i -) f i atta ay a ert re ane 4 ry Len Ol i i bay OL ny POY ad ke aes Nag pa Byte vt Mave. ears i Mey ang a tf ih ¥ ie b ti sevenh ee 7 Li Hi } i | - y) * ( i THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP JOHN ARCHIBALD MacCALLUM Digitized by the Internet Archive In 2022 with funding from Princeton Theological Seminary Library https://archive.org/details/greatpartnershipOOmacc_0 THE (, wal 201026, GREAT PARTNE LE God and Man BY JOHN ARCHIBALD “MacCALLUM Author of “Now I Know,” ete. NEW BY york GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY COPYRIGHT, 1926, BY GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP esp eer PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA This book is affectionately dedicated to my first tutor and priest through whose wise and delicate guidance I learned in early childhood of God and Duty and Destiny— MY MOTHER Piva i Cy ts sti ay PREFACE This book is based upon and grows out of the con- viction that man is of divine origin: he is the offspring of God. If this premiss is true, then it is certain that God must have a purpose in his children. It is beyond the reach of our minds to give a final explanation or even description of that purpose; but we are on safe ground in saying that the Father seeks to express him- self through the achievements of those who share his life. The pressure of his Spirit is the dynamic that pushes them into action. ‘Thus they are united with him in a joint enterprise that I have called The Great Partnership. Man, however, can never meet his full responsibility unless and until he understands that he has infinite re- sources at his command. God is the senior partner who has furnished the capital, and he is always ready to have any of his fellow-laborers use whatever of his wealth they can to further their mutual interests. The wisdom of the ages, the beauties of the earth and sky, the inspirations of art and history, the joy of serving, the discoveries of science, and the laws of the universe —these and a thousand other gifts are for those who can use them. The purpose of the following essays is to show that man lives in God and God in man. In them I make no attempt to be logical, neither in the order of my approach to the various aspects of the subject nor in the sense of offering definitions, because none can tell vil Viil PREFACE where divinity leaves off and humanity begins. A com- plete interpretation of these two controlling ideas lies beyond our apprehension. God is in nature, history, and society, as well as in ourselves. In love, beauty, joy, faith, law, wisdom, and goodness, he presses into our lives and, as we reveal these qualities in character, we prove our kinship to him and our capacity to act as his agents. This explains how and why it is that in serving man we are serving God and thereby real- izing our highest potentialities. J. A. MacC. Philadelphia (January, 1926). CONTENTS PAGE PREFACE . : : v F é : z vil INTRODUCTION 4 : : : : NG A Ge) Section I: The Ground of Relationship CHAPTER I Mawn’s NEED oF Gop . : : ; see 20) II Gop’s NEED or Man . E ; : Or AG III Gop’s FairH 1n Man . : : ‘ ey ey L Section II: God in Action PEN May OAS OREATOR Fa) seus aes hua oa a AO ~“ V_ Gop As SOVEREIGN : : SORA Vie OD AS 1) UGS (N's ie ay chen cranes eu nirtun mes) NGO ASUMATORR Aye wir Gtuln om tent G sete a ee ODE AS VVORKERN Va i i iep teas wl ie anit ie TOO IX Gop As FRIEND. : ; : ‘ ie bed. POD AS) COMBORTER Maan mee cas elk DAG Section IIIT: God im Attribute Pe AaOD JASORIGHTEQUSNESS 1) a) his vl. ep EA PRC Mee COD SASH OLINESS hii) hr con! os anda TOO VXIII Gop as Love aa Aa ey Ai RAN OCEODN ASS MERCY Sire: Sshs iste: Arar che eT Bele: XV Gop As GRACE Pape Seo SOTA, LAYS nAneO3 XVI Gop as PEACE AURORE Vachon dete hetea tet PCat VS LRIEITE RAS. LOY Uae ii cat 70° Wik Maer i and ee ix x CONTENTS Section IV: God in Essence CHAPTER PAGE DOVER GOD ASE LTR! AC Ae MiNi anni nen eae eee MOL De ee ASD GAS tO WISR Nb Roe nam aga : . oi) eae Ps COD AS OLG Tern ok : A : Pe aa ROC CSOD AS RUT Rive tk, ; ; a ; iene XXII Gop as Law OO Fa NE ps OS ARISE Vics "XLT, GOD JAS PURPOSE [hi na) oa Mae nv a et INDEX SARE Tea)) es Wan yee ar ea a THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP Ai Fo te iv ‘ Ar INTRODUCTION I Perhaps it would be unsafe to say that there is not as clearly defined a sense of God to-day as in some of the ages that are past. We can not be certain that we have the data that would justify such a conclusion. In estimating our own time we are always aware of its defects, while in surveying other ages there is a strong tendency to think only of their virtues. We sing of the “faith of our fathers,’ and generously ig- nore their truculence, querulousness, bigotry, and other limitations. Just as a remote landscape always ap- pears more beautiful than that which is near at hand because its harsh outlines are softened by distance and the sordid wounds of industry are hidden behind a protective veil of dust, smoke, and mist, so time throws the illusion of romance over the character of former generations. Their courage, vigor, and resolution stand out majestically, while their sins and vices are reduced to minor proportions or sink entirely out of view. Men who have understanding of their times have always been aware of this superstition which has been strikingly exposed by Sir Thomas Browne: It is the humor of many heads to extol the days of their forefathers, and declaim against the wickedness of times present. Which notwithstanding they cannot handsomely do, without the borrowed help and satire of times past ; condemning nt vices of their own times, 14 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP by the expressions of vices in times which they com- mend, which cannot but argue the community of vice in both. Horace, therefore, Juvenal, and Persius, were no prophets, although their lives did seem to indigitate and point at our times.* Doubtless it is true that in certain groups of men, and for certain limited periods there was a profounder realization of the presence of God than that which pre- vails to-day. This is illustrated in such a movement as Puritanism in the days of its greatest fervor, before it became denatured by cant, or in the rise of Methodism; but what counts in history is the sustained tendency. Here and there in pockets or small protected areas un- usual levels of character have been reached; but the human race is a unit; the law of spiritual gravitation is always at work drawing the men of greater achieve- ment toward the common level. For a few generations a spiritual aristocracy may flourish, but sooner or later the pull of the world will sterilize its self-perpetuating power. This does not mean that it has failed. On the contrary, there is a law of spiritual as well as of phys- ical conservation. The great moral achievements and idealisms of the past have, in their decay, enriched the soil for succeeding generations. Egypt, Greece, Israel, and Rome live on in multitudes who scarcely know their names and have no sense of obligation toward them. As Browning makes the Bavarian priest, Abt Vogler, say: There shall never be one lost good! What was, shall live as before; The evil is null, is naught, is silence implying sound; 1 “Pseudodoxia Epidemica.” INTRODUCTION 15 What was good shall be good, with, for evil, so much good more; On the earth the broken arcs; in the heaven, a perfect round. All we have willed or hoped or dreamed of good shall exist ; Not its semblance, but itself; no beauty, nor good, nor power Whose voice has gone forth, but each survives for the melodist When eternity affirms the conception of an hour. The high that proved too high, the heroic for earth too hard, The passion that left the ground to lose itself in the sky, Are music sent up to God by the lover and the bard; Enough that he heard it once: we shall hear it by and by. When these considerations are duly weighed, the conclusion is probably sound that with all its defects— its frivolity, sensuality, and spiritual illiteracy—our age is no further from God than any age in the past. But this is not a ground of satisfaction. On the con- trary, if progress is not an illusion, we should be more sensitive than our ancestors to the divine presence. Ours is a greater reason than theirs, for they left us a vast legacy as the fruit of their sacrifices and cou- rageous struggles against almost overwhelming odds. If fifty years of Europe are better than a cycle of Cathay, life in the twentieth century is immeasurably preferable to life in an earlier age—at least for those who are in a position to realize its richer possibilities. 16 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP Then too, our inheritance has been supplemented by science applied to every activity of life. Science has relieved us of many a pain which our forefathers had no choice but to endure; it has made easy many a hith- erto slavish task; it has extended our leisure however we may misappropriate it; it has banished many of our diseases and given us a control of circumstance undreamed of in earlier ages. Theoretically it would seem that this enrichment of life should make its bene- ficiaries more alive to the source of their blessings; practically, however, it has not worked out that way. The sense of God is neither as deep nor as wide as our opportunities for spiritual achievement suggest and our spiritual health requires. Il The greatest task with which the leaders of the Chris- tian church are confronted is to stimulate in men the consciousness of God. Nor is this task confined to the leaders of the church; it rests upon all men of vision, for surely it is undeniable that a realization of the Eternal is an indispensable element in the highest char- acter. What a transformation would be wrought in our social relations if all men were endued with a sense of the divine! How differently they would go about their work! What an increased feeling of responsi- bility would be theirs, giving them a new perspective so that they would liquidate their former interests and refund their assets! They would recognize many of their previous holdings as valueless—the pleasures and ambitions which hitherto had been dominant in their purposes—but they would see that every loss thus suf- fered can be recouped a hundred-fold by a realization INTRODUCTION 17 of the reality of God and the will to give him the first place in thought and action. Why is it so difficult to believe in God; or at least to take him seriously? Job’s plaintive cry, “O that I knew where I might find him,” is still the cry of multi- tudes. Doubtless every man would like to believe, to feel that he is watched over and protected by a benefi- cent Creator who finds delight in his well-being, even though in other moods he should shrink from the all- seeing eye. Yet as I write, there lies upon my desk a current magazine in which there is an article by one of the most gifted of American men of letters. He con- fesses that he is so benumbed in spirit by the spectacle of life always feeding upon life, that he cannot accept the comfortable explanation which holds that there is a good and kindly purpose behind it all. The slaughter house, epidemic, accident, the death of the young and the promising, the universal cry of pain—these in their totality blot out from his vision any signs of friendli- ness in the universe. Nor can it be denied that this attitude is representa- tive of many intellectual leaders from the time of Hume, though Job had stated the problem ages before. Man’s littleness against the blind forces of nature ap- palls him when he reflects upon the contrast. It is hard to reconcile the reign of law with an intelligent direct- ing mind which discriminates in favor of the good as against the bad. The imagination staggers under the thought of the world’s population, a billion and a half of individual souls, with those who went before them through countless centuries and those who will come after them. How is it possible to think of even the best of them living on forever in friendly relations toward one another in the heavenly commonwealth, or 18 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP of the great majority suffering together in a place of torment? The magnitudes and distances of the stars also add their quota to the confusion of the man of modern edu- cation. Nor is it surprising that the discovery of the evolutionary process has aroused such intense and pro- longed opposition by those who are governed by their emotions. After the-biologist and philosopher have made their fullest and most eloquent plea and have been granted a favorable decision before the judgment- seat of Fact, none can deny that a glory has departed from man’s estate. To be the specially created child of God gives a rank and station incompatible with ani- mal relationships however plausibly explained. III This frank admission of the difficulties involved in a theistic interpretation of: the world should not be dis- couraging. The man of intellectual vigor and moral integrity is always ready to face the facts of life, and to accept their bearings. While a simple faith has its beauties, it has also its limitations. It can never resolve the perplexities of the thinker. The framework of the faith of men who lived in a world they believed to have been made in six days is obviously inadequate for those who are convinced that man was working out his destiny ages before the date when Adam was so long supposed to have been created. Probably the chief reason for the doubt of our time is the failure to realize the simple truth enunciated by Jesus, that new wine must have new wineskins. If old skins are used, it will burst them and leak away. Likewise new thought must have new molds. We have INTRODUCTION 19 been trying for a century to confine our enlarged re- ligious ideas to the old forms that were adequate be- fore the rise of the sciences of astronomy. geology, biology, and modern psychology. Multitudes have been too lazy or too stolid to take the trouble to make the necessary readjustments in their thinking. This ap- plies to those of simple faith, but of bellicose temper, who deny that there is any valid reason in the new knowledge for changing their outlook; it applies also with equal force to many who should know better; the men of various grades of enlightenment who do not distinguish between an inadequate creed and the larger truth which the creed expresses in stuttering accents. To see that the world was not made out of nothing is. not to eliminate God, though many have made the blunder of regarding this recognition as the equivalent of such a denial. Here then is the seat of our trouble and also the ground of our hope. We need a larger God than our fathers, because we live in an infinitely larger world; in fact, our world is but an infinitesimal fraction of a universe. Before we pass final judgment upon the meaning of the sorrows and disappointments of the human race, we must, as Kant saw clearly and stated forcefully, get a clear perspective of the end in view. If the happiness of the individual—his success in his enterprises and his freedom from pain—is the supreme goal of life; if the universe is only a place of pleasure, then it must appear that, whatever its cause and origin, it is so colossal a failure that belief in divine control is impossible. But if we take the longest view and look upon the universe as the training ground of the spirit, many of our perplexities will be relegated forthwith to a sec- = a 20 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP ondary place. They will be seen to represent tempo- rary or provisional stages in a process whose complete justification will only become evident when its fruits mature in the form of virtuous souls. This is what Kant meant by value or worth—the idea which stands in the forefront of his ethics. In his own words: Nothing can be conceived, in the world or out of it, which can be considered good without qualification ex- cept a good will. Intelligence, wit, judgment, and the other talents of the mind, however they may be named, or courage, resolution, perseverance, as qualities of temperament, are undoubtedly good and desirable in many respects; but these gifts of nature may also be extremely bad and mischievous if the will which is to make use of them, and which