefore, serve not only for illustration of the general principles discussed in this book, but also for special use in churches studying Islam. A DEFINITION The general problem which concerns us might be stated at the outset as: Our (Christian) interpretation of the essential character—that is, the origins, de- velopment, complexity, and fruits—of the non-Chris- tian religions, for the sake of understanding, apprecia- tion, cooperation, and Christianization—of ourselves as well as others. Too much is involved in the problem to be compressed adequately into thirty-four words. We must address ourselves to a discussion of the main points of the statement, after we have weighed it with care. THe Oren Minp Notice first of all the parenthetical word “Christian.” It is thus separated as a precaution and a warning against prejudice, or, to put it positively, as a sugges- tion of the desirability of open-mindedness. Interpre- tation is the important consideration, and we cannot 16 MISSIONARY EDUCATION interpret truly if we are handicapped by prejudice. Whatever the cause and the origin, we have developed, as a matter of plain fact, an unwarranted amount of prejudice in the direction of the non-Christian peoples and their religions. Pride of religion is a quality com- mon to all peoples, whether Jew, Moslem, Hindu, or Christian, and with it has come a closing of the mind, to a greater or lesser degree, against alien faiths. This has been and still is unfortunate, for it breeds misunderstandings, forestalls appreciation, blocks co- operation, and works harm to the very faith itself whose adherents are close-minded. We Christians have been by no means free from provincialism. We have lived in our own Western world, peculiarly re- mote from the East, whether with respect to geography, history, language, literature, or religion. We measure in miles our distance from Bombay and Tokyo, but how may we measure the interval between ours and the Hindu or the Japanese mind? If our geographical sense is weak, then what of our appreciation of foreign manners and customs? We have indifferently or de- liberately shut off most of the world from us, and have thus deprived ourselves of untold resources of culture. For one thing, we scarcely realize how large the world is. As children at school we find in our geogra- phies the map of New England occupying the whole of one page and that of the vast continent of Asia or Africa occupying the same amount of space. In spite of efforts made nowadays to the contrary, we still form disproportionate views of the major portions of the earth’s surface. The observation, “how small the world is,” often means that the rest of the world is THE SUBJECT 17 attached to our world somewhat as small barnacles to a huge vessel. We certainly do not realize how varied the world is. Our geographical mind is matched in other realms of mind. We are accustomed to “lump” foreign peoples and things and to feel that we have justly characterized them with some hasty phrase. They are so distant that they look small and uniform. We cannot see the con- trasts of lofty mountain and low plain, of sand-strewn desert and green-clad river-bank, of poverty and wealth, of education and ignorance, of high spiritual attainment and debased living. When reference is made in sermon or address to things foreign, it is usually by means of a general phrase. We have be- come accustomed to such expressions as “the idolatry of the Hindu,” “the fetishism of the African,” “the gross immorality of Shintoism,” “the millions without hope and without God in the world,” and “the total inadequacy of the non-Christian religions.”’ What we should be convinced of is the total inadequacy of a phrase. Can one balance with five words the weight of twenty centuries? How little we really know of our own Christian faith after years of study and ex- perience! Many vast areas of Church history, of the history of Christian doctrine, of Christian art, and of Chris- tian ethics remain as yet practically unknown soil to even the better-trained Christian. The very field of sacred Scripture itself is comparatively little known to the man in the pew, although he has had the benefit of years of Biblical exposition. Our college men dis- play at times a lamentable ignorance of our Bible, al- though they may have spent their allotted time in 18 MISSIONARY EDUCATION church schools. If, then, we little understand what is always with us, how great must be our ignorance and misunderstanding of what is remote! Nor is the remote unimportant, and to be ignored on that account. To come to know it is to realize its extreme importance. But we may never come to realize its value if we keep our minds closed against it. Of course we are, as a matter of fact—by birth, tra- dition, and choice—Christian in our approach to the problem before us. This we may say is unavoidable, but it should be, nevertheless, an advantage and not a handicap. That is, our being Christian should signify a real religious experience in Christ which should en- able and compel us to evaluate in appropriate terms the religious experience of other peoples whom we study and whose records we examine. Our being Christian should not mean that we are sectarian and narrow- minded in our approach to other faiths, with a type of Christianity that is more formal than spiritual, and therefore barred against the breaking of further light. On the one hand, “holding no form of creed, but con- templating all’—as Tennyson says of the soul in the “Palace of Art’—is entirely too abstract and objective to get valuable results from the task we are here assay- ing. It is indispensable to hold some form of faith. We cannot commend a free-thinking, purely critical attitude. “All things to all men” means nothing of the sort. One must have within the realm of religion con- victions born of religious experience, in order to evalu- ate the things of religion anywhere. But narrow- mindedness may be nearly as great an evil and as heavy a handicap as no particular religious allegiance at all. THE SUBJECT 19 In any case, neither extreme is commendable. We must be Christian with an open mind. It is interesting and significant that Buddha specified open-mindedness as the first necessary step in his Eight-fold Path of Release, and that he incorporated _ into the body of his own teaching certain elements of the older order, which he revised and adapted to his own ends. It is obvious that no one could accept a new faith without having.an open mind! What we Christians desire as we do missionary work throughout the world is open-mindedness on the part of our hearers; otherwise they cannot accept the new teaching. Buddha desired the same. He urged Hindus to have open minds with respect to their sacred scriptures, the Vedas, and with respect to him and his new message. This state is a common prerequisite at a certain stage. Is it not also commendable at any stage? Buddha would have had no ground in justice to say to his hearers, “Open your minds, receive the new teaching, then close your minds forever.” The attitude of the apostle Paul is worthy of notice in this connection. He was willing to see God in the experience of other men. He declared that God had not left himself without witness, even among the. na- tions that walked in their own ways, and that God is in reality not far from any nation or individual. He quotes with assent the words of the Greek poets who said, “For we are also his offspring.” In God do all men live, and move, and have their being, Paul thought. All this was, of course, after Paul’s conversion. He suggested to the Thessalonians that they “prove all 20 MISSIONARY EDUCATION things, and hold fast that which is good.” He warned them against the quenching of the Spirit. At Athens he ventured to interpret the “Unknown God” of the “very religious’? Athenians in terms of the God of his own Christian experience. Paul was himself a Jew; he lived and died a Jew; but he became a new man in Christ. Christianity was to him a new doctrine and a new life, meant for all men, “whether Jews or Greeks, whether bond or free.” He was able to distinguish Christianity from the Jew- ish elements in its origin, and from the Jewish forms in which it had been first presented. His conversion was a genuinely new religious experience. When, however, he went out as a leader among the early Christians who faced a world in which they were greatly outnumbered, he saw the necessity and the pro- priety of preaching Christ in a language which that world could understand and assimilate. The world of Paul was full of diversity, and he realized this fact. We have reason to think that the apostle took his reckoning from the entire situation. There was Greek culture and Roman government, Eastern mysticism and Western materialism. Beyond it all Paul saw the unity of the world in Christ. To bring about this consummation he entered upon the mission of preaching Christ as the divine wisdom of God, preexistent and personal and loving, and a power sufficient for the salvation of all men. His thought of Christ portrays Christ as the fulfiller of the aspira- tions and needs of all men. He preached, however, not merely in the interest of a synthesis of all good quali- ties into a faith to bind the world into one, but also for the sake of conversion in Christ. He himself had THE SUBJECT 21 found God in Christ.. Through Christ would God reconcile the world unto himself. To Paul, Christ is the wisdom and the love of God, and Christianity is Christ, not a Church or a creed. But with all his con- fidence in Christ, he had due regard for the process by which men should give Christ their allegiance and be saved through Him. We can feel that the idea is characteristically Pauline, that the good in other faiths may be generously and properly recognized, that the sons of all lands and the heirs of all ages will live out their lives in their own peculiar ways, but that men will not be made fully alive apart from Christ. Did not the Master himself come to fulfill, not to destroy, to save the world and not to judge it? Such was his own declaration of purpose. He guaranteed to men that their doing of the truth would lead them to light and freedom in God, who is light and life and love. He emphasized the matter of fruitage as a test of life, and gave us ground for assuming that whatever is not against Him is for Him. The early churchmen had no right to close the canon, so to speak, and to maintain the doctrine of salvation through the Church alone. Nor had anyone the right to hold subscription to a creed the sole means to life. The Church as such, or else a body of doctrines, has too often been set over against the non-Christian world, and a line been drawn between the two which put the true faith on the one side and false faiths on the other. This state of the closed mind has come in for earnest examination, and nothing is surer than that there are fundamental agree- ments among all men with respect to God and the necessary relation which men sustain to Him. There 22 MISSIONARY EDUCATION is religious kinship which in the Christian view may be developed more fully, even to the point where men may realize their kinship in Christ. There is place within the Kingdom of Christ for many of those values which non-Christian men have discovered in their search after God. Of this Jesus himself assures us. From what wealth does prejudice disinherit us! We can be, if we will, both Christian and open-minded at one and the same time. In our interpretation of aspects of religion throughout our world we can in all humility and yet with all confidence follow the ex- ample of Jesus and of Paul. Our task is the saving of the world, not the judging of it. We have a richer experience to offer in fulfilment of the more meager religious experience of the non-Christian peoples, but we shall never gain their acceptance of it while we spurn their goods. To spurn their goods is neither sound pedagogy nor sound religion. But what a change of mind must overtake us ere we win the world to Christ! We have been so much in the mood of condemnation. Think for a while of the matter of worship. Nothing has prejudiced us against a strange religion so much as this. A Moslem friend recently said that the first time he visited a Christian church in America he thought the worship quite mean- ingless. He did not see the spiritual elements therein. Usually, also, the Christian fails to see most of the spiritual elements hidden in Moslem worship. Novelty and contrast blind the sight. It is part of the task of missionary education as conceived in this book to in- terpret the worship of strange faiths, to free the mind of whatever condemnation is unjustifiable. One of the THE SUBJECT 23 projects suggested later in these pages is a mosque scene, proposed as one means of finding the true values in Islam. It is difficult to understand strange ritual and sym- bols. Early Christians were once considered cannibals, for they were said to “eat their god.’ The observers failed to see the significance of the Christian commun- ion rite. We are all so accustomed to look upon the outside, forgetful of the fact that there is an inside as well. The author visited again a Roman Catholic chapel during the Easter Mission. The crude image of Mary on one side of the choir and the cruder image of Jesus on the other side, along with other crass symbols, repelled him, but in spite of it all he was able to detect something further of the devotion of the worshipers under the influence of an impelling ideal. There was real worship. And so it is with the worship in Buddhism, Hinduism, and other forms. Outwardly there are aspects which surprise and shock us. In Hinduism, Ganesha, for example, in the form of an elephant and besmeared with red, is to many of us truly hideous. But even here it is possible to get a truer view through an understanding of the symbolism of the god. We have vigorously condemned idolatry and forgotten to allow credit for the fine quality of devotion. One thing we should have done; but the other should not have been left undone. We must penetrate to the inner significance of ritual and of symbol. Another reason for our prejudice is a certain type of literature. Several years ago a missionary educa- tional booklet of a certain large American denomina- tion contained this paragraph: 24 MISSIONARY EDUCATION Hinduism. The religion of the greater part of India. This religion teaches that man has no real soul; it teaches of no savior, no salvation. It believes in the murder of girl babies and in child marriage. . . . The most terrible crimes are committed in the name of religion. The leaders, or priests of this religion, called Brahmins, are wicked, selfish, dangerous men. | In this paragraph every declaration but the first is open to serious question. Hinduism dwells much upon a doctrine of the soul, and has worked out a unique and elaborate theory of karma (retribution) and transmigration of soul. There are, in fact, in Hindu- ism three highly developed ways of salvation: by works, by knowledge, and by devotion. In the third instance salvation is attained through the grace of a saving god. One may not contradict so flatly the re- mainder of the paragraph, for there is some truth in each declaration. Child marriage is indeed notoriously common. Some backward peoples put away girl babies by violent means. The Thugs in former days committed their crimes in the name of the goddess Kali. Many Brahmin priests are doubtless unscrupu- lous men. But there are brighter aspects of Hinduism. It is not fair to present the worst in other faiths as if it were the total situation. The paragraph quoted serves rather to show the ignorance on the part of the writer of it, than to de- scribe Hinduism adequately. The words represent a set state of mind, the result of traditional training in ignorance. Of somewhat the same import is a para- graph from a book which gives “an account of some Indian children” : THE SUBJECT 25 A true Christian, as you well know, is one who would scorn to tell lies, or steal, or cheat, or act in any dishonor- able way. But this.,is not so in India; and a man who is considered as most religious, and is even called “holy,” may steal, lie, cheat, besides being horribly dirty and wearing his hair filthy and matted. This statement cannot be creditable to the Christian while being unfair to the Indian. The best of one faith must not be compared with the worst of another. We all recognize the “holy” man referred to above as the unworthy sadhu. There is in India a better class of ascetics, or sadhus, who are more typical of better Hinduism, who are examples of pure living and high purpose, and are earnest seekers after truth. If they are to be condemned, it is on grounds other than the matting of their hair. We can recall grave discussions among Christian monks as to the proper manner of their own wearing of the hair. Even of the unworthy sadhu it must be remembered that men bow in rever- ence before his wretched figure, looking beyond him to the Power to which they commit themselves. It is true that such statements as have just been quoted are no longer prominent in missionary educa- tional books which are now appearing. But these older books axe still on the shelves of church and com- munity libraries, where they are often consulted in matters of missions. It is to them that we can often trace many of the false notions which linger to em- barrass an enlightened missionary educational pro- gram. The minds of the rank and file in our parishes have been nourished on such notions and have closed like a sensitive plant in the process. 