therefore constitutes what is called character, is not good. Because of their lack of great convictions, their influence for good is not commensurate with their native powers.” In this profound insight judgment is pronounced upon many of the most brilliant intellects of our time. Deep as was the awe kindled in the mind of Kant by the con- templation of the starry heavens, still more profound was that aroused by the moral law within the soul of man. Even the “stars. and systems wheeling past” have meaning only as in their sublimity they minister to the reflective mind, and thus serve in the education of the race. From this point of view, all the stumbling blocks to which reference has been made are removed or rather avoided. If we agree that happiness is not the main purpose of existence and that it is only incidental at 2“Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysic of Morals” (Abbott’s Translation, p. 9.) INTRODUCTION 21 best, the ground is cut from under most of the argu- ments of the pessimist. Ifthe end for which the world was made is the culture of men of noble character, it’ is obvious that we have no reason to murmur or com- plain about the cost. The quartz must be crushed be- fore the precious metal can be extracted; the grapes must be pressed before the wine fills the beaker. Pain- ful though the process, it is a part of the price that must be paid for the ultimate good—virtuous souls that amid the strains and stresses of existence, like seasoned timber, never give. IV Much of the prevalent agnosticism, skepticism, and. indifference toward God, is due to lack of imagination. When the little creedal systems of our ancestors break under the strain of increasing knowledge, it is easier to disavow the reality of religious faith than to recon- struct the broken shelters. Yet sooner or later the reconstruction must be done, for human society can not long hold together without the binding conviction that there is a controlling purpose in life. If men are but the casual outcome of mechanical forces combining and recombining, but altogether unwitting of what they are creating and destroying, the will to live and to act nobly can scarcely be sustained. Marcus Aurelius spoke for multitudes when he said: “The world is either a welter of alternate combination and dispersion or a unity of order and providence. If the former, why do I care about anything else than how I shall at last be- come earth? But on the other alternative, I reverence, I stand steadfast, I find heart in the power that dis- poses all.” 22 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP Because the men of spiritual insight in all ages have recoiled from the outrage to their deepest convictions involved in the conclusion that love, justice, honor, fi- delity, and our other ideals are but the fortuitous ef- fects of mechanical forces in a constant process of re- distribution, they have always been ready to begin the arduous task of reconstruction when for any reason the house of faith has collapsed. Adam and Eve driven from the comforts of Eden are symbolic of man’s per- petual dispossession. No sooner is he established in full harmony with his environment, than some cosmic tidal wave sweeps him from his apparent security. He builds up a system of government that seems to con- tain every element of safety and every promise of per- manence, only to find in the day of its greatest achieve- ment that it is already slipping from its foundations. Driven from the garden, man makes a home for him- self in the wilderness, tempering his will in the fires of opposition’ by the assurance that he is the unique beneficiary of divine favor, and that the people who are trying to thwart him are the enemies of his God, who are to be driven off like chaff before the tempest. “The Lord will have them in derision.” Later when he learns that these devotees of alien faiths are uncon- querable, and that they have become the proud posses- sors of many of earth’s choicest gifts, he fortifies his wounded faith with the assurance that a day will come when the balance shall be restored and every wrong redressed. No more interesting historical survey could be made than that which would show the perpetual process of readjustment through which Christian thought has gone. An outstanding example is the belief in the early church in the immediate second coming of Christ, INTRODUCTION 23 an idea which soon gave way to a rational practical outlook upon life; then there was the reluctant accept- ance of the Copernican astronomy which at first seemed likely to undermine the faith, because it was said to contradict the Bible; again the rise of geology forced a reconsideration of the age of the earth. And al- ways there were those who heralded scientific discover- ies with jeremiads, holding that if they were true, or accepted as true, they would destroy civilization. It is evident that up to the present all such vaticinations have proved false. Whenever it has been necessary;, the house of faith has been rebuilt on a larger scale: to shelter the increased knowledge. This justifies the optimistic conclusion that order will rise out of the: present disorder so evident in disobedience to law, the decay of the family, the breakdown of ancient sanc- tions, the declining influence of the church, the lost respect for legislative assemblies and courts of justice, the strife of religious sects, and the widespread materi- alism and sensuality which characterize our time. q Disconcerting and discouraging though our analysis of present life may be, those whose faith is under- girded by a knowledge of history can face the future with unperturbed hearts. They know that the idea of evolution can be built into the structure of Christian doctrine without more difficulty than the revelations of Copernicus, Galileo, and Newton. In fact, to change the figure, it has been already woven permanently into the tissue of modern thought. Sooner or later the mili- tantly conservative section of the church will see the futility of denying what it already more than half be- lieves, and will also understand that science is not an enemy but an auxiliary of an intelligent faith. Whether applied to the study of cosmic methods and processes, 24 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP. the differentiation and spread of life, the rise of human institutions, or the growth of the Bible through numer- ous gradations of morality and spirituality, science can- not but enlarge our conception of the mystery and power of the creative intelligence which alone offers a key to the riddle of the baffling and overwhelming wonder of the universe. Vv In a sky which is brooding and portentous for all who are conscious of the grave dangers which menace our civilization, there is one promising rift through which the sun of hope brightly gleams. This is the increasing recognition of our human inability to cope with the evils induced by the almost universal demand for material comforts and pleasures. Scientists, states- men, jurists, and journalists are joining with religious leaders in trying to find some way to quicken the sense of God. We have good roads, motor cars, electric lights, summer homes, talking machines, moving pic- tures, airplanes, and radios. Into the making and use of these, many of which are luxuries, much of the com- munal effort goes, with the result that our fiscal ca- pacity is under constant strain. These things hold the primary loyalty of the great majority of our people. Theoretically many profess to follow him who has told us to seek first the kingdom of God and his right- eousness and all necessary material gifts will be added to them, but in practice they have reversed the process. Seeking first the things of transitory value, they have lost sight of those of permanent value. The sinister results are evident in war, industrial conflicts, racial INTRODUCTION 25 hatreds, and strangest of all, religious controversy and reaction. Somehow or other we have got to find the buoyancy which is derived from the cultivation of the soul; we have got to get back what Dr. Jacks has called “the lost radiance of the Christian religion”; artificiality and formality must yield to the creative joys which flow from simple tastes and high thinking; the ex- ternality of our life which now functions in luxury, / triviality of interest, the disinclination to think, and — speed, must be replaced by that inward resourcefulness which is the experience of those who know and trust God. The visible world of practical life must be com- plemented by the invisible spiritual world of which so many have no knowledge. How can it be done? God! —is the only answer to this question. He is the one medicament for our personal and social ills, the sole satisfaction for our needs. He is the only guaranty against man’s greed, selfishness, bigotry, sensuality, and internecine strife. Until he is allowed to enter freely into our sovereign souls—liberating our spirit- ual potencies, oxygenating our stagnant ideals, releas- ing our nobler impulses—every suggested reform, whether it be prohibition, equal suffrage, a world fed- eration—or all these institutions combined—will prove to be only a makeshift or series of makeshifts. What- ever value any new measure or proposal may possess is due alone to the measure of God it contains. Probably there are those who will take exception to the vagueness of these suggestions. It is my trust that such objections will dissolve in the light of the succeeding chapters. All of these, however widely they may vary in subject matter or in tone, are filaments 26 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP thrown out by a single nucleus,—the conviction that the ultimate essence of the universe is spirit, that God is not only the source of our lives, but the ground of all our hopes, and “the master-light of all our seeing.” The restlessness and wistfulness of our age are naught but the undirected or misdirected longings of man for God as the slumbering deeps in him try uneasily to awaken in response to the call of the Eternal. But man’s answer will remain incoherent and self-contra- dictory until his spiritual sensibilities become acute. Then he will learn to look for God, not in the unusual and the remote, but in the usual and near at hand. He will discover that there is more mystery and therefore more reason for awe and adoration in the mountains, the tides, the stars, and life itself, with its constant urge toward perfection, than in any miraculous events of the long ago, even though their truth cannot be gainsaid. He will understand that God is as near men to-day as in the days of Moses, Isaiah, or St. Paul, and as ready or even readier to make himself known, because the wider experience of our generation and fuller knowl- edge of his laws offer him more points of contact with the minds of his children. When the Christian man has learned this supreme lesson, without losing his sentimental interest in Jeru- salem, or minimizing its glories, he will realize that his task 1s to make a holy city of New York, Chicago, Paris, or London. He will look for evidences of the everlasting mercy not only in the Bible, but in the char- acter of his fellow men in his own generation—in their patience, their quiet heroisms, their frequent willingness to die for others, the wonderful, though usually un- cultivated, potentialities of their souls, and the efforts of faithful workers to establish the kingdom of heaven INTRODUCTION 27 on earth. He will see clearly that if we confine God to sacred places far away, or even to churches and shrines near at hand, to institutions we call sacred, or to certain times and seasons ; to creeds or dogmas which claim to imprison all essential truth, or to the pontifical declarations of ecclesiastical assemblies, the Father will not be recognized when he manifests himself in the beauty, the wonder, and the power of the world, in the effort of multitudes to act mercifully and justly,— and above all, in love with its myriad manifestations. Where can man find God, and in finding him, find peace, confidence, and ultimate victory? He can find him far away and long ago,—but better still, if like St. Augustine he looks into his own heart and rightly interprets its nobler affections, he will see that God is there. That is the greatest of all discoveries because it opens the door to another yet more important. For if God is in me, he is in other men, in the paths of history, and in the uncharted ways of the future. He is to be found in “the still sad music of humanity”; in the visions and ideals of prophets; in the ceaseless struggle of virtue for the mastery of the world, in the creative spirit which permeates the universe. ‘He is above all, and through all, and in you all.” SECTION I: THE GROUND OF RELATIONSHIP CHAPTER I MAN’S NEED OF GOD E Few famous sayings are more profound than that of Voltaire: “If there were no God, it would be necessary to invent him.” The thought in the great skeptic’s mind is easily discerned. It would be immeasurably more difficult to explain the universe without God than with him. The world would present an insufferable problem were it not that we can at least partially ac- count for its mystery by the affirmation that it is the work of a Creator of infinite power and wisdom. The first activities of a child in whose mind the light of reason is beginning to glow are an unconscious effort to understand his environment. He touches and tastes every object within his reach. He grasps at the moon and tries to catch the birds in order that he may learn what they are. As he has opportunity, he throws peb- bles into the water, climbs trees, picks flowers, and in every way within his power seeks to investigate the world about him. This motive is of course uncon- scious. He does not realize what he is doing, but in the process he is building up a body of experience which will be of the greatest future value. 