26 MISSIONARY EDUCATION Now an inescapable duty rests upon us to see things in their beauty and to see them in their truth. This is by no means to ignore the unlovely and the false. The false and the unlovely must be done away. The good, the true, and the beautiful will abide. We must rid our minds of all unfortunate and hampering predis- position, and open them to the witness of God through- out the earth. We should be as impartial as the rain and the sunshine, rightly weighing the things of others and the things of ourselves. Our own faith must stand before others on its intrinsic merits. Can we in any real way experience the faiths of others and thus come to appreciate the heritage which the centuries of seeking have accumulated for them? We cannot be Buddhists, and Hindus, and Moslems, in turn,—that is not possible, necessary, or desirable, —but we can look for the good in these faiths and try to portray this good to all other Christians in order to develop a proper sense of perspective in the Chris- tian leadership of the world toward the one God and Father of all mankind. We must discover, if possible, what real Buddhism is, what real Hinduism is, and what is real Islam. We must discover “pure religion and undefiled.” EssENTIAL RELIGION If the reader will now turn back to the original state- ment of our problem (page 15), he will see that the sec- ond phase of our discussion has to do with “the essen- tial character of the non-Christian religions.” What is the essential character of a religion? Professor D. C. Macintosh of Yale has defined “essence” as that THE SUBJECT 27 which is in the actual as well as being demanded by the ideal. An ancient Indian seer gave utterance to this prayer: | From the unreal lead me to the real. From darkness lead me to light. From death lead me to immortality. All peoples have sought in one way or another to learn discrimination between the real and the unreal, have sought to find a way out of the unreal into the real. Various religions have suggested various ways out. How adequate and satisfactory have those ways been? This is part of our present inquiry. Our emphasis here is upon the essential character of the various religions which offer ways out from the un- real to the real. Do they lead to the real? Have they the power in themselves to lead? Is there, for ex- ample, in actual Hinduism what is demanded by ideal Hinduism, and can it justly lay claim by virtue of its essential character to being a saving faith for all mankind? Is there bread of life in Hinduism, and do the waters of life flow so freely that the time will come when the adherent of Hinduism will neither hunger nor thirst any more? What is the power of Hinduism that it claims over two hundred millions of devotees ? | Since our aim in this book is not so speculative as practical, there is no space here for a far-reaching dis- cussion of the essence of religion in the abstract. We must examine particular religions in detail. Profes- sor G. F. Moore says in his History of Religions, “Without any attempt to extract what nowadays is 28 MISSIONARY EDUCATION called ‘the essence of religion,’ Jesus kept closely to what is essential in religion.”” Dr. Moore goes on to say that the emphasis of Jesus’ teaching was upon piety, morality, and charity—“a simple and natural piety, a pure and upright life, unselfish goodness to all men, taking its example and inspiration from the good- ness of the Father in Heaven, who bestows blessings on the evil as well as the good.” This is the religion of Jesus. This is the character God desires to see in men. ‘This is essential Christianity. Are these quali- ties found in Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, and other non-Christian faiths? If so, are they found in such abundance as in the Christian faith? Jesus “did not come to annul the Law and the Prophets, but to confirm them,’’ as Moore observes. He accepted the righteousness of the Scribes and the Pharisees as a contribution to the development of re- ligion, but imposed upon men greater requirements of righteousness for the sake of entry into the Kingdom of Heaven. The Sermon on the Mount is full of re- gard for the old order, the old commandments, and the old spirit, but is likewise emphatic in the matter of greater requirements. Jesus himself, living the per- fect life, pointed all men to the ideal of perfection. To that end he said more than had been said “of old time.” We attempt, then, to follow the example of Jesus and to adopt the attitude of Jesus in discussing what is essential in religion. We start, however, with a larger field than the one in which Jesus found himself. The world of his time was mainly the regions of the eastern Mediterranean. In our world are China and Japan, India, and all the lands. We have to do with THE SUBJECT 29 faiths beyond the horizon of the early Christian view, with Shintoism, Taoism, Confucianism, Buddhism, Hinduism, and Islam, not to mention the religions of primitives in Africa, and elsewhere. We live indeed in a “very religious’ world. With this world we start in our inquiry into “the essential character” of the non-Christian religions. It is not the unreality of the non-Christian religions, their falseness, if you please, which proves the diffi- culty in the way of Christian missions. Rather, it is their reality, their truth, their goodness,—that is, so much of reality, truth, and goodness as they con- tain,—which has raised barriers against the spread of the Christian gospel throughout the earth. On the other hand, these qualities should actually have aided the gospel instead of impeding it. One suspects that had the method of Jesus been used, they would have aided. Have we not misunderstood the situation? Looking upon the outside, we have wondered how these “false” faiths could possibly stand. And yet they have stood and still stand. The Hindu has been very hard to move. He may retreat before us, or he may appear to give assent to much we Say, and yet he has not been won to Christ. The Moslem has seemed espe- cially tenacious of his faith, and has not only stood his ground, but boldly and successfully advanced his cause. Buddhism has so penetrated into China that we may say that on the religious side that great land is essen- tially Buddhist. Christianity is in competition there with modern Buddhism rather than with indigenous Chinese religion. Buddhism has its tens of millions of adherents in China. It offered the Chinese something 30 MISSIONARY EDUCATION in fulfilment of their needs. It gave them religious comfort and assurance beyond anything formerly known to them. What is Christianity to do about it? This is a practical question. Have we Christians underestimated the facts? Have we passed all too lightly and in unsubstantial hope over vast fields of human thought and life? We have; and it is time for us to size up the task in its appropriate proportions. We need perspective. Is there not, indeed, something essential in every great faith? Consider China at some length, in our search for the answer to this question. The Chinese are by no means, as many suppose, a non-religious people. To the rang- ing eye, neglected idols and decaying temples tell of weak and decadent faith, but the close observer who knows the Chinese well is aware that religion has a strong hold upon them. Strictly speaking, there is no Chinese word for “religion,” the Chinese are not at all intense in religious belief and practise, and on the whole they have a low form of religion considering the high character of their civilization. However, one must not be deceived by outward appearance into thinking that China merely has the setting for religion without the thing itself. The tide of faith has had its ebb and flow, as in other lands, also, but the old Chinese forms of religion have still the power of spiritual renewal. There are some four hundred millions of Chinese. Among these numerous hosts various faiths exist side by side and live in comparative peace with one another —a tolerance due mainly, however, to the fact that no one faith is comprehensive. The Chinese have been very tolerant as a rule. The average Chinese, not a little to our surprise, is at once an animist, a Confu- THE SUBJECT 31 cianist, a Taoist, and a Buddhist, without any sense of inconsistency. It is only the Moslem Chinese or the Christian Chinese who is a man of one faith. Is there in Christianity that which demands exclusiveness? Could a Chinese be a Christian and yet offer sacrifices as Confucianists do to the spirits of their ancestors? The Christian Church also has had its “prayers for the dead.”’ Is ancestor-commemoration, as the progres- sive Chinese calls it, incompatible with real Chris- tianity? Have we missed something in Confucianism which is after all of the very essence of religion? There is no doubt that there is something permanent in Confucianism with which we must reckon. There is an essential core which cannot be disregarded. There is one great fact with which we must deal at once, and that is that all Chinese revere Confucius. In every city of even slightest importance there is a temple to the great Sage, with its wooden tablet to his memory as the chief object of veneration. Might a Chinese Christian properly worship there? Does the conver- sion of a Chinese to Christianity mean his abandon- ment of regard for Confucius? The problem is acute today. The answer depends upon an understanding of what is involved in the veneration of the Sage in one of his temples. The question might be put in this way, Can China ever be rightly expected to surrender her regard for Confucius, the greatest name in all the Far East? There is a great field here for study on the part of the local parish. It is an area which as yet is almost terra incognita to us. We may indeed have some correct impression of the bulk of China, and of the number of her teeming millions, but it is doubtful if we know much of the Chinese state of mind and of 32 MISSIONARY EDUCATION the elements of which it is made. This book ventures to suggest the project method as a means to that de- sirable end.* By such means we may see, and do, and know something of ‘“‘ancestor-worship,’ for example, and thus examine further into the real meaning of it. It is not surprising, after all, that there are survival values in Confucius and his teachings. May we indi- cate some of the grounds for our assertion; for example, Confucius himself. As a boy, Confucius liked to play at the worship of ancestral and other spirits by prayer and sacrifice. Later on he realized that he came into the world for the very purpose of perpetuating the family name of Kung, and to carry on the worship of the family spirits. This is one inter- esting phase of his life. There are others. Confucius was fond of horses and dogs. Once on the death of a dog of his he prepared a grave and wrapped the animal’s body in some old silk to keep the earth from touching it—this out of sheer regard for the dog and not from such a notion as the Parsis have, that dead bodies pollute the earth. He was fond of archery and other forms of sport. He considered archery as we might today consider football, a good test of character. He was a good sportsman. He declined to shoot at birds at rest. In fishing he used a line and never a net. He gave also much attention to music, and was “moved by concord of sweet sounds.” He declared that music made men large-hearted and generous, and he might even have had some notion of the therapeutic value of music. He was a good teacher, and one well liked. He had many pupils, and they were much devoted to him. He never refused instruction to anyone, even 1 See more particularly the author’s China in the Local Parish. THE SUBJECT 33 though the fee might be only a bundle of dried fish. He allowed all pupils to remain who were eager to get knowledge and to develop their mental powers. He, however, required much of his pupils. They had to do their own thinking. He insisted, for example, upon their finding the other three sides of the square when he gave them the one side to work upon. He offered instruction in a wide range of subjects—history, social propriety, literature, science, music, and government. As a man, he does indeed seem cold, lacking in imagi- nation, and without sympathy; but in any case there is his strict morality to commend him. He was “mild and yet dignified; majestic and yet not fierce; respect- ful and yet easy,” says the Analects. At the age of fifty-one, being challenged to put his teaching into practise, he accepted public office, first in the department of public works and then in the de- partment of justice. Remarkable things are said of his administration of affairs; almost unbelievable things, in fact. For example, it is said that “a thing dropped on the road was not picked up” by any but the rightful owner, and that doors were never locked. Certainly he was so successful in his own state that princes in adjoining states flattered him by imitation, and then became jealous of him. It was their jealousy that ruined him, but even after jealousy and intrigue had robbed him of his public post and had sent him out into exile, he kept his confidence in high Heaven and in the efficacy of the measures which he proposed for good government. His life went out in great dis- couragement. He died murmuring, “No intelligent monarch arises; there is not one in the empire that will make me his master. My time is come to die.” His 34 MISSIONARY EDUCATION name, his character, and his teaching, however, have remained the chief heritage of his country and the final source to which the Chinese continue to make appeal. History, of course, and the very life of China bear _ testimony to the incompleteness of the character and teachings of Confucius. He “looked to antiquity” for _ his authority. He was an investigator and a compiler, a “transmitter,’’ as he called himself, and not a crea- tive author. There was nothing in him of the mind _of St. Paul as seen in the third chapter of Philippians. His policy and attitude were detrimental to progress. _ How, for example, can China be Confucian today in the matter of the status of woman? The seal of in- _ feriority was put upon her by the Sage. How can the Chinese appeal to Confucius in certain major matters of religion? Although he recognized the supernatural, he gave no great amount of thought to that aspect of life, nor did he leave any satisfactory teaching with regard to it. With all that is admirable and imitable in his excellent system of ethics, he could point to no compelling motive for good life and conduct beyond the sphere of the human. Nor did he point to himself as the moral motive. Rather, he declared he had not attained the ideal. His ideal was the Superior Man, whose parts were mostly of the past, but a creature and an ideal without reality in fact. He himself con- fessed shortcomings, including fondness for wine. He said conclusively that “the character of the superior man, carrying out in his conduct what he professes, is what I have not yet attained to.”’ Confucianists have, therefore, been compelled throughout the centuries to create from scanty materials an ideal Confucius for THE SUBJECT 35 purposes of religious veneration, a testimony to the inadequacy of the religious basis even for its own morality. Meanwhile, the gospel of the Buddha came in from a distant land to give men hope and guidance with respect to life beyond, and millions of Chinese have turned for comfort to that alien faith. Is it not an intriguing problem, this quest of a great people after things of the spirit? How dare we judge the matter with so few details at our command? Is not the need of missionary education growing more and more ap- parent as we realize the vastness of the missionary task? We are dealing with great realities. What we have just observed with respect to Confucius and Con- fucianism could be paralleled from other large areas of human life as well. And now we ask, as we follow the lead of our thirty- four-word definition (page 15), What is further in- volved in “the essential character’’ of the non-Christian religions? We have already seen something of the general range of the answer as we have discussed some of the permanent elements in the Chinese order. “Origins, development, complexity, and fruits” are all involved. RELIGIOUS ORIGINS What of the soil, and what of the seed, and how are the two related? Every great religion has arisen out of a peculiar situation. Before the days of Mo- hammed, for example, there were in Arabia “seekers” for the one God, and a growing movement with that aim; an unorganized movement, to be sure, but yet 36 MISSIONARY EDUCATION most significant. Mohammed thought of himself as one of these seekers before larger thoughts filled his mind. There was this considerable reaction against polytheism, and a desire for some higher type of faith, although the Arabs as a whole took very little interest in religion, and their moral sense was undeveloped. The opportunity, therefore, for Mohammed was at least twofold. He could take advantage of a quest which was under way, and also be a prophet to his people. A number of Arab tribes had been partly Christianized. There were also many Jews in Arabia. All these various religious forces lent fertility to the Arabian soil. But if we know Mohammed weli, we know that the great factor in the new faith was the man himself. Islam is first and foremost a person, the person Mohammed. Mohammed’s personal ex- perience of God is the foundation of the faith. There was opportunity in Arabia for a prophet, and the Prophet appeared. ‘Thus a new religion was born, whose adherents today number some two hundred and forty millions. This great host and the faith it holds cannot be accounted for apart from the founder and the humble origins in the early days of the order. Saul was anxious to know whose son David was, thinking that the son is related to the father in more than merely physical generation. As Mohammed was a son of his times, so also is Islam a product of Mohammed’s person. Antecedents are woven into the very texture of this and any movement. Origins are part of essential character. For further illustration look at Buddhism, at least at Buddha himself and Buddhist beginnings. How much, indeed, is wrapped up in his life and his ex- THE SUBJECT 37 perience. He did not set out to found a new religion; he set out to save himself from a world infected with misery, disease, decay, and death. But the times were such and his experience was such that a new faith was inevitably born. Brahmanism reigned supreme in India in Buddha’s day, in the fifth century, p.c. Like a pillar of cloud it rose in the central part of Hindustan, overshadowing and overawing the whole social body, spreading by gradual processes in all di- rections. The priest was in control, and men were separated into divinely (i.e., priestly) ordained castes. Salvation, for the most part, was a way of works, although philosophy had interposed a way of knowl- edge as a saving thoroughfare. Men might rise in this way of works through processes of karma and rebirth from round to round of existence until they gained the very realm and state of God. Or, rather, they could by good works—and sound knowledge, said some— free themselves from the entanglement of karma and rebirth, and gain salvation. The way the masses took was, of course, the way of works. It required many sacrifices. Therein lay “atonement for everything, the remedy for everything.” And since it was the Brahmin priest who knew the ritual of sacrifice, he rose to a place level with the gods themselves, and a man’s salvation depended mostly upon the payment of the priestly fees. On the other hand, for the more intellectual Indian, knowledge, as we have intimated, was the way of salvation. One cannot speak, however, of much that was sys- tematic in the philosophy of religion of Buddha’s time, but, to speak in terms of the prevalent higher thought, and of the undefined consciousness of common prac- 38 MISSIONARY EDUCATION tise, there was one Supreme Being, absolute, infinite, eternal, omnipresent, impersonal, unknowable, inde- scribable, the one reality. The world of phenomena and change was but a dream, an illusion, an unreality. Individuality was but an illusion, and for the thinker the goal of knowledge was to realize the identity of the individual soul and the world soul. Salvation was “simply a quiet unstriving realization of one’s real self as free from all changes, even from transmigration, and as completely absorbed” in the Supreme Being. Says one of the writers of the day, “Whoever thus knows ‘I am Brahma!’ becomes this All.” This was not the sole theory of the times, but it was the domi- nant view. In it one has difficulty in finding any dis- tinctions whatsoever, as, for example, between good and evil, because there can be no distinctions if the individual is one with the impersonal Supreme. How- ever, the writers of the day do say that “he who has not ceased from immoral conduct cannot obtain God through the intelligence,” that as God is pure, so men may not be one with God and be at all impure. Now Buddhism was a development out of this gen- eral situation and a reaction against it. Buddha “did not teach a personal deity, worship, or prayer. Yet he taught a moral law in the universe which was ethically superior to the metaphysical Supreme Being taught in Hinduism from which he reacted.” He set himself against the priest and against caste, against metaphysical speculation and the ancient scriptures, and proclaimed ‘‘a consummate, perfect, and pure life of holiness.” Buddha centered his attention upon the problem of the widespread suffering of men. First of all, as an educated Hindu he sought a cure through THE SUBJECT 39 philosophy, and failed to find it. He then tried the way of the ascetic, only to conclude after six years that the practise of austerities was as futile as ‘“endeavor- ing to tie the air into knots.” And then one night, while seated cross-legged under a fig tree at Buddh- Gaya in Bihar, his meditation turned slowly to insight and his insight to enlightenment. He had found the way for him. Ina word, the “way” was that all suffer- ing will cease if all desires are suppressed, and the way to suppress desires is by the Eight-fold Path that be- gins with open-mindedness and right belief and ends in concentration and the mystic trance, ensuring the emancipation of the heart and the end of the processes of rebirth. But what, after all, of this Way which the Buddha found? On the practical side it is a way of kindness by which one would reach the perfect state, an all- pervading kindness affecting all creatures, human and non-human. Arnold has referred to Buddhism as “the religion which doth make our Asia mild.” It was a way of kindness which knew no caste distinctions, a gentler and more sympathetic way than India had known before. How is it, then, that scarce three thou- sand Buddhists are found today in the whole Indian peninsula? Is India not amenable to kindness? Or were there in original Buddhism defects that made the faith give way instead of conquering? As also in the case of Confucianism, history has discovered grave de- fects in Buddha’s teaching. The qualities present at the very beginning contained the germs of their own defeat, and again we see that the origins of a religion are a part of the essential character of it. In a very real sense a stream cannot rise higher than its source. 40 MISSIONARY EDUCATION DEVELOPMENT OF RELIGIONS We must take into account, however, the develop- ment of religions as well as their origins, for growth, also, is a part of essential character. In the case of Buddhism, since there are so many millions of Buddhists ir. the world today, we may suspect that the religion has improved, in some respects at least, as the years have passed. The whole concern of Buddha himself was with his private salvation, save as he taught men that each must work out his own salvation, which lay in each man’s own hands. He found no place for God in his faith. He held the world in low estimate, and with it human life, the human body, womankind, and the family. He took a generally pessimistic view of the world and of human life. ‘These are grave defects, as history has proved. To later Buddhism the Master himself has become virtually a divine being who as God rules the world. In this and other ways the Buddhist movement has sought to fill up in its development what was lack- ing in its origin. It will be of interest to notice in this connection some aspects of later Buddhism, reminding ourselves, however, in this instance as in every other, that a statement which represents one man’s conclusion —the author’s in this case—should not be thought necessarily sufficient as an introduction to the theme for another man—the reader. The Buddhism of China and Japan is very different from the original Indian Buddhism. One has diffi- culty now and then in finding any real connection, and yet it is not at all necessary to suppose that any alien influence has been at work in the making of the later THE SUBJECT 4] type. The moral ideal, for one thing, has been trans- formed. Instead of Buddhism as a way by which the few might reach Nirvana, the ultimate goal, it has become a way for the many. Instead of the indi- vidual’s striving for his own private salvation by means within his own power, men put their trust in the many exalted beings, Buddhas-to-be, who developed in the system and who are engaged in the service of others. Charity becomes in the later day the virtue chiefly prized, and by charity is meant, “not the cold pity of an illumined aristocrat for the folly of the ignorant, but a fervid love’ devoted in self-sacrifice to the help of others. Social ambition has been kindled by the process of the suns. In this later Buddhism distinction was made between good and evil, and a system of rewards and punish- ments organized to meet the issues of this distinction. The Nirvana ideal itself was transformed. Instead of the negative, almost impersonal, and unconscious state taught by Buddha himself as the final goal of man, there developed in Buddhist thought the Western Paradise, a sensuous heaven where the Eternal Lord Buddha dwells, and where the saved may dwell with him eternally. Buddhism becomes, then, a religion as well as a system of ethics—a religion of love, and faith, and hope, centering about the deified Buddha. Buddha himself was virtually silent on questions of God, the soul, and immortality, but this void has been filled by his later followers under the compulsion of their instinct and their need. And what they have sup- plied has values we must reckon with if we would make a Christian world, for there have developed in Buddhism ideas much akin at a glance to the Chris- 42 MISSIONARY EDUCATION tian’s own. In modern Buddhism, which is one of the most influential phases of religion, there are indeed ample stores of inward experience of the heart within the forms which have developed through the centuries. What Buddhism has become is still to a marked degree a part of essential Buddhist religion. An observation must be made, however, in this con- nection. Although the later type of Buddhism may have developed from within itself, and is not neces- sarily indebted to alien influence, the development has been too inward, too subjective, too much within itself. It has been obliged to ignore or to defy its founder’s caution both with respect to God and to himself. It has created the apparatus necessary for a religion, with- out having the essential materials of religion based on history and on fact. Not only has this process made Buddha a god; it has taken to itself other gods as well. Polytheism was the great penalty imposed upon it in answer to its original atheism. It left out God, and now it is confused with many gods! What has hap- pened is in reality that Buddhists have taken fragments of their experience and made gods for themselves, as the smith and the carpenter did, of whom the prophet Isaiah speaks. With some of their wood they kindled a fire, and with the residue thereof they made them gods. If such, then, is of essential Buddhism, it is essential weakness. Saving gods are not the creatures of men’s hands and minds. Nor is a saving faith thus made. Has Christianity developed after this manner? Was there an initial void which succeeding centuries had to fill in order to commend the faith to men? Were the THE SUBJECT 43 life and the teachings of the founder inadequate at last to meet men’s needs? The veneration of Jesus by the early apostles involved no forgetfulness of his real qualities. Some of his associates did indeed pass un- favorable comments upon him, but these had more reference to his office than to his person and his char- acter. His moral character was never called into ques- tion, even by those who hated him and threatened him with death. To his Jewish enemies he was guilty of blasphemy, on other than moral grounds—because he “made himself equal with God.” To his friends and the multitudes he was in truth God manifest in power and in love. Men thought of him on every hand as sharing in the moral character of the eternal God, and as the embodiment of God’s purpose to save mankind. His divinity was not a mystery to them so much as his humanity—he was so manifestly ideal. He had come to inaugurate the reign of God and in his own person made manifest the ideal whom every man should imi- tate. Who looked upon him saw God. Who followed him found God. His own experience of God was something every man could imitate. The full realization of all this on the part of men came only after his death. Then they learned the great fact that death had not separated him from them, for he was still with them in spirit. He was present within his community and manifest in various spiritual opera- tions. He was the Messiah, and the Savior not only of them but of the whole world. A new and saving faith had been born, and succeeding generations of its advocates in lineal and legitimate descent have gone in the power which it conferred throughout the world, spreading its truth and winning men to its way of life. 44 MISSIONARY EDUCATION And the point for us to keep in mind just now is that all the needful power was given them at the very be- ginning. They had not to work out for themselves and for others an ideal which had no basis in fact. Jesus represented adequately not only what man is but what he should become by the same divine grace which made Jesus what he is. Christianity has developed, to be sure, and has gained in power with the centuries, but men have merely come to realize what Paul first com- prehended—that the salvation in Christ avails for every man, and that there is no other way of salvation. THE COMPLEX CHARACTER OF RELIGIONS We have been considering by means of typical ex- amples the origins and development of various re- ligions in relation to the essential character of these religions. Some results of our inquiry are negative and some are positive, but all point to the fact that we cannot know a religion without examining its entire history. We must have the total view in order to dis- criminate between things fundamental and things formal. This leads us to remind ourselves of a third aspect of this present inquiry; namely, the complexity which characterizes each of the various religions. There are significant variations in every great faith. There is no great faith which does not represent a fusion first or last of many elements. Nor is there any great faith which has not divided in the process of development. How complex after all is historical Christianity! This we know at more or less close range. We live in the midst of Christian sects and denominations which the centuries—and other forces THE SUBJECT 45 than mere time—have produced. Each one of us is identified with one or another of these divisions of Christianity and may find his view of the whole colored somewhat by his loyalty to the part. Many of us may be in the position of the famous Parson Thwackum, who when speaking of religion meant the Christian re- ligion, and by the Christian religion meant the Prot- estant religion, and by the Protestant religion, the Church of England. It is, of course, the correction of this partial view of religion and of Christianity which is one of our aims in a proper program of missionary education. But first of all we must take into account here the facts in the whole field of religion. What is true of Christianity in the matter of divisions is also true of other faiths. But it may be that division is a sign of life rather than an occasion of despair! And, as the poet reminds us, there is life in the lily as well as in the oak. The virtue of religion is not merely in “grow- ing like a tree.” There may be weaker growths which are even fairer. The bare fact is, nevertheless, that religions have grown like plants, and because of certain psychological and other factors have become, if any- thing, even more diversified. The various religions have, however, much in common as to the very processes and principles by which they have become diversified. The student of comparative religion be- comes aware of striking parallels throughout the whole field. These parallels are of the greatest importance today in connection with modern Christian missions, and the study of religion. Similarities are more strik- ing than differences and are more valuable assets in missionary work. 46 MISSIONARY EDUCATION On one of the first pages of this book mention was made of our tendency to “lump” together foreign peo- ples and things. This quality of ours displays itself most prominently in our judgment of the non-Chris- tian religions. Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, and especially Islam, are.very simple faiths to most of us—until we have opportunity to behold with growing amazement their extreme complexity. Did we think that two thousand five hundred years, or even a single millennium, as in the case of Islam, would produce no variation in these faiths? Recall, if you will, the brief paragraph on Hinduism quoted from a certain type of missionary manual (page 24). How very easily it dealt with its whole theme! Let us in contrast refer to Hinduism at some length, just as illustration of the vast variety in all the fields unknown to us—unknown, that is, to the members of our local parishes for whom we are endeavoring to formulate an attractive and profitable program of missionary education. Hinduism is a veritable congeries of faiths, and not a simple faith at all. It would take as many words as have been already written in this book to put in even the briefest compass what we mean by Hinduism, even though we confined ourselves to the current situation and ignored the range of history. But we must be content for the present to let the whole field pass rapidly before us. There are two hundred and twenty- five millions of Hindus. With them conduct is of more concern than creed. That is, as one of the offi- cial reports of India puts it, “No one (Hindu) is in- terested in what his neighbor believes, but he is very much interested in knowing whether he can eat with him or take water from his hands.” This is due to THE SUBJECT 47 the fact that Hindus are divided and subdivided into castes based upon religious, occupational, national, or other principle. There are over two thousand mutually exclusive sub-castes among Hindus, mutually exclusive, that is, in matters of food and intermarriage. This engenders an exaggerated caste consciousness, and caste is practical, not theoretical. To some extent religion transcends this compart- mentalism, but more in theory than in practise, since Hindu orthodoxy consists mainly in conformity to caste regulations. What there was in the background of Buddhist India (pages 36-39) has persisted to the present day, and serves as the common denominator of caste-divided Hinduism. The main theological belief of Hinduism is still in one Supreme Being (Brahma), absolute, infinite, eternal, omnipresent, impersonal, un- knowable, indescribable, the one reality. As Brahma is the one reality, every soul is the whole and undivided Brahma, and so is infinite. The man who knows Brahma is one with Brahma. The external world is unreal, at least what reality it may have is due to ignorance and illusion. Brahma alone is real; all else is illusion. This is the characteristic thought of Hin- duism, the prevalent philosophy. We may call it pantheism. The religious force of it is that God is imminent in all things and dwells also in men’s hearts, and ethically the God who is all-pervading is the in- nate good in all. Says Tagore in his Sadhana, “To be truly united in knowledge, love, and service with all beings and thus to realize one’s self in the all-pervad- ing God is the essence of goodness.”’ This relieves us somewhat, does it not, of the idea that the soul is “drowned in the boundless Sea”? There is place, then, 48 MISSIONARY EDUCATION for religion and for ethics, for God, and love, and serv- ice in such an interpretation as is given by Tagore and many others to this Hindu pantheism. But still we ask, what of the religion of the common Hindu who judges and is governed by what is done rather than by any view he may hold of the universe of men and things? However, this theoretical belief in “one im- minent, all-inclusive, all-sanctifying World Soul” is the chief phase of Hindu thought. It is the Indian Idea. But there are other beliefs as well by which the Hindus live. The fifteenth century poet Kabir speaks as follows for many who give a mystical turn to typi- cal pantheism: “The creature is in Brahma, and Brahma is in the creature; they are ever distinct, yet ever united.” ‘My Lord hides Himself, and my Lord wonderfully reveals Himself.” “He is without form, without quality, without decay. . . . But that formless God takes a thousand forms in the eyes of His crea- tures.”’ “All men and all women of the world are His living forms.” “The Lord is in me, the Lord is in you, as life is in every seed.’’ Kabir preaches in all this a faith superior to and destructive of caste dis- tinctions, saying, “It is but folly to ask what the caste of a saint may be,” for men of all castes and all faiths have sought and found God, and having achieved that end, there remains no mark of distinction. This is quite antagonistic to priestly Hinduism. But an agnostic note is heard in his poems which places him at a disadvantage in the face of Brahmin knowledge of all things. He himself confessed, “I do not know what manner of God is mine,”—quite in contrast again with one (Paul) who knew “whom he had believed.” THE SUBJECT 49 The immediate result of Kabir’s work was, therefore, another Hindu sect. In practical Hinduism the many gods are far more prominent and potent than the One. Their worship represents a reaction against the absolute, pessimistic negation of life and of the world, which we have por- trayed above in terms of pantheism. This polytheistic worship has not, however, introduced an optimistic note, for in popular Hinduism life and the world are still evil. Rather, it has merely brought something of the more personal in its polytheism. Hinduism ex- hibits both monotheistic and polytheistic ideas held at one and the same time—a very interesting situation— for all the gods that are worshiped very directly by the common people are merely forms, say the thinkers, in which the Supreme Being has appeared. Thus the apologists for polytheism! The most popular of the gods in India is Shiva, “the Great God Shiv.” Benares is peculiarly his holy city, but his temples are found all over India. He is vari- ously the Destroyer, the Reproducer, the Great Ascetic, the Soul of the Universe. He is the refuge for man and beast, the “auspicious,” the creator of the world, the redeemer of mankind. One of his South Indian devotees sings: He who came to earth and begged for alms, He is the thief who stole my heart away. Madman men think Him, but He is the Lord. And another, also of the South: But if they love Shiva, who hides in his hair The river of Ganga, then whoe’er they be, 50 MISSIONARY EDUCATION Foul lepers, or outcastes, yea, slayers of kine, To them is my homage, gods are they to me. And another: Henceforth for me no birth, no death, No creeping age, bull-rider mine, Sinful and full of lying breath Am I, but do Thou mark me Thine. All of which testifies to the intense devotion of Shiva’s votaries to him, and to the ideas prevalent in their devotion. Even more intense devotion is given to his consort Kali, especially among the Bengalis. Shiva is the most popular god, for he has absorbed into himself and allied with himself so great a variety of qualities that worshipers of every taste may find satisfaction in him. And yet there is another great god of India with whom Shiva must share supremacy. He is Vishnu, the third of the great triad—Brahma, Shiva, Vishnu. In this scheme Brahma is the Creator and the Ultimate; Shiva is the terrible Destroyer, the god of Fear; and Vishnu is the Preserver, the god of Love. Vishnu is both a local deity and an Infinite Spirit, but he is more the latter than the former, by reason of a doctrine of incarnation through which he is represented to his wor- shipers in the gods Rama and Krishna. He is to the philosophical devotee “the sole Reality, of whom the entire material world and all spirits of men and gods form but the body.” But it is to Rama and Krishna that the Vishnu-ites make the more immediate appeal. The story of Rama—and of his wife Sita—may be THE SUBJECT 51 read with delight in the poet Tulsi Das’ Ramayana. -He is the pattern of noble manhood, and she, the su- preme example of womanly purity and fidelity. And the mutual love of Sita and Rama, says Tulsi Das, “exceeds all sense, or intelligence, or speech, or percep- tion.” Here follows a portion of one of the poet’s rapturous hymns to Rama, which is read devotionally by hosts of India’s sons. Glory to Rama of incomparable beauty; the bodiless, the embodied; the merciful, the mighty-armed, the dispeller of all life’s terrors; without beginning and unborn; the indi- visible; the one; beyond the reach of all the senses; the incarnate; an everlasting delight to the soul of the saints; the friend of the unsensual, the destroyer of lust and every other wickedness; at once inaccessible and accessible, like and unlike, the essentially pure, the unfailing comforter, who is ever at the command of his servants. May he abide in my heart, the terminator of transmigration, whose praises make pure. Hear also some of the words which Tukaram of western India addresses to Rama: I am a mass of sin; Thou art all purity; Yet Thou must take me as I am And bear my load for me. In God, in God—forget him not !