29 30 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP After a time he will learn something of the continu- ity of life and the uniformity of the laws which seem to govern our existence. He will see that certain re- sults always follow certain actions, that stones never fail to fall if they are released, that water seeks the lowest level, that fire burns, and the seasons come and go—that in short there is an order in the texture of the world to which there are never any real exceptions. How is this uniformity to be explained? What a prob- lem it would be to solve the riddle of our existence if there were no integral relation between cause and ef- fect, if one day stones fell upward and the next trav- eled horizontally through the air or over the surface of the earth! Existence would be impossible under such conditions. The world as it is presented to us in our daily ex- perience has every evidence of being made according to a definite plan. Everything in it fits into the general scheme, and the only reasonable explanation is that it is the fruit of thought. If we are shown a machine or any object for household use, we have no hesitation in concluding that some one made it. We should never dream of being so foolish as to affirm that a book, chair, or watch merely happened to come into ex- istence. In truth, things do not happen. That is a word by which we cloak our ignorance of surrounding circumstances. There is always a cause. Thus, if we are logical when we face the tremendous fact of the universe with its solar systems and circling stars all moving on schedule time, we must conclude that they were made.by some being or group of beings, which is simply to affirm our belief in God. Man needs God in order to explain the universe: otherwise we should be living in intellectual chaos. It is beyond belief that MAN’S NEED OF GOD 31 there should have come into existence without mind and purpose, a world which satisfies our deepest log- ical needs, enabling us to predict with certainty that this result will follow from this action—as, for example, when we mix sodium and chlorine in equal proportions we get common salt as a result of the combination, or when we pass the white light of the sun through a prism it is broken into the seven primary colors. Man needs God to sustain his intellectual integrity. His restless- ness and dissatisfaction in the material enjoyments of life are the blind urge of his soul to assuage its thirst in the everlasting springs. II But we also need God in order to explain ourselves. In certain moods we are given to thinking of ourselves in trivial terms. We sometimes hear the contemptuous expression ‘‘only a man,” and it is one which we should studiously avoid. The full glory of manhood has yet to be painted in the highest colors it will bear, richer than any artist has ever yet discovered. True, man has much base metal in his composition which too often he does not transmute into the pure gold of spiritualized character. It is possible to paint a grim dark picture in which his bestiality and foolishness are thrown into high relief. The cynic always delights in this kind of portraiture. The grinning crowd composed of men and women of vacant mind, more interested in the result of a pugilistic contest or the baseball score than in the greatest intellectual and spiritual achievements of the age, is a cause for tears. The popular franchise is always given for the mediocre and banal in art, litera- ture, religion, and every other department of human 32 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP effort. The prophet and creator have always to wait for appreciation until they are aged or even dead. Most men never think. They live in a material world and the beauties and wonders of the spirit are to them “as is a landscape to a blind man’s eye.” They waste their powers on trivial objects and in many phases of life seem more akin to the beasts of the field than to the nobler representatives of the human race. These weak- nesses are explained when we recall that man is an ani- mal. His life, growth, and death are subject to the control of natural law. His fundamental instincts of self-preservation and self-perpetuation are common to the whole organic world. His conduct is largely or altogether determined by his heredity and environment. He suffers from heat, cold, hunger, and disease, as the animals in the forest and in some cases his kinship to them is indubitably proved by his liability to their ail- ments, Yet this is not the whole story. The preacher is in danger of allowing his mind to become warped by dwelling too long upon the sinister elements in human nature. If he does not guard against this temptation, he will have a distorted view of life. ‘This is a par- tial explanation of the weakness and futility of much of the preaching of our time. It has degenerated into scolding because so many of those engaged in it have focused their attention upon the baser qualities of human personality without seeking to understand the reasons for them. These are menacing enough, but they do not deserve the major portion of our attention. On the contrary, the wisest way of eliminating evil is often to ignore it as far as possible and substitute good for it. ‘‘Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good.” MAN’S NEED OF GOD 33 The best process by which this can be done is to emphasize the higher values of the human soul. With- out denying man’s origin in the dust of the ground through which he shares kinship with all living things, little consideration is necessary to see the majesty of his potentialities. He enjoys transcendent gifts, par- ticularly the power of thought which unites him con- sciously and spiritually with the highest among his fel- lows of every age and place, and gives him an insight into the workings of the universe which makes him a partner with its Creator. But we never can explain a thing in terms of itself, or at least in terms that are less than itself. This is a fact which evolutionists of the cruder sort have forgotten. Man thinks because he derives from a thinker, which is another way of say- ing that he is a child of God. If we cannot explain the world without God, we find an even greater diffi- culty in explaining man without him. For while we cannot understand the mystery of the universe in all its complexity, there are certain well-defined areas of it in which we can find our way about with easy assur- ance. Our kinship with the originating mind from which it flows is proved by the fact that we think in the same terms. It is inconceivable that to God as to ourselves, a straight line is not the shortest distance between two points. Thus we think his thoughts after him because we are his children. This is what is meant by the ancient writer’s figure of speech that we are made in his image. To be possessed of life, thought, will, imagination, and yearning for the ideal, indicates a heavenly origin. This inference is confirmed when -we take man’s achievements into account. His great epic has yet to be written, wherein the highest praise will not be given 34 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP for bravery in war nor deeds of daring as a pioneer in hitherto untrodden wilds. This is not to underrate the heroism of Hannibal, Wolfe, Washington, or Nelson, nor the sublime fortitude of Columbus, Hudson, Peary, or Scott, nor to forget the sacrifice of the unknown soldier. But more rigorous still in their demands for patience, moral courage, and concentrated effort, are the achievements of Plato, Copernicus, Newton, Darwin, Pasteur, Ross, and an army of other scientists and ex- plorers of the mystic realms in which we live and by which we are surrounded. Endowed with the same qualities though working on another plane are the great spiritual heroes of the race, Isaiah, Amos, Savonarola, Luther, Knox, and Wesley. Those were the men who laid the foundations of our liberty, the temple of which is still far from completion. If we would know what manhood is we must turn to them rather than to the poor wastrel who has lost his way—perhaps because he never had a chance. Nor can we account for the great personalities who give content and direction to the course of history, except by referring their origin to something greater than themselves. Hence, the con- templation of man, as of every other fact in the great unitary system of our experience, pushes us back to God. III Thus far our consideration has had to do with our intellectual needs. Since we cannot conceive of ex- istence except in terms of reason, our reason must be satisfied or life would be intolerable. But reason is not all of life. We have emotional needs as well. One of MAN’S NEED OF GOD 35 the greatest of these is the necessity for consolation. Man has scarcely come to full consciousness before he begins to realize how frail he is. He learns how brief is his earthly tenure at best. There is no such thing as security against the ills of life. He may invest his money with the greatest care but there is always the possibility of a social upheaval which will overturn the strongest financial institutions. He may be blessed with a great inheritance of physical strength, but any day through accident or disease his health may be shat- tered. Risk is inherent in our very existence. With- out warning we may be robbed of life itself or of all that we hold most dear by the carelessness or evil in- tention of another. But even if our plans never proved abortive, they concern only temporary values. A few brief years and the end looms in the immediate foreground. Our con- trol over future circumstances is almost negligible even though we had the wisdom to foresee the best. How pathetic were the efforts of the ancient Pharaohs to secure by endowment the care of gardens in which food would be grown for their use to be ready on their return to earth! The very ground set apart has been desert for centuries, a grim proof of the futil- ity of man’s trying to determine the structure of the future. This raises the question as to whether there is any permanence of human values. Is there any source of healing or comfort when the soul is wounded by the breaking of the home or the miscarriage of its plans? Here God comes to our aid and meets our deepest needs. Through him we are assured that “if the earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved, we have a building of 36 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP God, an house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens.” The outward circumstances of life change but their spiritual content remains. Truth, justice, and love, can never be destroyed, for they are the very es- ence of the divine. It matters not what popes or as- semblies say, truth is truth and cannot be injured, modified, or destroyed. This was what Jesus meant when he told the disciples that the day would come when not one stone of the Temple would be left upon another. Soon that prophecy was to be realized but in the process the Christian faith was liberated from the bondage of place and enabled to spread out across the world. The assurance for which the heart yearns, and with- out which it cannot be satisfied, never comes from ma- terial things. They pass too quickly to give peace. But life with its strain, struggle, and disappointment, would not be worth while if there were no healing for our ills. The place which the Bible holds in the affections of the race is due to the fact that countless numbers of people have for centuries found in its promises the comfort which has enabled them to carry on in the confidence of ultimate victory however intense their immediate distress. They have felt the contagion of the Psalmist’s faith and been moved to share his con- viction: “Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me... Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever.’ Man needs God to carry him over the hard places, to sustain him in loneliness and grief, and to give him confidence and courage to face the future. MAN’S NEED OF GOD 37 IV These reflections lead to the climax of the problem we are considering. What are we here for? Surely there is a purpose beyond our intellectual and emo- tional satisfactions. This purpose is not hard to dis- cover. It is to inform our lives with those abiding qualities which are derived from God. As we have seen, our tenure here is brief. When Thomas Hardy was a young architect, he went from cathedral to ca- thedral in England, studying their structure and sketch- ing their beauties. And as the message of these mas- sive symbols sank into his soul, he found that in every case it emphasized the shortness of human life. So strong was this impression that its thought became the undertone of most of his work as a novelist and poet. But this very brevity intensifies our task. We must be about our business while the day is ours or night and darkness will overtake us. Nor is it a lightsome thing to do what we are commissioned to do, to take our animal nature with its frailty and passion and make it a fit dwelling place for the spirit of God. A large outlay of energy is necessary before the raw material of life in the form of food can be built up into the bodily system. And even greater still is the measure of strength required to sublimate our passions, our hates, and selfishness, and transmute them into no- bility, integrity, and goodness. No man can reach this height in his own strength. Why should I work for the common good? Why should I sacrifice my own interests for those who will never know me or be conscious of their obligation to me if I do? Theoretically I may admit that I am a trustee of posterity, but posterity is not at hand to 38 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP insist upon faithfulness to my trust. Thus the temp- tation to act in my own interests alone is so great that it often gets the better of me. On the plane of ordi- nary human motive, there are many reasons why a man should not go out of his way to work for the needs of others who have no claim upon him, Take the case of Sir Wilfred Grenfell! When a young physician in London looking about for a field in which to exercise his gifts, the suggestion was made that he go out to Labrador and Newfoundland to minister to the needy fishermen of those bleak coasts, If his answer had been given from the point of view of human prudence, we should never have known his name. Probably if we had been there and he had asked for our advice, we should have weighed the material returns that a man would derive from the practice of his profession in London, against the ob- livion of purely humanitarian service in so remote a part of the world. Yet how wrong such advice would have been! Because he gave himself without reserve to an impossible task, he has the unique reward of fame and good-will during his earthly life and the assurance that he has laid the foundations of a work that shall continue hereafter. But such a decision, involving as it seemed the essence of renunciation, could never have been made in his own strength. God alone explains the moral heroism of human nature which finds itself in putting the good of others before our own. That in its higher forms it is comparatively rare does not alter the fact of its derivation, nor reduce its majesty to the commonplace. And while most men are too selfish to go far out of their way to make a definite contri- bution to the promotion of the kingdom of God, every MAN’S NEED OF GOD | 39 normal man is potentially a spiritual hero. That we do not become Grenfells and Livingstones in our nar- rower domains of action is due in large degree to the fact that our sense of God is blunted. Within us all are latent qualities of a superb order which will never blossom in action until we live in the consciousness of the divine presence. Where such consciousness exists there is constant growth in the social virtues, such as sympathy, public spirit, and the will to sacrifice for the common welfare. The impulse from which these qualities come is divine. Man would never be other than self-regarding were he not a child of God and therefore at least dimly aware of his brotherhood with all other men. During the Great War a dying Ger- man soldier said to an Englishman who was trying to nurse him back to life in a shell-hole: “Strange, if you and I had met in the trenches, you would have tried to kill me for the sake of the Motherland, and I should have tried to kill you for the sake of the Fatherland, and here you are trying to save me for the sake of the Brotherland.’’ “Love your enemies!’ The fact that man recognizes the validity of this command and sometimes rises to its exalted plane proves his divine inheritance and his dependence upon God. CHAPTER II GOD’S NEED OF MAN I On first consideration the suggestion will seem fatuous or irreverent to many that the God who has made this universe should have any need of a being so frail and limited as man. We share the Psalmist’s amazement: “‘When I consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers, the moon and the stars, which thou hast ordained; what is man, that thou art mindful of him? and the son of man, that thou visitest him?’* Man prides himself upon his great achievements, yet it is impossible for him to create the slightest particle of matter. After a few brief years his course is run and he returns to the dust from which he sprang. And though there is moral grandeur in his courage, integrity, and other virtues, too often these break under the strain of temptation and his actions belie his claim of a divine origin. With all his talk of goodness and profession of admiration for such quali- ties as justice, mercy, and love, in practice he is often unjust, unmerciful, and unkind. Thus the question arises: What service can he render to the Being whose power and thought are revealed in the procession of the stars through the infinite depths of space, and in whose mind are hidden the secrets of the universe, a few of which man has painfully spelled out in build- ing his temple of knowledge? 1 Psalm 8: 3-4. 