— Do thou thy refuge find. Oh, flee from thence. Only by faith Canst thou to God attain. 52 MISSIONARY EDUCATION There is another side to Vishnu than that which Rama represents; it is that represented by Krishna. Both Rama and he are considered by Hindus as origi- nally historical characters. There are writings which tell the story of Krishna’s life, but his place in Hindu religion is best seen in the Bhagavad Gita, the “Lord’s Song,” where he is represented as the speaker. The Gita is an ancient philosophical poem of composite character, but it makes its claim to widespread accept- ance chiefly on the ground of the grace of Krishna by which men may be saved. In it Krishna declares: Doing always all works, making his home in Me, one attains by My grace to the everlasting, changeless region. ... If thou hast thy thought on Me, thou shalt by My grace pass over all hard ways. ... Surrendering all the Laws, come for refuge to Me alone. I will deliver thee from all sins; grieve not... . Have thy mind on Me, thy devotion toward Me, thy sacrifice to Me, do homage to Me. And yet, we must remind the reader, this lofty phase of Krishnaism does not stand alone. There is a lower form, an erotic aspect, in which worship of this god of Love is carried on with emotional abandon. Krishna himself, it is sad to relate, set an example on this lower plane, where sensualism could be mistaken for religion. We shall not carry this present discussion of Hindu- ism much further. Enough has been said to show the great complexity of this religion. In general, if we may summarize, Hinduism offers salvation by three definite, although not always mutually exclusive ways. There is the way of knowledge, the way of works, and the way of devotion. If the reader will recall our THE SUBJECT 53 whole presentation of Hinduism, he will see them all. The way of knowledge is chiefly the way of realization of the identity of the individual soul and the World Soul. The World Soul may be Brahma, Shiva, or Vishnu, according to the mind of the devotee. The way of works is the ascetic way, which Buddha tried and renounced, and which the masses of Hindus fol- low to this day. The ascetics of India are in the main devotees of the Great Ascetic Shiva. He is the Great God of Works, although works may be done in the name of any god. The way of devotion is the way of surrender to and reliance upon the god through whose grace men will be saved from the world of evil and of death. The god of this way is primarily Vishnu through his representatives Rama and Krishna, but Shiva also is the object of devotion as well as of works, although Shiva, unlike Vishnu, has no representatives or incarnations of himself. Here are, then, three ways of salvation, but in not one of them can one find a sound philosophy of salvation. It is sufficient for us here, however, merely to note how varied Hinduism is in its character and in its appeal to men. The choice of Hinduism to illustrate our idea of complexity was, of course, purely arbitrary, save as the little paragraph suggested it. Any other faith would have served our purpose, although any other non- Christian faith might not have served so well. India is truly a treasure-house of religion. No single land offers the student of religion quite so much as India does, whether from the historical or the contemporary point of view. Buddhism, also, is, as we may well suspect, an extremely varied field, and Islam, which we too often consider a very simple faith, exhibits many 54 MISSIONARY EDUCATION and astonishing varieties. We shall see something of the complexity of Islam before we have.concluded our whole study, for the chief materials used later in this book to illustrate the project method of missionary education are Islamic. We do not forget other faiths in this procedure, for our constant thought is how to bring the distant faiths of men into our immediate local parish consciousness. This is not a book of com- parative religion, but a book of missionary education. We are finding, however, that the principal materials for our use are from the field of comparative religion. It is the Christian religion which we would have triumph throughout the earth, and so we are bound to study the religions of others to that end. THE Fruits oF VaRIOUs RELIGIONS We have yet to make some inquiry regarding the fruits of the non-Christian faiths, for we are not to judge these faiths without such an examination. Even here we cannot generalize without a prior analysis. In our missionary educational work we have often made much use of the “fruits” of other religions. Especially does this method lend itself to “projects,” and dramatic representations. Prayer-wheels and priests, magic and incantation, the uncured lame and halt and blind, these and other institutions and individuals are exhibited to prove to us the futility of the non-Christian faiths. These examples are all practical, tangible aspects of our subject, and surely we are looking for tangible things when we look for fruits. But there devolves upon us the need of extreme caution in this matter. We must THE SUBJECT 55 satisfy ourselves as to what is really typical, and what is really due to the religion itself which we are typify- ing. This is no easy task. A wide familiarity with the general situation is a prerequisite. We should ask our- selves and others many questions and proceed slowly. Mistakes are inevitable, but they should be of the prac- tically unavoidable kind, rather than those which issue from our unpreparedness. Always we should bear in mind that more important even than the fruits ex- hibited are the interpretations which we put upon our exhibit and the spirit in which we handle our various materials. Now let us, in our present inquiry, be practical rather than theoretical. As one looks out over the earth he views a condition of distressing need. As one reads new books or travels, he finds himself thus con- fronted. Most of the needs we see at once to lie in the realm we call the ethical. The world is full of striving and suffering, as Buddha observed, and in spite of him is still, The market-place is full of bargaining, and the current talk is of money, food, and clothing, in spite of the Hindu ideal of renunciation and other-worldli- ness. Rulers in high and low places are disregarding the welfare of their subjects, contrary to the Confucian ideal of the ruler whose chief concern was the state. Disaster is visited upon communities of Christians in disregard of Mohammed’s ideal of tolerance. The question naturally arises, to what extent have the great faiths of men ethical power? Is Hinduism an ethical religion? Is Buddhism? Is Islam? Does Confucian- ism, a recognized ethical system, display a power to attain its own ideals? Here are faiths, each with its 56 MISSIONARY EDUCATION millions of followers to whom it is ministering. Do these faiths meet men in their need, disclose to them the true situation, solve their problems for them, and show them an attractive and adequate way out? This is altogether a very wide field of inquiry. How can one do it justice! It is not after all solely a matter of ethics. There are other vital issues involved, with always earnest and capable advocates of any faith ready to rise up in its defense against its critics. Let us look for a moment through the eyes of one of these advocates; at least, let us imagine him speaking. He tells us that we Christians are accustomed to attribute too much to the religion itself when we com- pare some of the worst elements in his social order with some of the best in our own, and when we say that the difference between his order and ours is a matter of difference in religion. He reminds us that we have considered famines as due to Hinduism, Turkish massacres as due to Islam, opium dens in Shanghai and “lily feet” in Peking as fruits of Chinese religion, and have compared with them the plenty, peace, and virtue within Christendom which, we say, are due to Christianity. We must acknowledge that at times, from the printed page and from the public platform, we have sought rhetorical effect or other ends by such means. We have perhaps been conscious at the time that there was some real justification in our method, but we have not always taken care to make the rigidly right analysis and then to draw the cogent inferences. And so we have laid ourselves open to the charge of unfairness. But let us take the charge against us for what it is worth, and resolve that we shall not be again indiscriminate in our exhibition of THE SUBJECT 57 the fruits of the various faiths. After all, we must know the faiths by their fruits as well as by their pur- poses. Consider briefly the status of woman in non- Christian lands. Take first the evil of child-marriage in Hinduism. When a leading Hindu declares that early marriage is the “greatest evil’ of his country, he does not charge his faith directly with it. He condemns it, as a Chris- tian might condemn the liquor traffic or the brothel, and turns to his faith to find a way to cure it! But there must be, after all, some causal connection be- tween Hinduism and child-marriage. The writer often recalls what his Hindu pundit once said to him, “The time comes for the tree to bear fruit, and so it is with women.” He was echoing a theory of essential Hindu- ism. And yet, as a Hindu, he never met the question of two and one quarter million wives of India under ten years of age, ten per cent of whom were under five years of age. When the time of bearing comes, one out of every seventy women of India die in childbirth, and there is appalling mortality among infants. It is destiny! And many other ills of life are dismissed as due to the operation of irrevocable and inscrutable fate. Certainly these conditions are ulti- mately fruits of religion. Hinduism holds that a woman at the time of childbirth is ceremomially (re- ligiously) unclean. This religion in fact is so inter- woven into life and so dominant a factor in all phases of life that many such conditions in the social order may be directly charged against it. If religion insists upon or is satisfied with sacred leaves thrown upon the house-top in the time of childbirth to keep the evil spirits away rather than being insistent upon cleanli- 58 MISSIONARY EDUCATION ness within the house, the resultant evils may surely be laid at the door of the religion of that house. Why are modern women of China turning away from Confucianism unless it is because Confucius set the permanent seal of inferiority upon them? “If no (such) distinction,’ said Confucius, “were observed between males and females, disorder would arise and grow.’ Woman must keep to her proper place in the family and the home. In reality, that distinction be- tween males as superior and females as inferior is a root of disorder! A Moslem recently reminded us with vigor that the veil is not a fruit of Islam. He was right, of course. The veil for women antedates Islam by centuries. It is the symbol of the oriental view of womanhood; but the attitude of Islam is oriental, and the veil was readily incorporated. He might still argue that the veil—and the position which it symbolizes—is not in- eradicable, and point to recent events as proof. He might argue, too, that polygamy might be abandoned consistently with true Islam. We hail with satisfac- tion whatever progress Islam or any other non-Chris- tian faith may make, but we still have a query as to how it really comes about. We think inevitably of Jesus’ estimate of woman- hood,—a unique appraisal,—not merely as to political status, but as to her rightful place in the whole social order. His high regard for woman was one of the noblest of his contributions to ethics and a spiritual view of life, and what Christian civilization—and non- Christian as well—has achieved in the exaltation of womanhood is but progress toward the goal set by Jesus rather than a development away from, or inde- THE SUBJECT 59 pendent of, and in spite of the mind of the founder of the faith. This fruit in Christianity is not, there- fore, a gourd too heavy for its vine to bear aloft, and which, in consequence, droops to the earth and meets the danger of decay. Women occupy places of great prominence with reference to the life of Christ. St. Luke delights to show their part in the gospel story. Jesus’ teaching and healing ministry was carried on among women as freely as among men. Women moved about in early Christian society with a freedom and prominence quite in contrast with the restraint and suppression commonly observed in Eastern civilization, and beyond anything even in the progressive Jewish order. Jesus struck a new note which continues to sound as the clearest and best note on the world’s womanhood. “By their fruits ye shall know them,” both men and religious systems. Not the least damaging observation which might be made in connection with the fruits of the non-Christian religions—to cite another type of example—is the negative attitude toward progress and reform which these faiths have taken when left to their own initia- tive,—and which, to be sure, organized Christianity also has often taken when it has lapsed from the high estate of its origin. These non-Christian religions have not only been content to do practically nothing with regard to important matters of life, but have de- clared such efforts to be entirely futile. They have possessed a state of mind indifferent and even hostile | to such matters. Now a state of mind is a very potent thing, especially when it represents the confirmed habits of centuries. It gives weighty significance to the com- mon and casual expressions heard on every hand 60 MISSIONARY EDUCATION throughout the East: “To what purpose?” ‘What can we do?” “It is our custom,” and the like. When after two thousand years of adherence to a faith the masses go about with such words upon their lips and notions in their minds which such words signify, the situation is indeed lamentable. There may have been tremendous economic factors figuring in the formation of this state of mind, but religion should have taught men to live and be superior to them. It was Jesus alone who said, “Be of good cheer, I have overcome the world.” And only he has told men the secret of being in the world and in God at one and the same time. Before leaving this immediate subject it is well to remind ourselves of three things beyond those which we have already specifically discussed. First, the fruits of the non-Christian religions are many and varied, and must be separately considered, not only in a com- parative view of these faiths, but with reference to any one faith alone. Suicide, for example, is a com- mon practise of Hinduism, but little known in Islam. The Hindu and the Moslem have different views of life, the world, and the hereafter. Again, the Hindu is monogamous in ideal, and in general practise, with provision in his sacred writings for polygamy under certain circumstances. The Moslem has before him the ideal and example of polygamy, but with monog- amy made possible by the Koran and imperative by progress. It will pay us and do justice to the cause of truth in the non-Christian religions to examine each phase of a religion in the light of its general setting. We have tried to indicate something of this larger view. THE SUBJECT 61 Second, we should look for the good fruits every- where and take pleasure in finding them. How often in earlier days we have looked for the bad qualities. Our missionaries, for example, searched the non-Chris- tian scriptures and other non-Christian writings for the purpose of discovering their flaws, and often ignored even where they found them qualities of a commendable sort which might diminish the non-Christian need of the Christian gospel. The writer himself during his first year of service as a missionary studied a booklet called Dharmtula, or “Religion Weighed,” in which the Hindu scriptures were searched for the sake of their defects. The author displayed no sense what- ever of appreciation of Hindu virtue, nor did he realize many of the risks of the exclusively scriptural method of comparison. As the years have gone and the scriptures of all the great religions have become bet- ter known, a wholesome change of method has oc- curred. A historical study of these writings has been of immense benefit. The chief results of this study are available now in our own tongue for any of us who desire to know them. Former faulty English translations are being revised, new materials are being produced, and we have at our ready command the rich treasures of Eastern religion. These are of surpass- ing value in the work of missionary education in the local parish. Third, there is the possibility of reform in all the great non-Christian faiths. What ground for rejoic- ing there is in this! If taking the Christian gospel to the non-Christian world meant the latter’s discarding all its heritage, where could room be found for the refuse? It would be difficult indeed to clear space 62 MISSIONARY EDUCATION enough for a new and perfect building. But when we make up our minds to use old materials, the way seems easier and better. This change of view on our part— and especially on the part of the non-Christian—is one of the inferences from the growing acceptance of the ideas of progress, the unity of life, and human docility. We no longer proceed on the basis of the impossible—we do not expect an ancient order to tear itself entirely loose from its old life. We expect forms as such to yield wherever necessary, but we look for life to flow continuously on. What a conception it is, the men of all lands finding themselves in the common life of the world. There is, however, a greater conception still, the world’s life in God through Jesus Christ. If we grant these three things, as indeed we must, we may well expect to learn many valuable lessons through our missionary program and endeavor. Many writers have called our attention to what the West might learn from the East. In his delightful volume on India and Its Faiths, Professor Pratt mentions some of the things which India, for example, might teach us, such as a sense of outer decency, a sense of the indecency of drunkenness, a feeling of repugnance at the thought of killing, the desirability of curbing self-assertiveness and self-consciousness, and the value of contemplation. Even the lot of Eastern woman has not been, we find by the newer view, an unrelieved curse. Seclusion and the veil have had their meaning for respectability, and womanhood has been held, after all, in a certain high regard. We observe that the world-denying attitude and the life of contemplation is not altogether without its benefits. East is East, and THE SUBJECT 63 West is West, and each may learn from the other’s best—if we may revise Kipling. But the West has yet the larger lessons for the East to learn. weigh it with something more than our merely tradi- tional experience and assent. We ask for it no treat- THE SUBJECT 69 ment different from that which we accord to other faiths. It must stand on its own merits. It must win by the essential qualities in which it is superior to the essential qualities of other faiths, by such things, if we may venture to suggest them, as: its concern for the life that is and is to be; its radiant optimism as to things present and things to come; its high, prophetic ethics grounded in a motive which insures success; its willingness to see good in all men and to point them all to an ideal human perfectness ; its living, active, lov- ing God, who inspires men to a religion of aggressive love. In all this shines the figure of Christ, who is in himself the realization of the ideal. Let there be no doubt of the value for us of a properly conceived and executed missionary educational program. Words of counsel cannot tell us what its merits are. Only the actual attempt can convince us. We turn now to consider against the necessary back- ground which we have just surveyed some means by which these merits may be realized in any local parish. II ORGANIZATION OF THE PROGRAM 4 NHE materials of the foregoing chapter have been offered as necessary background for the program which this book presents. It is as- sumed that everyone who has a leading part in the organization and execution of the program in any local church will give thoughtful attention to Chapter I. In this way the mind of the congregation may be more readily leavened with the principles of the new approach to the non-Christian religions and peoples. To a very considerable extent the program herein pre- sented aims at the creation of a new missionary mind, an object which cannot be attained by reading,—nor can it be done without reading,—and it cannot be ac- complished in a short period of time. It is not merely a matter of “mission study.” Something must be done about it, something in addition to mental exercise, prayer, and self-denial. Something must be done by the local church in a thoroughgoing, systematic way. The third chapter of this volume offers specific sug- gestions regarding things to do. The present chapter is devoted to the organization necessary in order to do them effectively. The author is aware that this book will come to the attention—at least he hopes it will—of different sorts and conditions of leaders in local church work. Some will be far more expert than he in technical matters of religious education and in the conduct of a religious educational program. Many will have had a different 70 ORGANIZATION OF THE PROGRAM 71 type of experience from his in matters of missionary education. He begs the indulgence of all as he presents details which he deems necessary for the less expert, details which in any case seem necessary in order to make clear and concrete the full missionary educa- tional program with which this book deals. A DrrREcTor Call him Director of Missionary Education, if you - will. We are thinking in terms of one man rather than of a “missionary committee.” It is likely that one man —if he is the right man—will accomplish more than several could in the actual direction of the program, after its main features have been discussed and agreed upon by a representative group. Sometimes a new office and a new incumbent justify themselves in con- nection with a new venture in church work. In some parishes a reorganization would be very beneficial, if it could be carried out with due consideration for every- thing and everyone involved. A new office might be introduced merely by some readjustment rather than by discarding any feature formerly employed. If the church has a Director of Religious Education, or a Minister of Education, or a paid worker with some such title, who is responsible for the general oversight of education, then he might be the director of the mis- sionary program. Under ordinary circumstances this is a man’s job, as one may see who realizes all that the program calls for. Although we speak of our program as falling under the direction of one person, we assume that the church 72 MISSIONARY EDUCATION has a general Educational Committee under whose jurisdiction falls all the educational work of the parish, and that this one person represents the Committee. If the church has no such committee, the introduction of a missionary educational program would serve as a proper occasion for organizing one. By whatever means the church may accomplish it, the educational work should be unified and administered by the fewest possible number of committees. If there is a small missionary educational committee it will be a sub-com- mittee merely. Each local situation has its own peculiar conditions and will be governed by them ac- cordingly, but it is strongly recommended that the prac- tical direction of the missionary program be entrusted to one competent man. The competency of this man may not lie in his im- mediate control of methods and materials of mission- ary education, but rather in his personality and general ability. He may not even be what is ordinarily considered a “missionary” type. But given a genuine devotion to Christianity and interest in the broader aspects of the work of the Church Universal, he could use this book as a textbook for his guidance in the direction of a missionary program. If he will give spare time during several months to a study of this book and some of the materials to which it refers, he will contribute to his own education as well as equip himself for the direction of the program. If the theme of the program be things Islamic, let him read Sailer’s book, The Moslem Faces the Future, and use its bibliography on pages 231-239 for a general introduc- tion. \ ORGANIZATION OF THE PROGRAM 73 A SECRETARY The Director cannot attend to all the details as the program proceeds. ‘There will be much correspond- ence at various times. Multigraphing is often neces- sary. Copying has to be done now and then. If the church office is so organized, these details can be taken - care of through it. Otherwise, volunteer service must be relied upon. The secretaryship is an important office, and indispensable to the success of the program, especially at such times as require frequent correspond- ence and telephoning in connection with preparations for the Grand Project. It might be possible to have one person act both as secretary and librarian (see page 82) of the program. He, or she, would find the work thus combined more interesting and rewarding. ORGANIZATION MEETING If local conditions indicate that this should be the first step in the process, the director and the secretary might be elected at this meeting. A better plan, how- ever, would be a prior appointment of these officers by whatever authorities have the power to do so. In this way the two officers would have opportunity to make a preliminary study of the enterprise—in conjunction with the pastor of the church, of course—and be pre- pared to come to the organization meeting with cer- tain definite proposals. They could bring in an esti- mate as to the extent of the program which they deemed it wise to undertake and indicate the specific phases of it which the local conditions would warrant. The Director could lay before the meeting the general 74 MISSIONARY EDUCATION Idea as well (cf. Chap. 1). It might be that a number of those attending this meeting will have done already some preliminary reading at the direction of the Librarian, thus providing wholesome background for the discussion of specific details. It is the program and not the meeting which we are thinking of organizing, and so the widest possible preliminary acquaintance with the theme is best. The plan laid before the meeting will not be ideal, but one adapted to the local situation. A too elaborate program will not be undertaken the first year—it might defeat itself. Time and opportunity should be allowed for natural growth. It is the development of the local parish which is being considered, and this is a gradual process. The permanent value of the program will de- pend much upon its gradual development. This meet- ing, then, is called for the sake of setting forth the missionary project in its true light and for learning the mind of the parish with respect to it. All should be invited to the meeting who would be best able to consider and discuss the object of the meeting. They are the leaven of the whole lump. The pastor, for obvious reasons, might issue the call. Or, the Educa- tional Committee might do it. In any case the attempt is made through particular individuals to spread the Idea and to gain the cooperation of the greatest pos- sible number ultimately. Cooperation is sought on the basis of specific proposals. A SuRVEY In some way or other take stock of the parish, con- sider the persons upon whom you can depend in carry- ORGANIZATION OF THE PROGRAM 75 ing out the program. This might be done, at least in part, at the organization meeting. Certainly the Di- rector will consider the matter most carefully. Do not assume that those who have been taking care in times past of the missionary interests of the parish are those to whom the new program will be entrusted, unless they are the best persons for the work. Inquire for new personnel with a view to the development of new leaders. Some aspects of the program may appeal to competent persons who have not been active in the parish work. Let new occasions enlist new workers and teach new duties. The survey might take into ac- count any particular local needs, and furnish ground for procedure in the meeting of those needs. For ex- ample, there might be no young people’s class or group in the Church School, chiefly because there had been no course of study in which the young people were in- terested. Other groups already in the scheme of things might be spurred to increased activity by some special task. The survey will enable those in charge to view the situation as a whole, and to see .it as a whole long enough ahead of time to keep superficiality out of the enterprise. All this will be brought out as account is taken of teachers and teaching, dramatics and the players, stories and story-telling, the mission study class and its leader, the annual Church Institute, the various minor projects, special series of addresses, etc. It may be decided to do just what is warranted in the light of equipment and personnel, in the expectation that a modest beginning will pave the way for a per- manent reorganization in which missionary education is an integral part of the general educational program. 76 MISSIONARY EDUCATION The survey, made by whatever agency can do it well, will enable those in charge of the program to bend every effort toward the development of local initiative. That is, the local church will be making its own pro- gram, and not attempting to modify and carry through a program submitted to them from outside the parish bounds. This does not mean that any local church will decline to cooperate with the general boards of its denomination—far from it. It means that the local body will attempt to develop its every fiber and muscle for the sake of more life to itself and greater power to cooperate through the general boards. Its own pro- gram, if well conceived, will be best fitted to its own needs. It will allow for growth and expansion. We are thinking in terms of the oak rather than of the corn-stalk, although growth and expansion are true of both, and both have their uses. We are eager to emphasize the importance of local initiative, regardless of the polity and organization of the denomination. Such a plan yields larger returns educationally, and therein lies our main interest. SCHEDULE We refer here to the time element in the formulation and execution of the program. For convenience, we may set the date of the Grand Project (see Chapter IV ) first and then work back from that time. Usually the best time for the Grand Project is in the month of May, certainly not later than early June. It might come in the week preceding Children’s Day, and not interfere at all with the latter, or, the two might be combined in some way. ‘The time of the Grand ORGANIZATION OF THE PROGRAM 77 Project might depend to some extent upon the availa- bility of costumes and exhibit materials (which should be booked in advance and made sure of). We leave, then, an indefinite period of several weeks from which the two or three days may be chosen for the Grand Project. During the preceding autumn we have to take into account other phases of the church’s work for the year. For this reason we propose beginning our program after Christmas. But even so, we do not assume that it has thereafter a monopoly on the time and energy of the parish. If possible and expedient, however, the missionary educational work might hold the center of the stage from February to May, in- clusive, four months in all. With the time definitely agreed upon as a part of the regular church schedule, preliminary work can be done in due season. During the autumn the mission- ary educational leaders could be leisurely preparing the program. During the month of January more in- tensive work could be done. During this month the teachers might do most of their preliminary reading in anticipation of the lessons which they are to handle from February to June (see page 84). They could determine some of the minor projects which their classes might undertake. (See pages 91-95.) The preparation and presentation of the Grand Project is discussed in Chapter IV. REFERENCE LIBRARY This program cannot be carried through without books and reading. The church should have assembled, at least by New Year’s Day, its own minimum refer- 78... MISSIONARY EDUCATION ence library. From twenty-five to fifty dollars should be spent for books. The “nucleus” named by Dr. Sailer in The Moslem Faces the Future, page 231, could be secured for about $12.50. The following minimum list for a Moslem project could be purchased for about forty dollars, including more than one copy of a book in each of several instances. In making the list we have in mind the average worker upon whom the program depends. The order in which the titles appear represents a certain progression and rounding out of the theme of Islam, but is not an indication that any one worker must read all the books listed. 1. The Story of the Saracens. ARTHUR GILMAN. G. P. Putnam’s Sons, New York. Out of print. Second-hand copies might be obtained through a dealer. This book deals with the Arabic phases of Islamic history. If one desires a fuller account he may read: The Caliphate: Its Rise, Decline and Fall. W. Murr. T. Weir, Editor. John Grant, Edinburgh. 1916. A later book on the same topic is History of the Saracens. SIMon Ocktey. G. P. Putnam’s Sons, New York. 1926. $2.00. 2. Mohammedanism. D. S. MarcotioutH. Williams and Norgate, London. 1912. Import to order through Henry Holt and Co., New York. If one desires a somewhat more technical study, he may read: Development of Muslim Theology, Juris- prudence, and Constitutional Theory. D. B. Mac- DONALD. Charles Scribner’s Sons, New York. $1.50. 3. Mohammed. Epitn M. Horrtanp. (Heroes of All Time) F. A. Stokes Co., New York. Out of print. Or, Mohammed and the Rise of Islam. D.S. Marcott- ouTH. G. P. Putnam’s Sons, New York. $2.50. ORGANIZATION OF THE PROGRAM 79 4. The Moslem Faces the Future. T. H. P. Satter. Mis- sionary Education Movement, New York. 1926. Cloth, $1.00; paper, 60 cents. (3 copies.) 5. Lhe Moslem World of To-day. JoHN R. Mort, Editor. George H. Doran Co., New York. 1925. $2.50. 6. The Arab at Home. Paut W. Harrison. Thomas Y. Crowell Co., New York. 1924. $3.50. 7. Moslem Women. A. E. and S. M. Zwemer. The Cen- tral Committee on the United Study of Foreign Mis- sions, West Medford, Mass. 1926. Cloth, 75 cents; paper, 50 cents. (3 copies.) We pause here for a moment. These seven books might be considered an irreducible minimum for the Director and a few other participants in the program. If the entire book, in each case, cannot be read, it would be well to read attractive portions in each. The reader could get a fair idea of Islam from these books alone. Book number 4 is intended to be in itself an introduction to the study of the Moslem World, and serves the purpose very well. If one be reduced to an extremity, he might depend upon Numbers 3, 4, 5, and 6 and feel well introduced to the vast subject. 8. The Koran. Tr. by J. M. Ropwett, (Everyman’s Library.) E. P. Dutton and Co., New York. 80 cents. 9. The Faith of Islam. Epwarp Seti. Society for Pro- moting Christian Knowledge, London. 1907. 10. The Mystics of Islam. R. A. NicHotson. (Quest Series.) Harcourt, Brace and Co., New York. $1.25. 11. Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians. E. W. Lane. (Everyman’s Library.) E. P. Dutton and Co., New York. 80 MISSIONARY EDUCATION 12. Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to Al-Madinah and Meccah. R. F. Burton. G. P. Putnam’s Sons, New York. Out of print. 13. Islam at the Cross Roads. D. E. O’Leary. K. Paul, London. 1923. 6 shillings. 14. Aspects of Islam. D. B. MacponaLtp. Macmillan Co., New York. 1911. $1.75. 15. Arabic Thought and Its Place im History. D. E. O’Leary. E. P. Dutton Co., New York. 1924. $5.00. In addition to these volumes, the following inexpen- sive books would be very useful. Of the following books all but the last are published or im- ported by the Missionary Education Movement and should be ordered through denominational headquarters. Young Islam on Trek. Bast Matuews. 1926. Cloth, $1.00; paper, 60 cents. Shepard of Aintab. Atice S. Riccs. 1920. Cloth, $1.00; paper, 75 cents. The Near East: Crossroads of the World. Wiutt1am H. Hatt. 1920. Cloth, 75 cents; paper, 50 cents. The Rebuke of Islam. W.H. T. GAtrpNER. United Council for Missionary Education, London. 1920. 60 cents. The Moslem World in Revolution. W. Witson CAsH. Edinburgh House Press, London. 1925. 80 cents. The Faith of the Crescent. JoHN Taxte. Order through Association Press, New York. The entire cost of the list of fifteen, together with the additions just mentioned, would be under fifty dol- lars. If it be thought best, several of the books named in the list of fifteen, say numbers 12-15, could be omitted for the sake of including the additional books, ORGANIZATION OF THE PROGRAM 81 or for the sake of including in the library a few copies of works of fiction (see below). It is very likely that many people of the parish would read fiction when not attracted by so-called study books. ‘This would enroll them, nevertheless, in the program. It might be worth while to procure some of the following books: The Arabian Nights. Tr. by E. W. Lane. Stanley Lane- Poole, Editor. (Bohn’s Popular Library.) Harcourt Brace and Co., New York. 1925. 