40 GOD’S NEED OF MAN 41 But though the value of man to God seems negative in the light of this contrast between their respective powers, it would be a grave blunder to jump to the conclusion that there is no service for him to render. It is always a mistake to dwell too much upon our weaknesses. Of course the wise man takes these into consideration. He does not allow himself to dwell in a world of illusion in which he is not aware of his defects. But on the other hand, he takes account of his assets and does not undervalue them. It is no insignificant thing to have the power to look before and after and to realize that in sacrifice and response to what is true man shares the divine nature. That we are here in the world and have somehow or other been brought into existence is a proof that God has need of us. Nor should we allow the fact that he is infinite and we so finite to blur our vision of our essential relationship with him. A drop of water from the ocean shares the qualities of its infinite source, and since we are derived from God we must possess values that give him an interest in us. He is spirit but so are we in our deepest reality. In that we have the key to the service we can render him, II Let us approach our perplexing question by an analogy. Here is an artist who has just painted a picture. It may not be a great work but it is the best that he can do. Into its making he has poured himself. He feels the ecstasy of creation, the radiant joy of having transferred his idea to the canvas and given it permanent and beautiful form. But his own admiration is not enough. If that were the only re- 42 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP ward few great pictures would ever have been painted. He shows his creation to his friends and if they appre- ciate its merit his delight is increased. Again he ex- hibits it to larger numbers including many a stranger and, if they confirm the estimate already given, his heart is further gladdened, and he is inspired to greater effort. This is true in any field in which man works. The soul hungers for appreciation and, where it is withheld, the best effort is impossible. The tragedy of our industrial system is that it dooms mul- titudes to non-creative tasks in which their only com- pensation is financial. A few motions over and over again year after year neither elicit self-appreciation nor the appreciation of others and so their best powers wither within them. The wonder is that so many of our industrial workers retain so much vigor of mind and soul. | This inherent need of appreciation on our part should enable us to grasp in however dim and vague a way God’s need of our appreciation. Into the uni- verse which he has made, he has put his best. Its orderliness, beauty, grandeur, and truth, are perpetual sources of wonder even to himself. Its integrity is revealed in the continuity of its laws. But the Su- preme Artist is not completely satisfied with his own artistry. He would also have appreciation. That is the meaning of worship. He wants our adoration and will not be satisfied until he receives it to the full. This is the reason he never leaves his children even though they try to escape him. Whither shall I go from thy spirit? or whither shall I flee from thy presence? If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there: if I make my bed in hell, behold, thou art there. GOD’S NEED OF MAN 43 If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea; Even there shall thy hand lead me, and thy right hand shall hold me.’ Man yearns for God, but the converse is equally true: God also yearns for man, and is always drawing him from his thoughtless wanderings back to the paths of goodness. Man’s restlessness is the index of God’s pull upon his heartstrings. This is the truth so mag- nificently expressed by Francis Thompson: I fled Him, down the nights and down the days; I fled Him, down the arches of the years; I fled Him, down the labyrinthine ways Of my own mind; and in the mist of tears I hid from Him, and under running laughter. Up vistaed hopes I sped; And shot, precipitated, Adown Titanic glooms of chasméd fears, From those strong Feet that followed, followed after. But with unhurrying chase, And unperturbed pace, Deliberate speed, majestic instancy, They beat—and a Voice beat More instant than the Feet— “All things betray thee, who betrayest Me.” ® Iil Another and equally basic need of God is that man should work for the fulfillment of the divine purpose. He has laid upon him the task of working out his own salvation. For ages man has been climbing up- 2Psalm 139. 3“The Hound of Heaven.” AAs THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP ward from the depths of bestiality, error, superstition, and ignorance. He has been building the temple of civilization which is still far from completion and in many parts is falling into ruin while yet in process of erection. In this colossal task he labors without plans or specifications and moves on in apparent blindness, now building on poor foundations noble structures doomed to topple over, again laying unshakable foun- dations for the future. But in every step forward man is impelled by an inner force which makes him dissatished with all that falls short of what is true and right. He strives for perfection though it seems further away with every advance he succeeds in mak- ing. He is rarely sure of the next step, and finds himself continually at the crossroads. But he has to make his choice and, when we take account of his ignorance, the wonder is that he does so well. The greatest statesmen do not know the way; they walk by faith, Yet whether men are conscious of it or not, and whatever their position, they are working for God when they discharge the humblest duties. Often we hear the phrase “Christian work” used as though it were restricted to distinctively religious activities. Such a limitation is wrong. Christian work is faithful service in any field of endeavor. As George Herbert so truthfully said: A servant with this clause Makes drudgery divine; Who sweeps a room as for Thy laws Makes that and the action fine.* God needs every man whatever his capacity, whether he is rich in mind or slow of understanding and lack- 4“The Elixir.” GOD’S NEED OF MAN 45 ing in spiritual sensibilities, to do the world’s work. This does not mean that honest effort in facing the primary responsibilities of life cancels all our obliga- tions. Men often speak of paying a hundred cents on the dollar in meeting their debts as though that would guarantee a clear title to excellence of character. Though essential, honesty is only the beginning of Christian duty. Every one has social obligations. The welfare of the community is a burden that should be distributed upon all its members in proportion as they are able to carry it. Any one who evades his fair share of the support of the orphan and the widow, the sick, the lame, and blind, is failing to rise to the level of duty which alone justifies his existence. Yet it is sadly true that large numbers of people who live on the best that the world has to give never think of help- ing their less fortunate fellows and allow their more charitable neighbors to carry their share of the burden. But God needs their help here no less than in the more prosaic tasks of selling merchandise and plowing fields. His heart must carry a constant load of grief because so many of his children who have strength, leisure, and capacity, fail to heed his call and there- fore do not find him, and failing in that great quest fail to find themselves, IV Again God needs man as a vehicle of his revelation to the forthcoming generation. For ages slowly but inevitably man has been pushing back the curtains of his ignorance. He has been grasping eagerly for new truth. He has unlocked many a mysterious door, until at last he has at his command a vast body of 46 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP knowledge. Starting with nothing, in a state in which he was scarcely able to distinguish between himself and the world around him, he has groped his way upward through the darkness to a height from which he can survey vast realms of truth. He knows something of his own past, and can describe the proc- esses by which the world came to its present form. He has learned the wonderful complexity of matter and, while its ultimate secret is still far off, he has the satisfaction of knowing that he is on the trail of truth. He can avoid many a false lead because of the knowl- edge he has inherited from the pioneers of an earlier generation. He has freed himself from many a cruel superstition by his grasp of the continuity of law. When the thunder roars ominously and the lightning flashes, he understands that no capricious spirit is trying to smite him. When pestilence appears in the neighborhood, instead of looking for an explanation in an offended deity, he begins to search for the inimical bacteria or amceba which is the cause of the contagion. Slowly but with steady inevitability he is experiencing the cumulative power of the words of Jesus: “Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” In every discovery, whether in astronomy, geology, physics, chemistry, biology, or psychology, man is being used of God for the advancement of the divine pur- pose. The power by which he rises above the level of his own past is not his own. He can no more create an idea than a tree or any other organic or inorganic thing. Each new truth which comes within the ambit of his mind is drawn there by the power of the indwelling God. Thus man is used by his Creator as the instrument by which his increasing purpose is GOD’S NEED OF MAN AT made known. For every revelation that God has ever given has been given through the medium of the hu- man mind, How else did the Bible come into being? We speak of it as the divine revelation, but that should not blind us to the manner in which it was given. The spirit of truth working like leaven in Moses, Isaiah, St. Paul, and many another consecrated soul, gave them the knowledge of salvation which liberated them from the bondage of error, and as they transmitted it to others, this knowledge was added to the ever growing spiritual capital of the race. Once the Bible was a few of the older books of the Old Testament. Later to these were added various literary strata, until at the Council of Jamnia in the year 90 A.D. the Jewish fathers decided officially upon the canon. In their deliberations they used the same mental processes as those which would be used by an ecclesiastical council to-day, accepting and rejecting the books proposed by majority votes. The New Testament was also of slow growth. Probably the first collection of its books was the bring- ing together of the Gospels of St. Matthew, St. Mark, and St. Luke,—the synoptics as they are called. To these were added a collection of the letters of St. Paul and subsequently the various other writings which make up the whole. But the singular fact for us to bear in mind is that in this process, the men who did the work, first in experiencing God, and then preserv- ing that experience in writing and later deciding what should be kept as authoritative and what eliminated as of lesser value, were living in time and subject to the same limitations as those under which we labor. Neither Isaiah nor St. Paul had any realization that he was writing scriptures for us. They were doing the 48 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP work of their day. In each of them the man and the hour met. True, they had a profound sense of their vocation, but that did not enable them to realize the outstanding role they would play in succeeding ages and in civilizations vastly different from theirs. When the Psalmist wrote the twenty-third psalm, his feel- ing and motive were akin to those of George Matheson when out of a heartbreaking experience transfigured by an unshakable hold upon God, he put us forever in his debt by expressing our faith in the hymn—“O Love that wilt not let me go.” The practical implication of these facts is plain: God’s needs and methods are the same in every age. All truth has not yet been made known. What man has learned is small in contrast with what is yet to be learned. Dr. Banting, working in a laboratory in Toronto, urged on by the inherent desire to ex- plore an uncharted field, learns how to relieve and perhaps to cure multitudes of his fellow men who suf- fer from a dread scourge. He is a living instrument of God used for this purpose, and because of his liv- ingness 1s a partner with God in its fulfillment. Few men, however, are called upon to make an important discovery, or to impress their generation with suffi- cient weight to transmit their influence to succeeding ages and gain momentum in the process like Isaiah and St. Paul. But this should not obscure the truth that every one may be an agent of the divine revelation. In making known the gospel of love, brotherhood, and redemption, God needs the support of the humblest of his children. Every one may become a luminous center radiating spiritual energy that will prove a source of life to strengthen the wavering purposes of his fellows. Every one is potentially a center of reve- GOD’S NEED OF MAN 49 lation to make known the majesty of manhood when it is in conscious communion with God—the source of all life and the fountain-head of all being. Vv There is a definite goal to which all these forms of human service lead. This is the ultimate purpose which God has in view. He is working for the com- plete emancipation of his children from every tend- ency that hinders the full development of their powers. To each man he has entrusted a portion of himself. With all our frailties we are “light sparkles of the divine.” What the old theologians called “the glory of God” can never be consummated until man has won all the increment possible from the nurture of his gifts. His talents may be five or two or one, as in the parable of Jesus, but he must make them as many as they can become or the divine purpose is that far thwarted. Thus the call to comradeship with God, to work, and to ordered study of the mysteries in which we live and by which we are surrounded, is sent to quicken in our minds a sense of our responsibility in the build- ing of the Eternal City which is never absent from God’s mind. Perfection is always his aim. He is never satisfied with what man has done because he has such a clear vision of the best. Hence no part of the human race has yet reached a condition upon which he has put the stamp of his approval and said: “Here is finality.’ Even when great heights were won, as in Greece and Israel, they only opened up new vistas and suggested new endeavors. For a time our forefathers believed that they had reached the ideal, 50 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP in the new republic they had founded. Our present discontents and many clashing interests reveal how far they were mistaken. Our eyes have since been opened to numerous injustices no less glaring than those against which they struggled, but of which they were not conscious. Chattel slavery, intemperance, religious intolerance, are examples. And before these are fully remedied, a better educated social conscience will rec- ognize others which must be expunged from our life. Thus the process runs on into the future where the towers of the ideal city can be dimly seen as God brings their outlines into view to encourage his fellow laborers, and to indicate the tasks before them. The man of full stature realizes his obligations to pos- terity. In trying to meet them he is paying his debt to those who went before him in the only coin he possesses and answering the call of God for his support. CHAPTER III GOD'S FAITH IN MAN I Faith in God is a familiar idea with which every one is acquainted, whatever his disposition or attitude of mind. But God’s faith in man is an idea to which most men have given little thought, or to which they are entirely unaccustomed. Yet even a cursory analysis of the relationship in which God stands to man will show that he is actuated by an unflagging faith in his children—a faith which has withstood multitudes of disappointments and is capable of bearing any possible strain to which it may be subjected. Nor is God’s faith in man different in quality from man’s faith in God. They are complementary aspects of the one underlying reality. Faith contains at least two elements. It is first an affirmation of truth, and secondly, a surrender of the will to that truth, or what is popularly denoted belief on the one side and trust on the other. Roman Catholic theology empha- sizes the first of these elements and Protestant the- ology the second, though in some Protestant sects faith is regarded as a body of doctrine no less rigid than that of Roman Catholicism, while in others, the stress is put upon trust, resulting in a blind and im- practical emotionalism. Faith is a New Testament rather than an Old Tes- tament virtue. The reason for this lies in the sov- 51 52 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP ereign place of law in the older era. What God was believed to require of men in the earlier stages of their development was that they should fear, serve, love, and obey him. It was assumed that they would believe his word. And in the teachings of Jesus the emphasis is not so much upon belief as upon action. “All things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them.” “This do, and thou shalt live.” Jesus speaks in such clear, universal, and self-evident terms, that the question of unbelief hardly occurs. Men do not dispute over the axioms of geom- etry or the multiplication table. It is a tragedy that the Christian thought of the intervening centuries did not retain the pristine simplicity of the gospel. If such had been the case there would be only one church with complete liberty of opinion, just as nationality allows freedom of political opinion, instead of the confused babel of strident voices which Christendom presents to-day. While Jesus often uses the word faith in his teaching, it has the meaning of trust in himself and in God. But with the rise of theological explanations of him and his work, the idea of faith became increasingly intellectual. With the death of Jesus, the gospel was preached as a message to be be- lieved, involving acceptance of the truth that he was the Messiah. St. Paul shared this conviction with his contemporaries, but he was a pioneer in that he worked it out on a reasoned basis, and tried to give it an adequate description. With remarkable insight and force of statement he gathered together the great experiences of Jesus, in the cross, the grave, and the resurrection, and argued that men must be united to Christ by faith and share his experiences if they are to realize the redemption he offers. Thus in the teach- GOD’S FAITH IN MAN 53 ing of St. Paul the two sides of faith are set forth, knowledge and trust, which result in a mystical union of the believer and Christ. II Obviously it would not be correct to say that God believes in man in the sense of accepting any body of truth which man has formulated. When we use the word faith to describe his attitude toward man, the emphasis lies on the idea of trust. He must have had faith in man as a means of self-expression, or he would never have taken the trouble to bring him into existence. For ages God worked to prepare a world upon which living things could subsist. At last it was ready for human life, after it had passed through many stages of development and refinement. Then the Creative Spirit formed man out of the dust of the ground as the fruit of an agelong process. Nor was the climax reached. Man was not all that the divine artificer desired. He was far from perfect. The noblest of men falls pitiably short of the glory that God has in mind for his children. But the fact that he has made man proves his faith in him. Man is the work of God’s own hands and we are reason- ably safe in assuming that he will not forsake his handiwork. Again, God’s faith in his children is revealed in the wonderful powers he has bestowed upon them. He has given them dominion over the earth. They think his thoughts after him. They have the capacity to look behind across the ages spent in their journey up- wards, and forward into the future that is yet to be. So rich an endowment cannot be explained except upon 54 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP the grounds of God’s belief in the investment he has made. For man’s abilities have not been improvised by his maker. They are the fruitage of long and strenuous thought which at last took shape in a form which reveals the divine image. Man’s own creations are ineffably precious to him. He treasures the works of his hands. Yet this is not creation in the deepest sense for the most gifted of men can not bring into existence a single particle of matter, nor create the sim- plest form of life. What we call creation is only the reassembling and ordering of materials already at hand. Our best work is only a faint reflection of divine creation but, since we share the divine nature, we are reasonably safe in assuming that God also looks upon his own work with some degree of satisfaction. Probably the surest proof of God’s faith in man is given in the wonderful way in which he has trusted him to work out his own salvation. He has given him the liberty to choose his own course. While al- ways holding before him the glory of the heavenly vision and planting in him an impulse to obey it, he has nevertheless left him free to make his own deci- sions. This is the meaning of the story of Eden. Man was placed in the garden with assurances of every blessing if he obeyed the will of God, but no constraint was used to compel his obedience. The reason is obvious. Force is utterly destructive of per- sonality. If God had made a world in which his chil- dren had no choice, it would not be a moral world. There would be no virtue in their correct actions. Yet foresight was unnecessary to see that they would often go sadly astray, as indeed they have been doing through the ages. What colossal blunders man has made, bringing disaster upon himself! But God has never GOD’S FAITH IN MAN 55 forced his will upon man even in the face of the greatest calamity. The only constraint brought to bear upon him is that derived from the educative value of suffering. Man learns by his mistakes, but having learned he has his reward in the iron in his blood which would be utterly lacking if his goodness were due to his lack of choice. Yet, on the whole, the human race has been very slow in realizing the wisdom of this freedom. Men often deny to their fellows the very gifts they have received from God. ‘They do not show the trust in them which God has bestowed upon all. This lack of trust is indicated in every attempt to control opinion by duress or to restrict the course of the future. Every theological controversy has its roots in the un- willingness of at least one party in the church to ac- knowledge the sincerity of their neighbors. What is not seen is that such efforts are in violation of the divine trust which is our common inheritance; and that if successful, they will work irreparable injury to those who, owing to weakness or on grounds of expediency, conform to the popular will. To make a man say “I believe,” when no new light is given to him is bad both for the man and for those who exercise the compulsion and also for the cause they represent. Such compulsion is often attempted in the effort to control the future. In London there are many ancient churches which have long since ceased to render any service to the community but which are continued be- cause some short-sighted donor established a trust for their continuance with the condition that if they should cease to function or be removed to another locality, the funds of the establishment would revert to his descendants. Wherever there is a trust, however fool- 56 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP ish, there are always those who are ready to admin- ister it, so that the welfare of the community is checked because of such failures to allow the wisdom of a suc- ceeding generation to find its own way. Not far from Philadelphia, near the center of a beautiful church lawn, there stands an ugly old building. It was the original church and together with the grounds was the gift of one man a generation or more ago when the neighborhood was poor. Meantime it has become a wealthy suburb, The old church is altogether inade- quate, but when a new structure was planned, it was found that in the title deed there was a clause which prevented it being torn down without loss of the entire property. So the new church was built on one side and the old one still remains, a permanent blot upon a scene that would otherwise be beautiful. God never makes that mistake. He trusts his fu- ture children not less than those of the present, for he has confidence to believe that there will be at least as much wisdom to-morrow as there is to-day. He knows that life is in a constant flux; that new lights often appear, changing the face of the old landscapes, and requiring the readjustment and modification of our old ideas to meet the new situations. Nor does he shrink from the cost which is involved in this trust. It is often misused. Tragic blunders occur. The world is grievously slow in learning that righteous- ness, holiness, and love, are immeasurably stronger and more effective than material power. But God trusts men even in the long and painfully disastrous processes by which they learn. When Nikolai Lenine was a young man of eighteen, his elder brother who had been his teacher and hero was put to death by the Czar’s government after a summary trial for hav- GOD’S FAITH IN MAN 57 ing taken part in a revolutionary plot. The burning sense of injustice kindled in Lenine’s heart prompted him to determine upon a bitter revenge and he set to work to forge weapons of the mind to undo the foe who had robbed him of his brother. How suc- cessful he was is now a matter of history. If the Russian government of the generation preceding the Great War had trusted the people, there would have been no revolution. Yet through all the pain, sorrow, and death, God never loses faith in man’s ultimate victory. Some day a greater Russia will arise out of the present chaos and tragedy. Only those who are lacking in faith in their fellow men, and forgetful that their neighbors are God’s own children, allow them- selves to fall into bitter reproaches in speaking of their mistakes. To lack faith in man is to deny God. Til God’s faith in man is strikingly exhibited upon the darker backgrounds of history. When the star of human hope sinks below the horizon as it has done occasionally in every nation and even over the whole world, the man who can guide the people to their des- tiny never fails to emerge. Usually he comes from the most unpromising surroundings; Moses from the desert, St. Paul from a Jewish home in Tarsus, Luther from a provincial monastery, John Wesley from a church which had become sterile in spirit and barren in faith, and Lincoln from the crudest of frontier cabins. Few of the world’s leaders in any department of achievement have arisen where we should expect them. Rarely does the man who has enjoyed the best initial advantages realize their promise by achieving 58 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP a position commensurate with his start in life. What was there in the home of the boy Shakespeare to jus- tify a prophet in foretelling that he would become the most colossal figure in the realm of poetry? Doubt- less there are multitudes of men who are potentially great. This accounts for the dreams and vague im- aginings which stir their hearts. But when a man rises far above the common level and becomes a heroic figure, his achievement is not to be explained alone by his superior worth. The hour calls out his latent powers, and he is upheld by those of kindred mind. Shakespeare inspires only because there is a poet in us all. Greatness consists not alone in intrinsic strength, but also in the multitudes of aspirations of ordinary men which take form and meaning as they gather around the figure of the hero. Lincoln grows greater year by year and is credited with a wisdom and foresight he would be the first to disclaim, because men love to give to their own convictions the sanction of his name. In this they are not insincere. The process is unconscious, but it proves their sense of kinship with him, notwithstanding the apparent gulf between their powers and his, and it justifies God’s assurance that the man will always rise to meet the demands of the hour however exacting they may be. In the light of these reflections we are on safe ground in concluding that God has faith in us, no matter how questionable our record. Because we are his children he knows that we possess qualities which will enable us to stand in the evil hour. The forces of disrup- tion are great and sometimes appear overwhelming; but greater still are goodness, holiness, righteousness, and love. In the end the spiritual always triumphs over the material. And with all its contradictions and GOD’S FAITH IN MAN 59 failures human nature is at bottom spiritual. The reason men often seem so unresponsive to the higher calls of duty and service is due more to lack of imagi- nation than to the carnal mind which is enmity against God. Thus, for those who can visualize the divine faith, it will prove not only a great corrective against discouragement but a great stimulus to heroic endeavor in those who accept God’s valuation of their worth. IV The converse of God’s faith in man is man’s faith in God. If he trusts us we ought also to trust him, for we have a thousand times more reason to do so than he has to trust us. He has never failed us, but we have often failed him. And while it is true that men have sometimes felt poignantly that God had de- serted them, on closer examination of the circum- stances or on more mature reflection, the discerning have learned that they were wrong in this impression. That God has never failed the trusting soul does not mean that we always get what we want. Rather it signifies that he is always with us and ready to sus- tain us in any situation however hard. What the world needs is a large and intense faith in God. This alone will usher in the parliament of man of which poets and prophets dream, for in its ultimate inter- pretation and application faith in God is faith in brotherhood and in cooperation in all the relationships of life, whether within the state or in the intercourse of nation with nation. This is not to depreciate social, political, and industrial programs, or paper plans to avert disharmony and friction between capital and labor or the quarrels between governments which often 60 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP break out in war. Such programs, when they are worth while, register an increasing faith in God. One of the surest marks of a lack of faith is fear that the world is going to the bad. Many people are convinced that the forces of unrighteousness are in full control. In the growth of science, and the changes of manners and of opinion which are always taking place, as their old landmarks fade, they jump to the conclusion that unbelief is undermining the ancient foundations. This accounts for the hysteria which characterizes so much of our present day religion. Defenders of the Bible and of Christ rush forward with feverish haste, unheeding of the fact that neither the Bible nor Christ needs any defense. One might as well speak of defending the sun or the law of gravi- tation. The best and only service that can be done for the Bible is to incarnate its truth and give its message a free field of action unencumbered by any claims of its superiority apart from those which are self-evi- dencing. This is equally true of Christ. What sane man would dream of defending the beauty or the fragrance of a rose, or the glory of a sunset? What Christ requires of his followers is not defense, but a persuasive testimony to his power to elevate the soul, and endue it with grace, charm, and sympathy. To speak of defending him implies that he is in danger, whereas his only danger lies in the indifference or ig- norant zeal of his followers who have not entered into his spirit, and have no real faith in his method. The greatest handicap of Christianity is the unspiritual Christian. Just as the belief that the times are out of joint and the world going to destruction is a proof of infidelity, so confidence that the truth and method of Christ will GOD’S FAITH IN MAN 61 redeem the world is a proof of vital faith. Practi- cally all the troubles of Christendom are due to our failure to take the Christian gospel seriously. Nations depend upon their armaments to protect them against their foes. Men lose their souls in accumulating wealth far beyond their needs because they are afraid to trust God in their old age. They appeal to the courts to settle their differences instead of coming to- gether in a spirit of mutual forbearance and with a sincere desire to discover the reasons for each other’s point of view. Probably it is too much to look for a world from which all friction and misunderstanding have been expurgated, but there can be no doubt of a great advance when a conscientious effort in this direc- tion has been made by a considerable number of the makers of opinion in church and state. Faith in Christ means the faith of Christ, of which St. Paul said: “TI live by the faith of the Son of God.”’ And what was Christ’s faith but trust in God, which is trust in the fruits of the spirit, which are “love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, and temperance?” Faith is the surrender of the soul to the ideal of perfection—the conviction that he who possesses these virtues will win the ultimate victory. In the interim he may suffer many a disap- pointment, but that will only prove his soul. Some- times a schoolboy feels that his father is harsh or un- sympathetic when he refuses to help him to find the answer to a question set by his teacher, but with the coming of the wisdom of maturity he will realize that his father was acting in his best interests. Such a refusal is a proof of faith in his inherent capacity to solve the problem for himself, and a recognition that to do so is much better than to have the answer found 62 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP by another. But when the lesson has been learned there will ensue an inflow of power which will sustain him in the high adventure of life and enable him to meet every issue in confidence. This is a parable of God’s method with us; when we are buffeted by misfortune and the way seems too hard for us to endure, there is no reason that our faith should weaken. We need only to recall that these are the processes by which we are fitted for wider spheres of action. When the world seems to be tumbling in ruin is the best of all times for the exercise of a buoyant faith which is after all only a spiritualized imagination through which the soul sees, glimmering beyond the present darkness and confusion, the street lamps of the City of God. SECTION II: GOD IN ACTION CHAPTER IV GOD AS CREATOR I When many of us of an older generation were chil- dren we were given a brief explanation of life through the medium of the “Mother’s Catechism.” In that compendium of wisdom we learned that God made us and also that he made all things. For the moment this was satisfactory. The mind of the child is quick to accept any proffered resting place, though it does not remain there long. As the years went on we saw that there were other questions growing out of these an- swers. When, why, how, where, and of what ma- terials, did God make the world? ‘The answer in the opening chapters of Genesis did not resolve the mys- tery. It was not specific enough. We were told that the date of Creation was the year 4004 B.C. or there- about. This was confusing for geology pointed to a much greater age for the earth, to leave out of ac- count the heavenly bodies which we would naturally think of as equally old. Nor did it help us much to go to our religious pre- ceptors. Usually they tried to silence our questions by pointing out the sin of doubt. Rarely did they give an answer that satisfied us even temporarily. Their attitude was usually like that of Carlyle’s mother when 63 64 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP she was asked by her son, then fourteen years old, the meaning of the Song of Solomon. She gave him the traditional answer, and when he continued, “‘How is it known that it is symbolical, representing Christ and the Church?” she was shocked beyond bounds. ‘The sight of her horror made him say no more. “I saw I must not,” he said afterwards, “‘and so I shut up my thoughts in my own breast.’’ Needless to say many a life has been irreparably hurt by such an attitude. To ask questions in a sincere search for truth indicates a healthy soul, and when they arise in a growing mind they should be answered as far as possible or, at any rate, honestly faced. II There is no denying that our forbears believed in the special creation both of the world and man. They interpreted the narrative or narratives in the first two chapters of Genesis literally. To them those stories were copies of the blue prints by which the Almighty had worked when in the beginning heaven and earth alike “rose out of chaos.” But when researches in astronomy, geology, and biology, revealed facts at vari- ance with the traditional belief, there was widespread discomfiture among the devout. If these new doc- trines were true, it seemed to them that faith was no longer tenable. No wonder they fought strenuously against the light and were often overzealous in de- fense of the old ideas. It was in vain. Slowly but steadily the new science created a new world, except in the cases of those who refused to study the evidence. Time was pushed back for millions of years beyond » 4004 B.C. Through what processes the earth passed in GOD AS CREATOR 65 its creation only the astronomer-geologist can tell, and there are great lapses in his reckoning, but all schol- ars have long ago accepted the conclusion that before it was habitable for man it had been zons in the making. The reason our forbears of the past two or three cen- turies struggled so hard against this truth is to be found in the conviction that it was at variance with the teach- ing of the Bible and particularly with that of Genesis. Believing that the Bible is inerrant, it was enough to demolish any scientific discovery to quote a scriptural text which contradicted or seemed to contradict it. John Calvin derided the teachings of Copernicus by a reference to the 96th Psalm: “‘The world also shall be established that it shall not be moved.” John Wesley maintained that to disbelieve in witches is to disbelieve in God because the Bible affirms their existence. Philip Gosse, a distinguished naturalist and contemporary of Darwin, turned his back upon the evidence for evolu- tion in the belief that its acceptance meant the rejection of the Holy Writ. The fundamentalists of our day are belated survivors from this era. They have accepted the erroneous idea that the hypothesis of evolution eliminates God from the world, because it denies crea- tion by divine fiat. While we should have the deepest sympathy with those who feel that the foundations of the faith are being undermined by modern scientific methods of thought, this sympathy does not justify us in allowing them to block the traffic in religious ideas. The forces of ignorance, prejudice, bigotry, and superstition, must be broken down, and education is the only means by which it can be done. Evolution has passed the theo- retical stage and must be accepted as a fact, though its method is still uncertain. This uncertainty accounts 66 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP for those differences of opinion among scientists as to the relative importance of its various factors, which the uninformed seize upon to justify their denials of the evolutionary process. But such denials only retard in- tellectual progress. They do not affect the truth of evolution which is not dependent upon belief nor to be decided by majority vote. It has already been implied that evolution is not a cause. It is simply a process. But an explanation of the process is as necessary as if the finished creation had been produced instantaneously or in six days in accordance with the story of Genesis. Suppose it could be proved that, as some maintain, William Shake- speare, the actor of Stratford and London, had no poetic gifts and that the association of his name with the wonderful body of literature that is attributed to his authorship was a fraud or mistake. We should still be under the necessity of accounting for “Hamlet,” . “Julius Cesar,” “King Lear,” and the other dramas and poetical creations that bear his magic name. Thus, whether the universe was made in an instant or was the outcome of an xonic process of develop- ment, we are pushed back to God for its explanation. Our everyday experience strengthens the idea of its growth. An oak tree takes many years to reach ma- turity. The human embryo passes rapidly through many stages of development which correspond roughly with the lower orders of creation. In the growth of the child to manhood, he also passes through sociolog- ical stages which parallel those through which the race has passed in its struggle upward from the cave or tabernacle to modern civilization. The evolution of man has been irrefutably estab- lished. This does not mean that the human stock was GOD AS CREATOR 67 derived from any existing apes, but rather that man and apes, as divergent branches, point back to a com- mon stem. Man’s life is therefore collateral with that of the ape. As Professor J. Arthur Thomson has said: “The broad fact is that man is solidary with the rest of creation and that the first man worthy of the name sprang from primate parents who begat him. And there is no reason why man should be ashamed of his poor relations. If there is great excellence in him, the achievement, there must have been the right stuff in those through whom he was achieved.” * Strangely enough the advocates of the traditional theory of special creation have failed to see that this method does not relieve their embarrassment in the lower orders of existence. Birds, beasts, and fishes must still be accounted for and if God made them by his fiat they would still be related to man as being derived from a common source of life. Like him they are made of the dust of the ground. Thus there is nothing disturbing to an intelligent faith in accepting the facts of science which prove to all who will con- sider the evidence with open minds that man has been upon the earth for hundreds of thousands of years. The only reasonable objection to this conclusion is, as we have seen, that it is at variance with the story of creation in Genesis. But the difficulty will disappear if we make our approach to the Bible from the right point of view. The Bible is not a book of science, but of religion. Its value lies in the fundamental fact that its constant aim is to reveal God. But this is done through the only medium possible in the various periods of history it covers, that is, the thought-forms prevail- ing at the time. In fact we have not a single story of 1 The Homiletic Review, January 1924. 68 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP creation in the opening chapters of Genesis, but two distinct stories from two different periods, and far from consistent with one another. They were evi- dently patched together by a later editor who did not take the trouble to rub off all the projecting corners. For example, the order in the one narrative is alto- gether different from that in the other. ‘This does not invalidate their authority in religion, though it does exclude them from the category of science. Both of these creation narratives bring us face to face with God as the ultimate cause of the world and all that it con- tains. If we can only get hold of this elemental prin- ciple in our interpretation of Scripture, most of our theological difficulties will be resolved. We shall no longer feel that we are on the defensive when we are confronted with the Piltdown, the Neanderthal, or the Cro-Magnon man, proving our remote ancestry, but shall understand that the supreme fact is the noblest man the race has produced. He cannot be explained in terms lower than himself, and certainly God must at least be as good as he. This brings us face to face with the fact of Christ and implicitly with the Father whom he reveals. III One of the great weaknesses of the human mind is to seek for a resting place and when it is found to look upon it as final. Thus the idea has been widely ac- cepted that the creation was finished long ago. The truth is that creation is an endless process. God is still making man, and a little reflection will show that the divine artist has yet far to go before he can look upon his work with thorough satisfaction. In the GOD AS CREATOR 69 movement of the wind and tide, in the change of the seasons, the growth of flowers, and the flight of birds; in the development of the horse from an animal no larger than the fox in far-off prehistoric days, the creative impulse is at work. God is the ground of every prayer and aspiration, of every struggle for purity and moral worth, no less to-day than when man , first became a living soul as he emerged from his long sub-human apprenticeship. The confusion which so often arises when the crea- tion is under discussion springs from a false analogy. God has not made the world as a mason makes a wall nor did he make man as a sculptor shapes a statue. He works from within outward and is the living prin- ciple of the universe—its ground and cause. There is nothing mechanical, arbitrary, or capricious, in his ac- tivity. He is spirit, the ultimate essence of all reality, and therefore endued with the necessity for outward self-manifestation. The innumerable forms of life upon the globe, instead of being special creations as our forbears believed, have all developed from a few orig- inal forms or from one into which the Creator orig- inally breathed the spirit of life. Who knows but that some of the unlovely forms of existence, for which there seems to be no reason, represent the blundering efforts of the life principle to find a worthy vehicle of expression? This would also explain the dinosaurs and other prehistoric monsters who once splashed in Juras- sic oceans and long since were thrown into nature’s dis- card. Nor is this suggestion any reflection upon the wis- dom or the power of God. There is no perfect man, and there are multitudes who are pitiable failures. Yet God is in all men, striving to reveal and express < y” 70 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP himself in nobility of character. He works under the _, self-imposed limitations of his medium. Man is a ' partner in the creative process, as in fact all nature is, and has to pay in the currency of effort and even of failure, a price for every advance. IV Creation implies a goal. Under the divine impulse man would never have made his long ascent were it not that there is always a higher point for him to reach. Our restlessness in our achievements is de- rived from an instinctive recognition that we have not attained the end. There is still a vast amount of work to be done before chaos gives place to order, confusion of mind to wisdom, and waste of human effort to con- servation, The perfection of the kingdom of heaven is still far off. We must work within ourselves and within the community for its coming. A thousand needs are presented to us every day. Ignorance, super- stition, bigotry, greed, disease, and many other evils, hold back the coming of the heavenly commonwealth. It is for us to work for their elimination, as well as for the full development of our own powers in every aspect of our lives, morally and spiritually, but also intellectually and esthetically. And when we are thus working, we are being used of God, as channels of his creative purpose. The value of such effort on our part as registered in the increase of our happiness is immeasurable. Only in the development of our inner resources do we achieve that harmony with our environment which brings us peace. One of the greatest of the world’s tragedies is the widespread dependence upon things. Men try to GOD AS CREATOR 71 substitute material for spiritual wealth. It never works. Money can not buy lasting position, a good name, nor even a temporary happiness that is real. Women try to attain distinction by the display of jewels or by dress or even by painting their checks to give them the semblance of health. The pleasure gained from such adventitious methods is always transitory and never satisfies. It leaves a feeling of bitterness and disillu- sion. As Ludwig Lewisohn has said in describing habitués of the theater: “The features are unmolded by experience; the soul does not break through... . Business and awkward dinners and noisy teas and re- serve and repression and decorum and conventionality —have left them with a few yards of fur, a handful of diamonds, and neither memories nor hopes in their im- poverished hearts.” ? In sharp contrast with the effort to find happiness in material things is the joy which comes from crea- tive activity. Real and lasting happiness only comes from the building up of spiritual capital. To feel that one is wiser, purer, stronger, and more resolute, to-day than yesterday is the essence of life. To be assured that we are enlarging our inner resources is the one guarantee that we are living. As Carlyle wrote to his friend Johnstone: “Without increasing in knowledge, what profits it to live?” The temptation to which many yield is the hope of quick returns of happiness. Men are reluctant to take the time to lay the foundations for spiritual growth. This is the explanation of the widespread failure to cultivate the latent appreciations of our human nature. The enjoyment of literature, music, art, science, phi- losophy, and religion in its higher and less emotional 2“The Creative Life,” p. 75. 