85 cents. Haji Baba of Ispahan, Adventures of. J. J. Morter. (The World’s Classics.) Oxford University Press, New York. 1923. 80 cents. Stamboul Nights. H. G. Dwicut. Doubleday Page and Co., Garden City, N. Y. $2.00. The Shirt of Flame. Hatipan Epis. Duffield and Co., New York. 1925. $2.50. Haremlik: Some Pages from the Life of Turkish Women. DemitrA VAKA. In collaboration with K. Kenneth- Brown. Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston. 1912. $2.00. Disenchanted. Pr1errRE Lott. Macmillan Co., New York. 1925. $2.00. Greenmantle. J. BucHan. George H. Doran Co., New York. 1916. $2.50. Hira Singh. T. Munpy. A. L. Burt Co., New York. 1917. 75 cents. Masoud the Bedouin. AtrrepA P. CarHart. Missionary Education Movement, New York. 1915. $1.50. The Lure of Islam. C. M. Prowse. Sampson Low, London. Alien Souls. A. AppuLLAH. James A, McCann Co., New York. $1.75. Order through Miss Jean Wick, 59 Washington Square, New York City. If a public library is situated within reach, the church might arrange to procure many books on loan, 82 MISSIONARY EDUCATION or at least arrange for a reserve shelf in the library during the time of the missionary program. The reference library requires the attention of a special librarian who will devote himself to the circula- tion and use of the books. He should know in a gen- eral way what are the contents of the books, should see that they are available when wanted by particular workers whose needs he knows, and should suggest to various persons books in which they might have some special interest. All these details a competent librarian could work out for himself, including the cataloging of the books and the record of loans and returns. What a valuable office this might be, both for the librarian himself and for those whom he serves! ‘THE PROGRAM We have in mind here certain principles which should inhere in and dominate the organization of the program. Of fundamental importance is the principle of integration. The missionary educational work should be an integral part of the whole educational program, a part of the one curriculum; not a “parallel” series of studies and activities, nor an “optional” series, nor a miscellaneous lot of “extras” thrust now and then into the general program. Nothing less than integration gives missions the place they deserve in parish consideration. If missions are “extra,” the policy serves to engender an attitude of antagonism. The “monthly missionary program,” the occasional missionary address, the optional course in missions, even the annual mission study class have inevitably seemed to some to be intrusions and not really a part ORGANIZATION OF THE PROGRAM — 83 of the regular scheme of things. And even with these features missions have occupied only a comparatively small place in parish work. The general attitude may be seen in several recent books on religious education, in which very scant at- tention has been paid to missions and missionary edu- cation. In the view of this book and its philosophy of religious education this is as serious a fault as an at- tempt to understand China through her five hundred thousand Protestants, while at the same time the rest of the four hundred millions of Chinese are disre- garded. We who study religion within too narrow limits are under a severe handicap. Even our rich Christian heritage does not furnish us altogether suffi- cient materials for a full comprehension of the broad field of religion. We Christians cannot ignore the rest of the world, whether we consider our own good or the good of others, and especially if we realize that we have a saving gospel for the non-Christian world. Let us be persuaded that “religious education” falls significantly short of the highest goal if “missionary education” is not part and parcel of it. In the foregoing paragraph we set out to say one thing, and said two; namely, that missionary education should be integrated with the general program, and that religious education is at best imperfect if it has not included missionary education. The two should be in reality one. This mind should be in both kinds of educationists, and then the local curriculum would serve the highest ends of education in religion. How may the integration at which we aim be ac- complished under the present circumstances? We may suggest first of all a very concrete and definite way; 84 MISSIONARY EDUCATION namely, the use of missionary educational materials in direct connection with the weekly Church School les- sons. It is the method of correlated lesson materials. The author’s China in the Local Parish, pages 16-33, contains references to a full set of Chinese materials for use in connection with the International Graded series of lessons. Teachers could work out a similar program with reference to any field of mission study. We may here explain what we mean by the method of correlation. Assume for the moment that the topic for the missionary program is the Moslem World. Take, for example, a lesson on the Crucifixion. Dur- ing the discussion of the lesson the teacher may refer to the fact of the Crucifixion as a stumbling block to Moslems, a doctrine which is difficult for them to be- lieve. The Koran says, “Yet they (i.e., the Jews) slew him (Jesus) not, and they crucified him not, but they had only his likeness.” Mohammed taught that God would not suffer the sinless Jesus to be slain, and sent a likeness of him to suffer on the Cross. In mis- sionary work among Moslems the story of the Cruci- fixion is not to be used in the approach to them. Rather, the approach is on the ground of Jesus’ won- derful character and life. Interesting, isn’t it? It is profitable as well as interesting for us to think over some of the real problems which our representa- tives abroad face as they strive to win the Moslems to a better way. Take another example. If the class is studying the Temple and temple worship, how ap- propriate it would be to compare the Kaaba of Mecca, the Moslem’s sacred shrine, and to discuss aspects of Moslem worship. Or, again, suppose the lesson has to do with the evils of drink. There lie at one’s dis- ORGANIZATION OF THE PROGRAM — 85 posal some very interesting materials on the Moslem’s attitude in the matter. The Koran prohibits intoxi- cants, their sale and consumption. Ideally speaking, Islam is a great prohibition society. Or, take a les- son on loyalty to God. What an unusual opportunity there is to emphasize the cardinal doctrine of Islam, that “there is no God but Allah!” These illustrations will suffice to show what is meant by correlation. Biblical materials and Islamic lie very close together, and references to things Islamic seem very much in order in studies of the Hebrews and early Christians. They are appropriate for a study of later times as well, even the present day. Each week some glimpse into Islam may be taken as the lesson hour proceeds. The teacher might arrange for this in the preparation of his lesson, and find it very fruitful indeed. If the teacher were but to look ahead and get a general view of the lessons he has to handle during the time of the missionary educational program, and then do his read- ing in things Islamic with a pad and pencil at hand, he could make note of illustrations, comparisons, and other references of value to him in teaching. He would en- joy the new way of conducting the course. He would not, in reality, be “lugging in” these Moslem materials, for it would have been agreed at the outset that all teachers were to do this whenever possible and appro- priate as one means of conducting the missionary pro- gram—as one means, we say. This method of correlation may seem to deal with somewhat scattered materials which lack any essential continuity in themselves. They are, to be sure, scarcely more than illustrative and comparative materials, but they have, nevertheless, a certain value in themselves. 86 MISSIONARY EDUCATION If some cogent references are used each week, the cumulative effect of the scattered fragments will be significant in the end. But after all, this is only one method. It is, however, general enough in its applica- tion to help in creating a common mind for the pro- gram, and to afford a scheme into which otherwise miscellaneous materials may fit harmoniously. An opening exercise which includes some Islamic refer- ences, an occasional talk on an Islamic theme, a minor Islamic project, all seem then to be relative to the program. More is to be said later (in Chapter III) about various projects which may be used as an integral part of the regular religious educational work. A second consideration in the organization of the program should be the comprehensiveness of its appli- cation to the various departments of parish life. While the missionary theme is being pursued, it should find a place in the thought and work of every phase of the parish organization. The ideal is no less than the entire parish engaged in the study of Islam, or some unitary topic or field, whatever it may be. This would include groups of boys and men as well as groups of girls and women. The program might even afford opportunity for the organization of new units in the parish or in the Church School. A class of young people might be formed for the study of the great liv- ing religions of the world, the course closing with the Moslem faith on the eve of the Grand Project. A series of public addresses might be given on Sundays at another time than a regular service hour for the sake of those not being reached in other ways. A third consideration for the program as such is that of intensive study at certain points. A class or ORGANIZATION OF THE PROGRAM — 87 two in the Church School might elect to devote a number of weeks to the missions theme as an agreeable change from the regular routine. A “mission study class,’ or forum, would surely be included in the pro- gram, using one or another of the study books issued by the Missionary Education Movement. Some churches hold an annual institute, or at least a “School of Missions.” ‘The pity is that most churches have done little more in missionary education than to hold for a few weeks each year a mission study class or an institute, a method which has reached only a small percentage of the parish population. These features are good, but they would be more valuable against the general background of study and activity which we have sketched above. A fourth consideration which applies to the whole extent and variety of the work is that the educational ideal should dominate. The emphasis should not be so much on “missions” and “missionary education,” for these terms might repel at first many whom we are anxious to enlist; but on the land, the people, their habits and customs, and their religion. These things must necessarily be of interest to all. The program will aim to broaden the horizon of those who enlist in it. Something concrete and tangible will issue from it for everyone who participates. One person may learn something more of history, another may enlarge his knowledge of art, a third may find his interests to be ethical or philosophical, and so on—and all at work under the auspices of the church! Ill PROJECTS N our first chapter we discussed the general prob- ] lem of missionary education in an effort to find out what it is, after all, that we are trying to do when we undertake missionary education. In our sec- ond chapter we dealt with the organization of the local church and parish for purposes of missionary educa- tion. In this present chapter we have to do with specific missionary educational projects,* by which our organization may work out our theory in practise. A missionary educational project is a problematic act, or a series of problematic acts, with a missionary motive, carried out under circumstances reproductive of an actual missionary situation. We seek to inter- pret the life and mind of non-Christian peoples by do- ing things which exhibit with fair accuracy their life © and mind. We desire to bring the distant scene into the immediate, local consciousness, and to let it make its own interpretation. The difficulties in the way do not deter us, but only make us more determined and more careful when we have come to realize something of the great value of our enterprise. Activity is at the basis of our effort. By activity we mean all sorts of right-purposeful activity. We would rally the forces of body, mind, and spirit for our purpose, and not the least of these is bodily activity. We would have things made by hand, and enlist our parishioners in various forms of dramatization. We mean, also, mental activity; not, of course, the mere 1 For China projects see the author’s China in the Local Parish. 9g f PROJECTS 89 acquisition and memory of information about various lands and peoples, but the stirring of all the rational processes of the individual. We must think our way, if possible, into the minds of other peoples. We must direct our thoughts to the problems involved in mis- sionary work; we must ask ourselves what to do in certain situations; we must discover the principles involved in the solution of the problems encountered. We should seek earnestly for the inner, spiritual mean- ing also, for it is the spirit which giveth life. The realities with which we are concerned are ultimately spiritual. We must test the spirit—if not the spirits— to see if it be of God. In undertaking projects we should see that we make the most of them toward the development of activity in the persons which our projects enlist. Each teacher will attend to this for his own class, or each superintendent for his own de- partment. The activity demanded by the true missionary edu- cational project should be carried out under proper circumstances. It is an actual missionary situation which we would portray. For example, we do not choose for an April missionary program on India—as some have done—a hymn entitled, “We plow the fields,” unless it be understood that this agricultural operation in India is performed a couple of months later than April. Or, again, we have often discussed problems of the “native church”—in our American setting. Of course, we cannot rid ourselves of the American setting, but we should discuss native church problems in their own setting primarily. We have considered the problem of India’s political freedom within the setting of our own political environment 90 MISSIONARY EDUCATION rather than in its total Indian setting. We have looked at Chinese villages through Western eyes and failed thereby to perceive the Chinese villager’s thought of his own village. We read the Koran or the Bhagavad Gita in a subjective, Western mood, and miss the dis- covery of certain values which those books have. for the Moslem or for the Hindu. We have too often ab- stracted foreign problems from their own natural setting and have sought to solve them in a state of isolation. If we would understand what this book, at least, means by the missionary educational project, we must refer to Chapter I. In a word, we must take the origi- nal definition of missionary education (page 15) and substitute for “interpretation” the word “practise.” We have, then, this definition of the project: “Our (Christian) practise of the essential character —that is, the origins, development, complexity, and fruits—of the non-Christian religions, for the sake of understanding, appreciation, cooperation, and Chris- tianization—of ourselves as well as others.” All that was said of “interpretation” may be said of the project, or problematic activity. It is fundamental to the project that we learn, at least in part, to see others as they see themselves. Seeing them as they see themselves is in large measure prerequisite to the Christianizing process. GENERAL PROJECTS Before discussing in detail certain major Islamic projects, a general list might be submitted in illustra- tion of what we mean by the missionary educational PROJECTS 91 project, it being understood that each project is not to be considered merely as a thing in itself, but as a part of a larger program. Each project represents a phase of a larger situation and needs to be presented in relation to the whole. In each instance the individual, class, or group undertaking the project makes a careful and leisurely study of the essential materials involved in the project, and is interested not merely in doing something, but in doing something accurately and in the right spirit. An apparently simple project may resolve itself into an elaborate and engaging study and open up ultimately a wide portion of the general mis- sionary field. An apparently non-religious project might lead to considerations of religion. For example, a boy or group of boys might set about making models of apparatus used in irrigation, such as the water-wheels of Japan, China, the Eu- phrates, and the Nile, meanwhile studying the gen- eral question of the relation of irrigation to fertility and life. The religious educational value of such study might be realized if the boy or group of boys con- sidered at the same time the holy well of Zem Zem in Mecca, the Well of Knowledge in Benares, Jacob’s well in Sychar, and the general question of sacred springs, pools, and rivers. Water has loomed large in the life and thought of men, whether for purposes of fertility of soil, or for its cleansing and symbolic qualities. A cult of water is early and widespread, ranging in its development from the worship of water as a power in itself, through the worship of water-spirits, on up through various ceremonial uses of water to its highest ritual and spiritual use in Christian baptism. Jesus used the waters of Sychar from which to draw lessons 92 MISSIONARY EDUCATION for the Samaritan woman, and we may follow his ex- ample with propriety and profit in our search for the spiritual meaning of water to mankind, and especially for the meaning of Jesus’ words at Sychar and else- where, “born of water and the spirit,’ “the water of life,” etc. The New Testament will be better understood if we study it in relation to the whole field of religious phenomena. Both Abyssinian Christians and Creek Indians have been accustomed to bathe annually in order to wash away the sins of the year. A form of baptism has been practised by peoples widely separated in time and space, by Aztecs, Incas, Babylonians, Poly- nesians, Cherokees, and Christians. John the Baptist had baptized before Jesus did so. Jesus took the rite and elevated it to a place of supreme spiritual significance. It behooves us to know just what he meant by it and what its value is for the Christian Church today. This we may learn by comparison as well as by direct ap- peal to Jesus himself. We may say reverently that it is not a far cry from water-wheels to baptism. There was a ladder set up by Jesus at Jacob’s well, which reached to heaven. The following is a list of projects, without reference to any particular country, people, or religion, and in disregard of any logical order. 1. Worship. Scenes from wayside shrine, temple, or — mosque. Involving the necessary physical setting, utensils of worship, ritual, and worshipers. 2. Education. A typical school, say of either the village or the specifically religious type, in order to show the very rudimentary traditional education of the masses. PROJECTS 93 3. Home Life. Women’s life in the zenana, harem, etc. The status of woman shown by monologue or conversation. 4. Religious or Ethical Doctrine. A discussion between a Christian missionary and some non-Christian on some major doctrine of religion or ethics, with a group acting as “jury.” 5. Irade. Scene at a shop. Typical bargaining between shopkeeper and prospective customers. Typical wares and prices. 6. Humor. Typical stories of many peoples. Folk tales illustrating the common stock of ideas. 7. Games and Child Life. The games of children of various lands studied and exhibited in connection with a study of play-life in these lands. 8. Marriage. Wedding customs and their significance. Marriage processions, ceremonies, etc. 9. The Drama. Study and reading of specimen plays. Dramatic performance of scenes from native authors. to. A Congress of Religions. Representatives of various great religions met to discuss a single theme, such as sin, salvation, God. 11. A Musicale. Specimens of the vocal and instrumental music of many peoples, or of a single people; a public re- cital, possibly. 12. Building Construction. Building miniature houses, temples, mosques, shops, or other structures, with attention not only to exterior but interior (see also No. 16). 13. Scrap-books. A collection of current photographs from newspapers and magazines illustrating aspects of religion, 94 MISSIONARY EDUCATION with appropriate descriptions of scenes portrayed. Or a book of clippings bearing upon given topics, such as modern tendencies in Shintoism, Hinduism, etc. 14. A Pilgrimage. A study of pilgrims and pilgrim rites in various religions, with a comparative view expressed at an imaginary meeting-place by pilgrims of various faiths. Let them meet at the “New Jerusalem.” 15. Sand Maps, Charts, etc. Construction of maps, etc., in connection with the study of racial types, natural products, etc. 16. Village Construction. A study of typical villages of various lands, showing types of architecture, colors, water- supply, occupations, etc. 17. Medical Work. A study of native methods of former and of present times, of native views of disease and its cure in comparison with the best modern medicine. For example, the meeting of a modern doctor and a village practitioner at the bedside of a patient. 18. Museum. A visit to a museum for the study of for- eign customs. Or, the rental of “curios” from a mission board, provided the curios are accurately labeled! 19. Correspondence. Imaginary or real letters exchanged between pupils in the parish and foreign individuals, written on carefully selected topics. 20. Impersonation. The comments of some Asiatic upon an American city, scene, or aspect of American life. A Hindu at the Chicago slaughter-houses; a desert Arab at his first “movie”; an Oriental’s impression of coeducation; sh eaey To us PROJECTS 95 21. Studies in Literature. Readings from poetry or prose to discover some major literary themes and the style used. Readings to the class or other group, with comment. 22. Story-telling. In appropriate costume. A special oc- casion, it may be. Creation stories. Stories of the Judgment. 23. Food. The study of foods of various peoples. The making and serving of some of these dishes as “refresh- ments’ at a social function. Food taboos. Sacred animals. These are the items which most immediately come to mind. They represent the range of common life and afford opportunity for a study of similarities and differences prevailing among the many peoples of the earth. It is a suggestive and not an exhaustive list. In actual practise other projects will suggest themselves. Each of the projects suggested requires considerable attention for its proper execution. This is part of its purpose as an educational venture. Printed sources should be available,” and the presence of someone with first-hand information and experience would be most helpful, although not indispensable. Different churches could undertake different projects, according to their available resources and experience. There are thou- sands of churches in America that could undertake from year to year any one or all of the projects listed above. It is often merely the question of a leader and the actual beginning. Once a group or a congregation has learned the technique, it will make use of projects freely and without further hesitation. There is no sounder educational method, whatever the size of the church. 2The author will be glad to furnish references for any par- ticular project. 96 MISSIONARY EDUCATION We present now, with introductory remarks, several specifically Moslem projects. MosquE PRojEcT Worship. Prayer was for Mohammed a “pillar of religion,” a “key to Paradise.’”’ It is the second of the five foundations of Islamic practise. These five foundations are: 1. The belief and unhesitating profession that “there is no God but Allah and Mohammed is the apostle of Allah.” 2. Prayer, or more specifically, five periods of prayer daily. 3. The annual fast during the month of Ramadan. 4. The giving of the legal alms. 5. The performance of the pilgrimage to Mecca by all who have both sufficient means for the journey and for maintaining their families at home during their absence. Prayer was for Mohammed more a matter of time and place and ceremonial obligation than an attitude of mind. It wasa service. At least that was the note which the Moslem community caught from him. A> little better can be said of the Prophet himself, espe- cially with reference to those moods of his in which he sought communion with his God. Prayer was a means to communion. His own religious experience — was rich at times. He was a mystic of a sort. But prayer in Islam has been consistently, for the most part, a ritualistic practise. Mohammed learned very early the need and value of ceremony, and instituted many forms of worship. DR. WATSON L. PHILLIPS, PASTOR EMERITUS OF THE CHURCH OF THE REDEEMER, NEW HAVEN, CONN., IN THE ROLE OF MOHAMMED IN “KERBALA’”’ (¢PIOM 94} SEM BulUUIs9q 9} U],, “7oMd]D-1D UDY 1-DPDG rq ‘SCI YORI Ul PAQIIOSUL DOI} ‘sp1oM 94} Ivadde soyoIe OM} JOy}O 94} JOAQ “YRITV pIoM 94} JO suorj jeder ore yore jeIJUDD 9Yy} sAOqY ‘eIPUy WorZ syulid u0}09 o1e JpIs JayyTe ye soinSy osenbs oyy *Asjsoede} ystyiny, ewospuey pue plo ue suny st AeMYoIe [eI}UID 94} UT A€VMAVI-IV dIfSvVNW AHL PROJECTS 97 The first mosque to figure at all in the Moslem com- munity was established at Medina after Mohammed and his few followers had “fled” thither from Mecca in 622 A.D. It was a converted date barn. The floor was uneven and the roof leaky, and during the rainy season worship was conducted in it at some incon- venience. Mohammed is known to have advised the worshipers to bring sand with them to dry up the mud spots. Prayers were instituted in Medina. Five times daily were the faithful called to prayer: between dawn and sunrise, at noon when the sun had passed the zenith, mid-afternoon, evening-time just after sunset, and when the night had closed in. These are still the specified times to be kept with precision. Mohammed once remarked, “My worst fear is that my nation will delay prayer till after the appointed time.” He often said, “God has promised that he will cause him to enter Paradise who performs the five prayers that God has prescribed for his servants.” At first it was a question as to how the faithful should be summoned to prayer—by what means. The conch-shell was declined because of its pagan char- acter. The trumpet was possible, but it was an in- strument of the Moslems’ Jewish enemies. Bells rang out from Christian churches and monasteries. Islam was a new faith, and a new way, at last, and a novel way was decided upon for the call to prayer—the hu- man voice. Among the Moslems of Medina was a strong-voiced African, named Bilal, who has the honor of having been the first muezzin. There was then no minaret for him to mount. He called from the roof of the improvised mosque. The faithful were then all 98 MISSIONARY EDUCATION within hearing of his summons and most of them were able to gather at the mosque for congregational wor- ship. Since the days of Bilal muezzins have had minarets to climb, from whose balconies their voices have carried out over larger communities. The cry at first was merely: “Allah is great! Come to prayer!” Since then it has been: Allah is great. There is no God but Allah. Mohammed is Allah’s apostle. Come to prayer. Come to works. Allah is great. There is no God but Allah. Prayer in Medina had not only religious value but a certain martial value as well. The postures which were used were good, so Mohammed thought, for physical exercise and for military drill. Early connec- tion was thus made in Islam between religion and war- fare—we do not say this here as harping upon the somewhat mistaken notion that Islam is exclusively a “religion of the sword.”” Mohammed and the Moslem community were now and then in certain straits. The food supply was low at times, and rich Meccan cara- vans often passed along the Syrian routes. Then, too, Mohammed came to realize that Islam was not firmly established until Mecca itself was secured for the faith, and he prepared to wage war, if necessary, to that end. Mecca was to be won by the sword in an extremity, but at any rate by religion. In the end Mecca capitulated to religion with almost no shedding of blood or loss of life. In all the campaigns prayer-times were observed. Mohammed recognized the effect of prayer upon the minds of his soldiers, as did Cromwell at a later date in his struggles with the English Crown. And Mo- PROJECTS 99 hammed’s foes were known to hesitate in the face of his praying army. Allah, they feared, was more powerful than their own gods, and the odds were against them. For purposes of prayer there were certain pre- requisites. The body and the clothes of the worshiper should be clean, and the place of prayer should be free from all impurity. Prayer is always preceded by ablution, usually performed with water, but in cases of extremity, as out in the waterless desert at a time of prayer, Allah takes the will for the deed. In all this the ceremonial is immediately apparent, but it would be too much to say that the ethical is en- tirely lacking. A mosque service is not mere form. There is in it an inner moral and spiritual meaning which the sincere worshiper may find to his good. We cannot dismiss strange symbolism as empty show. We might even find for ourselves something in it signif- icant for religion. There is no doubting, however, the tremendous power of Islamic ritual. It is a social and religious force which we Protestants especially should seek to understand. Aside from the prayers at stated times, Mohammed commended prayer at various times; for example, in connection with trade, in times of danger, on behalf of one’s parents or of believing guests, on the part of a father for his children, in times of sickness, and for the sake of repentance and guidance. It is easier to see the ethical here, although it is not lacking else- where. We would make the point, however, that in any religion in which the ritualistic is highly em- phasized there is a tendency, often realized, to under- emphasize morality. Worship itself is to the ritualist 100 MISSIONARY EDUCATION of more value than purity of heart, and the personal character of the priest of the ritual order is not neces- sarily involved in the exercise of the priestly office. It is the office which counts. There is no priesthood in Islam, but ritual is highly emphasized, and Islam suffers from a certain lack of outspoken moral em- phasis. At least, Islamic history bears witness to this fact. Be it said, however, to the credit of many Mos- lems today that morality and things of the spirit have a high place in their faith as they advance its claims to the allegiance of modern men. They try to set forth the best they have, and we must put ourselves in a position to consider it. Let us turn at last to the matter of the specific mosque project. If any further preliminary word should be added to the statement on prayer which we have just made, it would be that prayers may be said privately, or in a company, or in a mosque, although prayers observed in a mosque are the most meritorious. We have chosen public prayer for our project, and pro- pose a service which requires about twenty minutes to reproduce. Our aim is not to show the variations, in- tricacies, and length of a Moslem public prayer serv- ice, but to exhibit something typical and its significance. There is variation, of course, in Moslem practise, but we can offer here a simple service which is quite in keeping with the characteristic actual situation, such a service as one might see, for example, were he per- mitted to attend it, in the average jama’ masjid, or mosque of assembly, on Fridays. The setting. For ordinary purposes nothing elaborate is needed; in fact, little more than imagina- PROJECTS 101 tion. Prayers are conducted in an open court. Rugs or mats may be used, or the worshipers may spread their outer garments instead. Water should be handy, a fountain, pool, or vessel, for the ablutions—not actual water, of course. The pulpit is easily arranged, a simple set of three steps with room enough on the top step for the zmam, or leader, to seat himself cross- legged or to stand. If the service is to take place as part of the Grand Project (see Chapter IV), an ap- propriate setting for it will be arranged in the general plan, something representative of an actual mosque court. It must be borne in mind, however, that Islam is austere. In the main body of Islam there are no showy shrines, no images, no ornamentation other than plain colors and inscriptions, mostly Koranic quota- tions. Costumes. If the service is to be carried out in costume, that also is a simple matter. Costumes may be rented, or made.* Costumes should be used in con- nection with the Grand Project, whether they are used on other occasions or not. They are indispensable for the sake of atmosphere, and for the proper state of mind on the part of the participants. In this too much should not be left to the imagination, The fullest possible equipment is essential to a serious considera- tion of the theme and a serious carrying out of the project. Costumes themselves are symbolic and significant, and should be used—but with great care, of course, for the sake of accuracy. Mental attitude. Any group of men and boys may be chosen for the project who will in due time put 8 Consult your Mission Board about them. 102 MISSIONARY EDUCATION themselves in the proper frame of mind toward it. Several earnest men might be included in the group for the sake of their immediate influence. It is the purpose of the project to convey to the participants something of the inner significance of the Moslem prayer service and to exhibit something of this signif- icance to whatever audience the group may have at- tending its demonstration. If the service is to be performed on a public occasion, the audience should be appealed to beforehand in behalf of the true char- acter of the demonstration. It should be remembered that a service is being attempted which is sacred to millions of Moslem men. ‘The true motive of the project should be understood by all, and all should act accordingly. Applause even may be out of order. Certainly were we permitted to attend a real Moslem service in a real mosque, we should not applaud at its conclusion. It is not a show, a spectacle; it is Moslem worship before God. We have had set before us a preliminary statement on Moslem prayer, parts of which statement might be used at the time of the demonstration in order to in- troduce it. We have had the setting of prayer de- scribed, and have been reminded of the frame of mind essential to the project as a real religious educational venture. Now for the actual service itself. The Call to Prayer. The call to prayer (the adhdan, or azn) may be given by the muezzin after the man- ner indicated in Lane’s Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians, pages 382-383.* During the call This book will be referred to many times throughout this chapter as “Lane,” the full title being omitted. PROJECTS 103 the worshipers approach the mosque and enter the outer entrance. At the inner entrance they pause and remove their shoes. (Only in exceptional mosques are shoes retained today.) The shoes are carried to a place designated for shoes at one side of the court. (Were they left outside, they might be carried off.) Outer coats, if such are worn, and turbans (usually, though not always) may be removed and deposited beside the respective places where the worshipers will eventually engage in prayer. Ablutions. Each worshiper then repairs to the place of ablution. This may be an imitation fountain or pool, made with strips of wood for framework, or merely a water-vessel (see Lane, pp. 146-147)—or several vessels if many worshipers are to take part in the service. Each man may “pour” for another, until all have ended their ceremonial washing. Each man tucks up his sleeves (he does not roll them) above his elbows, saying as he does so, “I am going to purify myself from bodily uncleanness in preparation for prayer, to draw my soul near to the Most High.” It might be well to have one or two among the first arrivals at the place of ablution speak loud enough for the audience to hear. The others as they come one by one may merely mutter the declara- tion to themselves. Each man, after the original declaration, washes his hands three times, saying meanwhile, “O God, examine my accounts with favor.’ He rinses his mouth three times, each time throwing water into it with the right hand. Next he snuffs water up his nostrils from the right hand. Then he washes his face, then the right hand and fore- 104 MISSIONARY EDUCATION arm, then the left hand and forearm. After that, he washes his neck, drying the one side with the back of one hand and the other side with the back of the other hand. Last of all he washes his feet up to the ankles. The bather who speaks loud enough for the audience to hear him should, of course, speak after the call to prayer has ceased, or he will not be heard, and the audience will miss an important part of the service. Reading from the Koran. While the men are gathering at their places after performing their ablu- tions as described above, a Reader seated (he may come in from another entrance than that used by the worshipers) toward the front of the mosque court and facing the incoming men, may read extracts from the Koran for their benefit as they seat themselves (the number of literate Moslems is comparatively small). His book may rest before him upon a Koran-stand (rahil) which he has taken up from the side of the mosque court and placed where he wishes to use it. He sits cross-legged as he reads. Each man as he sits down at his own place listens attentively to the read- ing. Portions of suras 87, 81, and 52 might be read. The role of Imam. ‘The reading is at last inter- rupted by the entrance of the Imam, or leader of prayer, from a side room off the mosque court (he wears no shoes, of course). He goes to the pulpit and sits upon it for a moment of quiet meditation. He then rises and delivers the weekly sermon (the khutba). Mohammed remarked once that “the length of a man’s prayers and the shortness of his sermon are signs of his sense and understanding.” The following sermon may be used: PROJECTS 105 In the name of God, the compassionate, the merciful. Praised be God. Praised be that God who hath shown us the way in this religion. If he had not guided us into the path, we should not have found it. I bear witness that there is no God but God. He is one. He has no associate. I bear witness that of a truth Mo- hammed is his servant and his apostle. May God have mercy upon him, and upon his descendants, and upon his companions, and give them peace. Fear God, O ye people, and fear that day, the day of judgment, when a father will not be able to answer for his son, nor the son for his ‘father. Of a truth God’s promises are true. Let not this present life make you proud. Let not Satan, the deceiver, lead you astray. O ye people who have believed, turn ye to God. Verily, God doth forgive sin, verily he, the forgiver of sins, is merciful. Praised be God. We praise him. We seek help from him. We trust in him. We ask forgiveness of sins. We seek refuge in him from evil desires and from former sinful actions. O ye people, remember the great and exalted Lord. He will also remember you. He will answer your prayers. The remembrance of God is great, and good, and honorable, and meritorious, and worthy, and sublime. | The Imam (or he may be a khateeb, or preacher) may read a prayer also. For specimens see the Inter- national Review of Missions, April, 1926. We quote here a prayer which tradition says Mohammed gave for the use of anyone undertaking a new work: O Lord, I supplicate Thy good assistance in Thy great wisdom; I pray for ability to discern and obtain what is good, through the means of Thy power. ...O Lord, if Thou knowest that the matter which I am about to under- 106 MISSIONARY EDUCATION take is good for my religion, my life, and my futurity, then make it easy for me, and give me prosperity in it; and if Thou knowest that it is bad for my religion, my life, and my end, then put it far from me, and show me good, what- ever it may be. This is, however, a prayer for private use, and not for mosque worship. At the end of the sermon the muezzin enters, or rises if he has already come in during the sermon, and recites in ordinary tone of voice the call to prayer, adding to it the phrase, “Qad qamat as-salah!’ (Now comes prayer!) The Imam takes his place in front, standing and facing the prayer-direction (Mecca), and all arrange themselves standing in their chosen places and facing with him, each with his right hand gripping his left wrist. The Imam recites, as they stand, the Fattha,’ or “Opener’’ of the Koran, as follows: Praise be to God, Lord of the worlds, The compassionate, the merciful, King on the day of reckoning. Thee only do we worship, And to Thee do we cry for help. Guide Thou us in the right path, The path of those to whom Thou hast been gracious, With whom Thou art not angry, And who go not astray. At the conclusion of the chapter he says, “Allahu akbar!” (God is great!) and all repeat the words after 5 Sura I, as it is in the Arabic Koran. In Rodwell’s translation it is Sura 8. Rodwell’s translation is based upon a reconstruction of the Koran which attempts to arrange the parts in chronological order, the order in which the parts were revealed to the Prophet Mohammed. MOHAMMED AND HIS GRANDSONS, HASAN AND HUSSEIN AN ARAB VILLAGE SCHOOL PROJECTS 107 him. Then following the example of the leader, all place their hands upon their knees, and say after the leader, “Subhana rabiya al-adhim,’ or in English, “Glory be to the great Lord.” Then all say after the Imam, “Semia Allahu liman hamida,”’ or in English, “Allah hears those who praise him.” Thereafter come the other postures of prayer, punc- tuated now and then with the expression, “Allahu akbar!” For the postures, see Lane, pages 78-79. When kneeling, the instep touches the floor. The service ends with the worshipers at ease on their haunches. The leader says, after a moment of silence, “Salam alaykum wa rahmat ullah,”’ (Peace be upon you, and the mercy of God). At this the wor- shipers rise, resume their coats and turbans, pick up their shoes, and go out. EDUCATION PROJECT We may turn next to a project in Moslem education. It, also, calls for a preliminary statement on the ques- tion as a whole. Moslem education is not an easy subject to handle fairly, especially when the attempt is made in a few pages, but since this book is intended as a source-book, a minimum treatment of every phase of our project material must be given in each instance, whether with regard to the method or the content of the project. The specific project in education might be worked out somewhat as follows. Let us call it an Arab vil- lage school, a “kuttab,’ as it is known in Egypt and elsewhere. With it we may combine phases of the more strictly “mosque school,” for we desire to illus- 108 MISSIONARY EDUCATION trate both religious and secular education of the primary grade. The language used will be the Arabic (is it needless to say that the accent in the words “Arab” and “Arabic” is on the first syllable ‘“Ar’’?), - whose pronunciation may be mastered with sufficient accuracy by means of a key. The pronunciation must ignore, of course, colloquial differences prevailing in different regions. We have similar differences in English pronunciation throughout the English-speak- ing world. Ordinarily the Arabs call a dog “kelb,” but some call it “chelb.” Pure colloquialisms are numerous, but our project does not necessarily involve any close consideration of them. It is well to know, however, that Arabic is a living language, very flexible, and subject to both use and abuse, as is any other tongue. It is both interesting and profitable to include some of the Arabic language in the project. It is of no little interest to our chil- dren to learn that Arabic is written in a way which to them is “backwards.” It gives them a new appre- ciation of language to know this. It widens their gen- eral horizon. They are eager to try the writing itself. It is an obvious aid to their understanding the school life of Arab children. And who knows but that some child may get through the project an abiding interest in things Arabic and Moslem? One child engaged in such a project asked why she was being taught merely the alphabet when she would like to be able to write letters in Arabic to children “over there.” Arabic is a beautiful, graceful script. It is used freely for decorative purposes. Within the range of Sunni Islam (the main body of Moslems) the use of “likenesses” is prohibited, and so no Sunni mosque PROJECTS 109 may have figures of flowers, animals, fishes, and the like for decoration or any other use. Arabic script is used instead. Mosque arches, corridors, minarets, and domes have Koranic quotations freely applied to them, sometimes chiseled, sometimes painted, and often worked in mosaic. The strict Moslem is determined to have no symbol or suggestion to detract from the worship of Allah, the one God, without likeness or associate. A novice can master without too much effort suffi- cient Arabic for purposes of the project. The “mas- ter” shown in the illustration of the school (page 107) knew no Arabic at all to begin with, and yet he di- rected the project with great success. The script is not difficult to write if one practises a bit with freehand movements. The master, of course, always has at his hand transliterations in the Roman character for his guidance in the conduct of the “school.” The school is held in the mosque court. The equip- ment includes a blackboard, a bench and a rod for the ‘teacher, mats for the floor, several Koran-stands, wooden or tin slates, several boxes belonging to better- class pupils, a school bag for each pupil, in which are pencils, pen, inkwell, writing-paper, books, and, per- haps, some parched corn (pop-corn), or salted pistachio nuts—although the pupil may have the corn, or nuts, or a chunk of bread tied up in a corner of his coat or sash-belt. In the illustration referred to may be seen several reading-stands, a pencil-box, a slate, etc. The reading-stand is made of two boards put together in “X” fashion, with the two lower ends carved into legs. The stand folds shut in “I” fashion. Some indication as to costumes is given in the illus- 110 MISSIONARY EDUCATION tration. In the school shown all the students are “boys.” Some of the girls who impersonated some of the “boys” might as well have been girls, had there been appropriate costumes; although, having all boys conveys the proper impression that education even yet is mostly for the males. (It must be kept in mind and properly explained that the project is not meant to set forth a comprehensive view of education in Islam, and that it ignores higher education, technical education, the education of women, etc., as carried cut in many Moslem centers today. ) It might be best to describe the actual presentation of the school scene in terms of its place in the Grand Project. In that way we can get all the details before us. Preceding the performance of the project, a state- ment may be made with reference to Moslem education in general, and to this project in particular. At the time there will be in the “schoolroom” the blackboard, the bench, the rod, rug or rugs, several rahils or read- ing-stands, and a couple of boxes belonging to better- class students. The schoolmaster (sheikh,° we may call him) is in a room off the “schoolroom” (the mosque court). After the introductory remarks by the Direc- tor, the curtain may be drawn disclosing the mosque court with its furnishings as just described. The pupils assemble slowly and irregularly. Each brings his school-bag slung over his shoulder (just a common cloth bag with a shoulder strap), containing pencils, crayons, pen-holder and pens, inkwell, ink powder (to be stirred with water), copy-book, writing- paper with indented lines, a book or two, and, perhaps, 8 This name is not pronounced “sheek,” but “shaykh.” PROJECTS 111 some parched corn, or salted pistachio nuts in the shell (if these edibles are not tied up in his clothing).‘ Two pupils may bring presents for the sheikh, say an orange or a pomegranate or some tobacco, which they beg leave to give him after he has entered the room. The sheikh will receive the presents more or less casually, with a brief “Thank you” (“Mamnun,” or “Katiar khayrak’’). Two pupils may bring notes from home testifying that their conduct has been good of late. On receipt of the notes and after reading them (to him- self—or aloud to the audience), he may inform the audience of their import, and give the two boys some appropriate recognition by a word or two, such as, “Very good” (“Tayyib,” or “gayn”’), or “Good fel- low” (“Jada’ tayyib”’). So much for what the pupils bring with them. Each student removes his shoes before entering the schoolroom and places them at the edge of the mat. If two or three of the boys have boxes in the room, in which they keep some of their school things, they will unlock their boxes and arrange the things—with what- ever they bring from home—at their places on the floor. Each pupil, as he enters, disregards all others, save for some casual greeting such as, for example, Sabah ul-khayr! (“Good morning’’) and then he ar- ranges his things. He gets his slate from his box or from the side of the room—from a nail, it may be, on which it hangs over night. The slate is made of wood and painted white, requiring black chalk, or it is made of tin. A minimum size for the slate may be six by eight inches, with a handle at the top, all being cut out from the one piece of wood or tin. He 7For properties see under “Exhibits,” pp. 147-148. 112 MISSIONARY EDUCATION gets his reading-stand, also, if he has one, from his box, or from the side of the room. He then seats himself cross-legged on his mat, or at his place on the floor, and begins his “review” (muthakdra, remem- bering). The review is well under way before the sheikh ap- pears. Each pupil is at his own particular task, rocking back and forth and reviewing aloud. Some are doing their letters (see pages 115-120 for various appropriate materials which, of course, have been mastered by the boys before the final presentation of the project), some are working at their numbers, some are committing to memory a few of the Ninety-Nine Names of Allah, some are reading from Korans on the stands before them. All now and then cast furtive glances at the doorway in expectation of the sheikh’s entrance, and on his appearance they all apply themselves with greater vigor and more volume to the review. There is fear of the teacher and great respect for him on the part of primary pupils. It has too often been the case, however, that teachers of these lower schools have not been altogether worthy of respect, either for their learning or their morals. The most important aspect of the Moslem educational problem is still that of primary common school education. Efforts now being made in Egypt, Turkey, and elsewhere in the direction of mass education are worthy of our attention and of whatever aid we may afford them. On entering, the sheikh scrutinizes the pupils and the work going on, and he may encourage a boy or two with the rod. He then seats himself on a chair or bench at the head of the room and reads to himself a while, the children going on with their review. Soon PROJECTS 113 he taps a bell, and bids them all “Be quiet.” At this point the presents and the notes may be offered to the _ teacher. | Then follows a scene characteristic of the school ses- sion, not too long drawn out to be of interest to the audience, and yet casual enough to be typical. The number class is called and lines up before the master to recite orally and by the board. Another group ap- pears next and goes through the alphabet. The master may summon each group by calling individual names. Several pupils might be called upon to recite names of Allah. The whole school might engage in the chanting of the Koran (the Fatiha, or “opening” chap- ter [see Lane, page 383]), sitting cross-legged and swaying with the music. After this period of recitation on previous lessons, the master will announce new lessons, writing some materials on the board, some on slates and copy-books, especially for several pupils whose eyes are “weak,” and making sure that all can write and pronounce cor- rectly the new words and expressions. The teacher will draw lots and call upon two boys to recite from the Koran (they may recite in English certain verses which they have memorized). The teacher will then call two boys by name, who, he announces, have done the best work of the school and have mastered what the school offers. As they stand before him, he gives each a portion of the Koran. Each salutes with a bow, right hand upon the abdomen, and kisses the master’s hand, who then binds about the turban of each (head- gear is kept on in school) a strip of white or green cloth in token of their graduation. At a clap of the teacher’s hands all put away their 114 MISSIONARY EDUCATION things, rise and form in line by twos. The teacher leads, the graduates and honor boys and the rest in order follow, reclaim their shoes, and go out. If any occasion for “punishment” should arise, the teacher may have the offender—if the offense be slight—extend his hands, palms up, and strike the palms with the rod; or he may set work to do after school, such as copying a hundred words. Severe punishment is inflicted by beating the bare soles of the offender’s feet as he lies on his back on the floor, with his feet held fast by other boys. If necessary, a cloth is tied about the boy’s ankles in order to hold him fast. | If a distinguished visitor appears at the school while it is in session, all the pupils start at once to their feet. The visitor may wave them down again, but they re- main standing until the teacher himself bids them sit. This he does after due time allowed for honoring the guest. Certain pupils may be called upon to exhibit their learning before the visitor. Here follow materials for the various lessons men- tioned above. Colloquial variations in pronunciation are disregarded for the most part, even the widespread tendency of Arabic-speakers to flatten the long a, and make it similar to the a in fat rather than like the a@ in father. Numerals (without reference to gender). The order of writing numerals is from left to right, as with us, but the individual figures are usually written with the characteristic right-to-left movement. Beyond ten it is one-and-ten (ahad-asher, shortened to hidasher), two-and-ten (shortened to “ithnasher’), PROJECTS 115 etc. Twenty is “two tens” (ashrun). The year 1927 would be \4YY. The Moslem year, however, is by the moon and not by the sun. Moslem festivals and fast days are thus movable occasions according to our solar calendar. I 2 3 4 5 6 \ Y % 4 ° ny WAHID ITHNAN THALATHA ARBA KHAMSA SITTA 7 8 9 10 Y A Ve SABA THAMANYA TISA ASHERA Alphabet.. The order is from right to left in every case, whether of letter, word, or sentence. The English equivalents are given in the first row. These sounds are near enough for purposes of the project, although they do not represent accurately the differences between the pairs of ?’s, th’s, 2’s, s’s, and a’s. The first a is a plain short wu sound, the second is a guttural impossible to indicate in print. The first t is like our t, the second is harder, like ¢t in toss. The first th is like th in think, the second is like th in that. The s’s are more nearly alike, and so are the 2’s. The second row is, of course, the letters in Arabic script, as each appears when standing alone. In the writing of words these letters, at least nineteen of them, suffer changes when linked up with each other. Some enthusiastic participants in this project might be interested in identifying letters as combined in the Arabic words given below. 116 MISSIONARY EDUCATION In the third row are words representing the letters as each one is named separately in “saying the alpha- bet.” In pronouncing them, a is as @ in father, az as the sound of a in faith (except in the case of “ain” and “ghain” where az is like the a in aisle), 1 as ee in seen, Ou as in our, 4“ as 00 in spoon. In Egypt the 7 is like g in garden, otherwise like 7 in joy. Q is just a guttural eR. d kien th t b a j (g) er Ci CMCC Nee ral DAL KHAI HAI JIM THAI TAI BAI ALIF Z . d S sh S Zz r th ZAI TAI DAD SAD SHIN SIN ZAI RAI THAL ea ea ve l k q f gh a aa, ¥ J 4) © 8 Bes HAI NUN MIM LAM KAF QAF FAI GHAIN AIN PROJECTS 117 A few of the ninety-nine “excellent names’ of Allah au) The King The Holy The Peaceful The Faithful Be Gaal h tS) yah AL-MALIK AL-QUDDUS AS-SALAM AL-MUMIN The Strong B\es) AL-JABBAR “Al” means “the.” Its pronunciation is often influ- enced by the consonant at the beginning of the word before which it stands. Note the instance of this above: “as-salam.” Names to be assigned to boys of the school SALEH Sa‘D SAFWAN YAHYA YUNAS YUSUF Omar Amr Qatis AMAN ZarID AsAaD_ ALY eae pd | OUP 5. told Ne OTHMAN Hasan SuLaimMaN Musa Abu JAHAL Qhte cpr LL ee hem a! The name “Abu Jahal” means “father of ignorance,”’ and would do for the dunce of the school. 118 MISSIONARY EDUCATION Miscellaneous words and expressions boy girl _ big little who what how Ye ce eS ate we aS WALAD BINT KABIR SAGHIR MAN MA KAIF this good bad book bread water We ob gr WT GFL HATHA TAYYIB RADY KITAB KHUBAZ MA’ dates sugar coffee Boy ashe ciolsgs TAMR SAKKAR QAHAWA How are you? Kaif halak? We aS Very well. = ‘ - —, 3 “~~ , zs ford NS i . t~ Og mx 4 2 fo xd ? ~ ~ = ; © ue he Mat ms vane t oe shy {5 Ne Le Ae Penangeenat > * Sa oe Heat Petes Eats cr [ize a fn eae ea me we : eta Bit art oats : ns 3 ns aie a Sor gat are sre OS AS Ae Se a eee rte : > ae ig Aire NA = iM : ae ; eats See Sete SS ees So = — : Se RSE SS TS : SAS ~ A pes Ey ah SP . St Wisk pL he an ts I Dba