72 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP forms, is comparatively rare because the majority of people are unwilling to undergo the necessary disci- pline. The appetites require no technique. This ac- counts for the vagaries of popular taste. The thought- ful newspaper whose policy is to tell what is true and to emphasize only what is wholesome is read only by the few, while its rivals which play up every sensation are read by multitudes. The crowd is never discriminating in its tastes, and the crowd is simply the large majority of people, many of whom pride themselves upon their culture and are therefore difficult to teach because they do not recognize their poverty of soul. One of the most fundamental needs of mankind is the clear vision which will enable men to see that the largest rewards of life both in time and in eternity go to those whose activity is creative. This is another way of saying that in their hearts and minds and pur- poses, the spirit of God has been allowed to work freely. The spirit is always seeking a place in the soul of man, trying to restore it where it is injured or broken whether by accident or sin, to reduce its chaotic purposes to order, to bring its scattered vision to a focus upon what is true, to fill it with loving sympathy for all the sins and sorrows of the world, in brief— to create man in the image of God. Modern science has broken down the wall between the material and: spiritual in nature, or rather has re- duced the material to spiritual terms. No man can say where matter leaves off, for all our old tests have proved inadequate. The radio reaches across oceans and into the depths of the earth, through partitions of masonry and steel and every other barrier as though they did not exist. The only explanation is that every material thing is interpenetrated by a spiritual essence. GOD AS CREATOR 73 What is this but God who “closer is than breathing, and nearer than hands and feet”? The Creative Spirit of the universe is ever ready to meet with our spirits and endue them with new life and power, through which we too shall become creators of that great com- monwealth of justice, mercy, and love, which man is always building when the spirit of God permeates and controls his life. The world is a theater of divine ac- wv tivity. God’s creative work will never cease till man ~” “has built Jerusalem’ not only “in England’s green and pleasant land,” but here, there, and everywhere. “Creation’s Lord, we give Thee thanks That this our world is incomplete, That thou hast not yet finished man, That we are in the making still— _ As friends who share the Maker’s plan, And sons who know the Father’s will.” CHART RAV, GOD AS SOVEREIGN I Theoretically, every one who believes in a personal God must be convinced that he is the Moral Governor of the universe. Since he created all things, he natu- rally and rightly controls all things. Throughout the Old Testament this idea of God’s absolute rule runs as a unifying principle. He orders the course of the stars. He is the potter, and men are the clay which he molds according to his will. “Shall the clay say to him that fashioneth it, What makest thou?’ “TI will di- rect all his ways. . . . I form the light and create dark- ness: I make peace and create evil.’ Even those who are unaware of God’s existence are unconsciously ful- filling his purpose. He girded Cyrus the Persian king, though Cyrus did not know him. This doctrine of divine sovereignty received great emphasis in the Protestant Reformation. It was the central thought of Calvin and other reformers. In some instances they pushed it to extremes which reduce it to absurdity, as when they limited the number of the elect to such narrow proportions as to shut out from salvation the vast majority of men in every age. Yet they did not carry it as far as the Mohammedans to whom God’s will is the supreme reality which informs everything that happens. To the devout believer in Islam, not a leaf falls, nor a serpent bites his victim, 74 GOD AS SOVEREIGN 75 but it is the will of Allah. He drives the poor sinner to his crime and rejoices in the penalty he suffers. There is no god but God! Nor is it easy to escape this conclusion in our think- ing if we try to approach the question from the stand- point of the sovereign will. Since God is almighty, whatever is must be in accordance with his purpose. The older theologians fell back upon the Devil to ex- plain the evil of the world, but they did not answer the obvious objection that if this explanation is correct, God must have abdicated at least a portion of his sov- ereignty in favor of the Evil One. They tried to steer between the Scylla and Charybdis of divine responsibil- ity for things as they are on the one side, and a dual control upon the other, with the result that their de- liberations were nearly always misty and unsatisfac- tory. Fortunately they found their solution in a prac- tical ethic rather than in a theoretical explanation of the divine wisdom, and opened the door to a better un- derstanding of the difficulties by their insistence upon righteous action. Owing to the modern recognition of nature as a uni- tary system, it is easier for us than for our fathers to see that though God is sovereign, his will is neither arbitrary nor capricious. He is ruled by the law of his own being. There are many things that he can y not do. He can not violate the truth nor undo the past. The spoken word can not be unspoken, nor the shot arrow recalled. He can not make a two-year-old child in two minutes for there is an essential contradic- tion in the terms of the proposition, Nor can he grant special favors to those who serve him best. They must accept as their reward the consciousness of his pres- ence. His laws are applied to all alike. The rain falls — 76 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP on the evil and the good. The earthquake destroys the mission house as readily as the pagan temple. We need to revise our thought about the divine char- acter. In many minds there lingers an idea of God which makes him akin to an oriental despot. Prayer is made to him for special gifts without thought of the effect upon others, should the petition be granted. When one man wants rain another is asking for fair weather. A little reflection will show that the only way to avoid a topsy-turvy world is to make the same rules for all. | We have been too easily satisfied with phrases in shaping our ideas of God. Often they dull the edge of the mind. We speak of him as omnipotent without a clear conception of what omnipotence means. The same is true of the other attributes such as all-suffi- cient, everywhere present, and most merciful. We can learn to say the words glibly enough but the question is, How far do they reach? As we have seen, the al- mightiness of God does not enable him to abrogate the “laws of his own being, to take a stone and make it into bread, nor to alter a single fact when once it has been brought into existence. What then is the range of its meaning? I do not ask this question to answer it but as a warning against the fallacy of resting on a word as though it solved all our difficulties. The truth is that most of our definitions of God are unsatisfac- tory because these definitions themselves have to be defined. Until men agree upon the exact significance of the words they use in their discussions, there is nothing more futile than argument upon theological questions. A man who denies the omnipotence of God before a popular religious gathering will immediately find himself in hot water, yet most of those uniting in GOD AS SOVEREIGN 77 the censure would be unable to give reasons for their action, nor would they have any idea of the difficulties involved. This is not honest. We must strive for in- tellectual integrity which is surely as important as financial integrity. II The only legitimate approach to the problem of God’s sovereignty is from our own experience. We must begin with ourselves, and when we do so we find that we are hedged about with so many restrictions that we sometimes doubt whether we have any freedom. We had nothing to say as to when, where, or in what cir- cumstance, we entered the world. We had no choice of our parents nor of the capacities with which we are endowed. Our inheritance from our ancestors deter- mined our color, and in large degree our temperament; and our ability to adjust ourselves to our environment is also given to us. We say that the social order in which we live is blind and corrupt. But we did not make it, and if any of us had never been born the city and nation in which we live would doubtless have been much as it is. This is the truth which underlies the doctrine of predestination. Men are pushed on both by an inward and outward urge, and what they are is determined in large degree by forces beyond their con- trol. Thus whatever path the mind of man takes, it is sure to bring him up against the inevitable fact of God’s sovereign will. On the other hand in our experiences we are con- vinced of a certain degree of freedom. In the practi- cal affairs of life we deal with men as though they were fully responsible for their conduct. We punish 78 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP those who do wrong and praise and reward those who are conspicuous in doing right. This means that we believe that they are sufficiently free to determine their own course. Furthermore we are justified by the re- sults, for the assumption of moral responsibility works. The only logical conclusion is that within a certain narrow but sufficient area of life man has the right of self-determination.- A reasonable explanation of this freedom is that he shares the divine nature. If man had no control whatever over his actions any more than he had over his birth, there would be no virtue in his conduct how- ever good it seemed. When he comes to years of dis- cretion, even though his range of choice is limited, he becomes a partner with God in the shaping of his char- acter. The raw materials of noble personality are given him in his native gifts and in the environmental in- fluences which determine in a broad and general way the outlines of his development. But it is for him to fill in the details of the picture by making a right choice in the use of his powers. He has to work out his own salvation, or he would not be a moral agent. It would be short-sighted to suppose that, in this ex- planation of God’s sovereignty and man’s freedom, all the difficulties have been cleared away. We cannot escape the fact that our lives are rooted in mystery, nor can we explain how or why we came to be, nor say for a certainty what our worth is. God is beyond the grasp of our finite minds, but for that matter even the finite is inexplicable and is always melting into the infinite. The straight line when extended into space soon escapes the grip of the imagination as the dis- tance becomes too great for our comprehension. GOD AS SOVEREIGN 79 Iil We have also another perplexing question which grows out of God’s sovereignty. Why does he allow evil to say nothing of creating it? How can we recon- cile the rule of a God who is good with all the suffer- ing which prevails in the world? None whose mind is open to the obvious facts of life can deny that in this we have a baffling problem. The good man dies with his work unfinished in the exercise of a sacrificial min- istry, while his bad neighbor lives on in affluence. The unscrupulous man wins wealth and honor while his sensitive competitor almost fails in his modest aim to win a livelihood. The author of the book of Job did not solve the difficulty; nor does it seem likely that it ever will be solved. But we know enough to be sure that we can have no knowledge of good without a knowledge of evil. The one is the counterpart of the other. As Milton saw clearly, the material out of which virtue and vice are made is the same: They are not skillful considerers of human things, who imagine to remove sin, by removing the matter of sin; ... Though ye take from a covetous man all his treasure, he has yet one jewel left, ye cannot be- reave him of his covetousness. Banish all objects of lust, shut up all youth into the severest discipline that can be exercised in any hermitage, ye cannot make them chaste, that came not thither so: such great care and wisdom is required to the right managing of this point. Suppose we could expel sin by this means; look how much we thus expel of sin, so much we expel of vir- tue; for the matter of them both is the same: remove that, and ye remove them both alike. This justifies 80 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP the high providence of God, who, though he commands us temperance, justice, continence, yet pours out before us even to a profuseness all desirable things, and gives us minds that can wander beyond all limit and satiety.* Thus everything depends upon the use to which we put our powers. The combative instinct that we inherit from our remote ancestors will be sublimated if it is directed against social or political injustice, or it can be allowed to operate on a low plane of personal trucu- lence and hostility. Evil is thus the negative pole of good. Light would have little meaning apart from darkness. Our work in achieving worth of character is to withstand being overcome of evil, and to overcome evil with good. Owing to the rule of law there is no escape from a large measure of suffering which we do not bring upon ourselves, and nowhere in the Bible is there any prom- ise of such escape. Jesus suffered hunger, humiliation, and death. He told his disciples that they would be persecuted. He also stood against the narrow and self- complacent interpretation of disaster as a divine visita- tion upon those who have sinned most grievously. He pointed out that there were other sinners in Jerusalem beside those upon whom the tower of Siloam fell. Yet there are many still who profess loyalty to him who are so uninstructed in his teaching as to see in the Japanese earthquake a manifestation of divine wrath upon a sinful people. Fortunately, the Christian com- munity is outgrowing this superstition, though only a half century ago, when a part of the city of Cincinnati suffered from a flood, some of the clergymen of more favored residential districts above the water level ex- 1“The Areopagitica.” GOD AS SOVEREIGN 81 plained the disaster as punishment sent because of per- versity of the poor who lived in the lower sections of the city. It is ground for encouragement to realize that comparatively few teachers of religion to-day could be found who would give such a reason for a calamity. But while we cannot explain evil, there is one un- shakable position which we can take in the assurance that it is all we need to know. This is the conviction that while we must accept disaster when it comes whether in the form of ill health, broken hopes, pov- erty, bereavement, or the failure of our friends, God has decreed that we shall always have strength to bear it if we trust ourselves to his guidance and control. Man’s primitive belief in an ideal state in which there was perfect innocence, peace, and freedom from re- sponsibility, is altogether inadequate to explain the di- vine purpose. If Eden had remained forever, there would be no moral worth. Character like every other value must be earned and therefore requires the tem- pering which comes through pain, affliction, temptation, and sorrow. If left to ourselves, we should never have chosen one of these harder experiences. No mother would let her child bruise himself by falling if she could guard every step he takes in learning to walk. Few indeed are the objects of desire that we should give up for the sake of the benefits derived from renunciation. If we could have controlled the circum- stances of our lives, who among us would ever have suffered a broken home or a bitter disappointment? In that event we should all have been lords of the earth ruling over growing kingdoms, healthy, acquisitive, and self-satisfied, Little consideration is necessary to see that in such an Edenic world, the noble and heroic traits of char- 82 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP acter, which make life beautiful and at their best prove man’s divinity of origin, would be impossible. Pain in its various forms is thus a part of the great disci- plinary process which God has established for the edu- cation of mankind. It is never sent to indicate his wrath or displeasure nor for its punitive effects, but in order to temper the souls of men and make them he- roic, patient, and sacrificial. And though there are many apparent inequalities and mysteries in its dispen- sation, we can see enough to assure us that a world without tears would be a world bereft of joy. Thus suffering as a constituent element in human life does ’ not indicate a hard inscrutable will on the part of the Creator, but is rather a revelation of the universality of law. Nature, with equal mind, Sees all her sons at play; Sees man control the wind, The wind sweep man away; Allows the proudly riding and the foundering bark.’ The presence of evil also reveals the consistency of the divine character in showing God’s obedience to the laws he has established, since he suffers in all the sufferings of his children, yet works his sovereign purpose out through every tear. Not long ago two little children of six and four years of age, while playing with matches in a loft, were burned to death. A Job’s comforter who came to the heartbroken parents offered the platitudinous ob- servation that it must have been the will of God that they should die. It would indeed be hard on God to 2 Matthew Arnold, “Empedocles on A‘tna.” GOD AS SOVEREIGN 83 believe this to be true. But it is God’s law that if chil- dren of that age are allowed to obtain matches and play without supervision where wood shavings are stored, fires will be started which will sometimes cause destruction and death. And while it is true that the penalty for parental neglect is terribly severe in such a case, we must bear in mind that the lives of all men are so interwoven that the cruel cutting down of these little ones will probably be the means of saving chil- dren yet unborn, Thus the doctrine of God’s sovereignty is not only the best intellectual explanation that we have of the , current of events in which we move and over which we have no control; it also opens the door sufficiently to justify the poet’s faith. As Tennyson puts it: Oh, yet we trust that somehow good Will be the final goal of ill. To pangs of nature, sins of will, Defects of doubt, and taints of blood; That nothing walks with aimless feet; That not one life shall be destroyed, Or cast as rubbish to the void, When God hath made the pile complete; That not a worm is cloven in vain; That not a moth with vain desire Is shriveled in a fruitless fire, Or but subserves another’s gain. Behold, we know not anything; I can but trust that good shall fall At last—far off—at last, to all, And every winter change to spring.® 3 “Tn Memoriam.” 84 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP, IV It is a singular fact that those who have had a deep conviction of God’s sustained control over their lives have been the great makers of history. Ours would indeed be a hard task if we had no sense of the reign of law. The farmer is confident, when he plants his seed, that summer will follow spring and bring warmer suns which will stimulate the growth of the corn and assure a harvest. The metallurgist knows that steel will be the result when he combines a fractional per- centage of carbon with melted iron in the retort. The entire fabric of modern industry rests upon scientific certainty. There are no evil spirits to interfere ma- liciously with the forces that man sets in motion. Be- cause of this definite knowledge we have built a new civilization in less than a hundred years. The explanation of the influence wielded by the fol- lowers of Calvin and those of kindred belief before and after them is to be found in the same conviction. They believed not only that God rules the world but also that he had called them to be the agents of his pur- pose. This conviction was iron in their souls. It nerved them to resolute action. They were afraid of nothing and undeterred by no difficulty because God was with them. One and God were always a ma- jority. Often this sense of election made them hard to get on with, irascible neighbors, narrow dogmatists, but it imbued them with power. Their sinews of ac- tion were never cut by doubts. We of to-day, who pride ourselves upon a wider outlook, can not afford to do without the same sense of divine control over our lives. This is essential to mental and spiritual health for it ensures a purpose in existence. Nor should it GOD AS SOVEREIGN 85 be difficult for us to realize this sense of divine guid- ance because science has given us a new revelation | which has rectified and enlarged our conception of the meaning of God’s rule and man’s responsibility and freedom. CHAPTER VI GOD AS JUDGE I Throughout the Bible from Genesis to Revelation there runs an undertone of judgment. Soon after the great drama of human life had begun, according to its chronology, the question was raised as an affirmation, “Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?”’, and one of the last and most vivid visions of the poet- apostle on the island of Patmos is that of the dead— the small and great—standing before God with the books opened. But even where there is no direct ref- erence to judgment, the idea lies in the immediate background, for the ideal always suggests an examina- tion of the actual. When a man comes into the pres- ence of another who is his superior in character, he becomes conscious of his own defects. The Bible is saturated with the idea of perfection. Righteousness, goodness, truth, and love, form its currency, and when- ever our minds make a vital contact with any of these values we are constrained to recognize the shabbiness of our worth and thus to feel that we have been weighed and found wanting. It is a commonplace that we do not like to be judged. We would escape from the necessity if we could. At bottom we are afraid. True, many men are ready to compete with their neighbors. The college student who has been faithful in his work does not shrink 86 GOD AS JUDGE 87 from going up to the examination. He is confident that he will meet the test. But his confidence is based upon his assurance that he can do as well as others rather than upon a conviction that he is the scholar he ought to be. He knows that if he were to be tested by the ideal he would fail. In ‘Pictor Ignotus,’ Browning has interpreted one phase of this recoil from judgment. The unknown painter is aroused by the praise which he hears given to the work of a young artist, and affirms that he could have done as well. He then goes on to tell of his early ambitions. In imagination he saw throngs following one or other of his pictures through great cities, with streets renamed for him in honor of the event. But he could not endure the thought of his work being bartered and sold by ignorant people with- out appreciation of his motive, and used to adorn the homes of those who did not understand. So he turned to the monastery and there, year in and year out, painted the mother and her child upon the damp walls of the unending aisles and cloisters, where the portraits soon would fade. Yet one is made to feel, without the poet’s saying it, that he was unhappy in his choice. The suppressed desire to express his talent where it would receive recognition however inadequate had caused a secret inflammation of his soul. The same unwillingness to face reality is described by Cervantes in his story of the helmet which Don Quixote made for his own protection. ‘The material was cardboard, and having finished it, he gave it a blow with his sword to see if it would serve his pur- pose. But to his dismay it broke in pieces under the impact and in great chagrin and disappointment he had to set to work again. When he had finished his 88 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP second effort, he put it on his head and refused to test it in the assurance that he had a good helmet. We may smile at his naiveté, but in truth the story is a portrait of ourselves. How often we prefer a happy illusion to the hardship or the distress which the facing of reality may bring! II Little reflection is necessary in order to see that ' judgment is inherent in the fabric of our existence. Before a new ship is put into commission it has to make a trial trip. This may uncover grave weaknesses in the structure but if they are there the buyer wants to know about them before it is too late. Otherwise he would become involved in loss or disaster. The government, after building a great gun costing hun- dreds of thousands of dollars, subjects it to a rigid test though this may reveal a flaw which will prove its utter worthlessness. The insurance company be- fore accepting a risk insists upon a careful medical examination and also investigates the morals of its client. Thus life is interwoven with judgment which in its application to human character may be described as the effort to find what is true and to make a proper estimate of its worth. The essence of the matter is that we are all the time judging and being judged. We have a certain valua- tion of the character of our friends and neighbors and of all those with whom we come in contact in any way. One man is a musician and, after we have heard him play, we give him a rating in our minds. To an- other we yield a higher or lower position according as he approaches our standard. The converse is equally GOD AS JUDGE 89 true: we are judged by the world. Sometimes we re- ceive more than our due, and sometimes less; but one thing is sure—we always have a rating in the minds of those who know us, and it is usually upon a lower level than our own estimate of our character. III The question may be raised here as to why it is that God judges his children. The reason rests upon the broad fact that we are his trustees. He has given ~ us a great inheritance and he expects us to pass it on unimpaired to succeeding generations. It is therefore obvious that he requires us to acquit ourselves faith- fully in meeting our responsibility and, since his inter- ests are so definitely involved, he keeps us within the range of his vision. There is something terrifying in the thought that we are never absent from his presence. Our fathers were dominated by this idea and looked upon him as rigorously stern and exacting. But this is counterbalanced by his absolute fairness. In fact, we have far less reason to fear the decision of God as to our merit or lack of merit than that of our friends, because he never makes a mistake. His decisions are never reversible because they are always just and they are always just because he never fails to take every relevant circumstance into account. This is where men often make serious blunders. Our decisions are always in danger of resting upon too nar- row a base. A man is haled into court and charged with a serious offense. All that the judge wants to know is whether he committed the crime of which he is accused. From the legal point of view it is irrele- vant whether the man was neglected as a child, or 90 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP warped in soul by an evil environment. The court is not interested in his history and would rule out all tes- timony that seeks to explain why he grew in such a way as to incline him to criminal action. But in his judgments God takes account of the un- uw known factors which make up the background of life, for nothing is hidden from him. ‘Thus an evil action takes on an altogether different character from the di- vine point of view. God’s court is one of equity and it makes all the difference in the world that a boy never had a chance. However stern he is, his sternness does not consist in meting out punishments for offenses that could not have been avoided. Unless we have been openly defiant of his law and his love, we are sure to fare better with him than with men. How often we are misjudged, and how seriously it hurts when we are! Our best friends sometimes attribute to us mo- tives of which we never dreamed and censure us for failures we could not possibly avoid. The absolute truth and fairness of God’s decisions inflict a wound that is clean, and thus they never leave the rankling sense of injustice which destroys the corrective in- fluence of many human tribunals. IV , In addition to his fairness and knowledge of all the facts, God has another quality which is often lacking in the best of human judges. This is a profound sym- pathy which enables him to understand all the sup- pressed values of a struggling soul, however baffled and confused by failure. Even the worst of men possesses gifts that are of eternal worth, though often they re- GOD AS JUDGE 91 main potential and never become actual. This ex- plains why in the stress of war or accident a man who in civil life is regarded as of little value suddenly re- veals himself as a hero. Qualities which have hitherto been buried in his subconsciousness blossom in action. Perhaps the fault which accounts for the man’s failure usually lies in himself, though in some cases this is not so. Circtimstances exercise a tremendous pull both for and against the realization of our purposes. One man chose the right path because of a happy word spoken at the critical moment when he had to make a great decision, while his neighbor of equal capacity but without such help chose the wrong way. Then there are the unrealized aspirations of which the human judge rarely takes account and to which he can never give full value. The world does not know the real man—the man who has tried and hoped and dreamed and missed the mark. He is rated for what he appears to be, commonplace in achievement, devoid of imagination, without gifts, and yet he may have dreamed magnificent dreams and been on the edge of their realization. Even his nearest friends do not ap- preciate these intangible values which are never trans- lated into material currency. Not on the vulgar mass Called “work’’ must sentence pass, Things done, that took the eye and had the price; O’er which, from level stand, The low world laid its hand, Found straightway to its mind, could value in a trice: But all, the world’s coarse thumb And finger failed to plumb, 92 THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP So passed in making up the main account; All instincts immature, All purposes unsure, That weighed not as his work, yet swelled the man’s amount : Thoughts hardly to be packed Into a narrow act; Fancies that broke through language and escaped ; All I could never be, All, men ignored in me, This, I was worth to God, whose wheel the pitcher shaped.* When these considerations are taken into account, we see immediately how much better we fare before the Judge of all the earth, than when the decision is rendered by the wisest of men. Only he who is guilty of the gravest offense against God and man—the sin which is usually hidden from human eyes—need fear to come before his judgment seat. This is the sin of an unloving heart which aims to exclude others rather than to include them within the circle of the divine mercy. Unless we have a right spirit all our other vir- tues are vain. St. Paul’s matchless hymn of love ex- pounds this theme in imperishable terms. The elo- quence of angels, faith that would remove mountains, charity that bestows every possession upon the needy, and zeal that carries the believer to the stake, are alto- gether unprofitable where love is lacking. The imagina- tion of the world is always caught by any of these vir- tues. The eloquent preacher is sure of a large follow- ing.