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RELIGION AND THE WAR
<^
RELIGION AND THE WAR
BY MEMBERS OF THE FACULTY OF THE
SCHOOL OF RELIGION, YALE UNIVERSITY
EDITED BY
E. HERSHEY SNEATH, Ph.D., LL.D.
NEW HAVEN
YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS
LONDON: HUMPHREY MILFORD
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
MDCCCCXVIII
.0^
^^p<-^'
COPYRIGHT, 1918, BY
YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS
DEC 23 1918
©CLA511032
PUBLISHED ON THE FOUNDATION
ESTABLISHED IN MEMORY OF
JAMES WESLEY COOPER
OF THE CLASS OF 1865, YALE COLLEGE
The present volume is the second work published by the Yale
University Press on the James Wesley Cooper Memorial Publica-
tion Fund. This Foundation was established March 30, 1918, by
a gift to Yale University from Mrs. Ellen H. Cooper in memory
of her husband, Rev. James Wesley Cooper, D.D., who was born
in New Haven, Connecticut, October 6, 1842, and died in New
York City, March 16, 1916. Dr. Cooper was a member of the Class
of 1865, Yale College, and for twenty-five years pastor of the
South Congregational Church of New Britain, Connecticut. For
thirty years he was a corporate member of the American Board of
Commissioners for Foreign Missions and from 1885 until the time
of his death was a Fellow of Yale University, serving on the
Corporation as one of the Successors of the Original Trustees.
Not in dumb resignation.
We lift our hands on high ;
Not like the nerveless fatalist,
Content to do and die.
Our faith springs like the eagle's,
That soars to meet the sun,
And cries exulting unto Thee,
"O Lord, Thy will be done."
When tyrant feet are trampling
Upon the common weal.
Thou dost not bid us bend and writhe
Beneath the iron heel;
In Thy name we assert our right
By sword, or tongue, or pen,
And e'en the headsman's axe may flash
Thy message unto men.
Thy will, — it bids the weak be strong;
It bids the strong be just:
No lip to fawn, no hand to beg.
No brow to seek the dust.
Wherever man oppresses man
Beneath the liberal sun,
O Lord, be there. Thine arm made bare.
Thy righteous will be done.
— John Hay.
PREFACE
Religious interests are quite as much involved in the world war as
social and political interests. The moral and spiritual issues are
tremendous, and the problems that arise concerning "the mighty
hopes that make us men," — hopes that relate to the Kingdom of
God on earth, — are such as not only to perplex our most earnest
faith, but also to challenge our most consecrated purpose. It is
the sincere hope of those who have contributed to this volume that
it may prove helpful in the solution of some of these problems..
E. H. S.
Yale University,
August 21, 1918
CONTENTS
PAGE
I. Moral and Spiritual Forces in the War . . 11
Charles Reynolds Brown, D.D., LL.D., Dean of
the School of Religion and Pastor of the University
Church
II. God and History 22
Douglas Clyde Macintosh, Ph.D., Professor of
Theology
III. The Christian Hope in Times of War . . 33
Frank Chamberlin Porter, Ph.D., Professor of
Biblical Theology
IV. Non-Resistance: Christian or Pagan.'' . .59
Benjamin Wisner Bacon, D.D., Litt.D., LL.D.,
Professor of New Testament Criticism and Inter-
pretation
V. The Ministry and the War . . . . 82
Henry Hallam Tweedy, M.A., Professor of Practi-
cal Theology
VI. . The Effect of the War upon Religious Education 105
Luther Allan Weigle, Ph.D., D.D., Professor of
Christian Nurture
VII. Foreign Missions and the War, Today and To-
morrow ...... 122
Harlan P. Beach, D.D., F.R.G.S., Professor of the
Theory and Practice of Missions
10 CONTENTS
PAGE
VIII. The War and Social Work . . . .141
William Bacon Bailey, Ph.D., Professor of Practi-
cal Philanthropy
IX. The War and Church Unity . . . ^ . 151
Williston Walker, Ph.D., D.D., Professor of
Ecclesiastical History
X. The Religious Basis of World Re-Organization . 161
E. Hershey Sneath, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of
the Philosophy of Religion and Religious Educa-
tion
I
MORAL AND SPIRITUAL FORCES IN THE WAR
CHARLES REYNOLDS BROWN
In one of our more thoughtful magazines we were favored last
February with an article entitled, "Peter Sat by the Fire Warm-
ing Himself." It was a bitter, undiscriminating arraignment of the
ministers and churches of the United States for their alleged
lack of intelligent, sympathetic interest in the war. It was written
by an Englishman who for several years has been vacillating
between the ministry and secular journalism, but is now the pastor
of a small church in northern New York. The vigor of his literary
style in trenchant criticism was matched by an equally vigorous
disregard for many of the plain facts in the case. His tone, how-
ever, was loud and confident, so that the article secured for itself
a wide reading.
"What became of the spiritual leaders of America during those
thirty-two months when Europe and parts of Asia were passing
through Gehenna .f"' the writer of this article asked in scornful
fashion. And then after listing the enormities of the mad military
caste which heads up at Potsdam, he asked the clergymen of the
United States, "Why were you so scrupulously neutral, so
benignly dumb.'"' His main contention was to the effect that the
religious leaders of this country had been altogether negligent of
their duty in the present world struggle, and that the churches
were small potatoes and few in a hill.
It has been regarded as very good form in certain quarters to
cast aspersion upon the ministers of the Gospel. When the war
came men began to ask, sometimes with a sneer, and sometimes
12 RELIGION AND THE WAR
with a look of pain, "Why did not Christianity prevent the war?"
It never seemed to occur to anyone to ask, "Why did not Science
prevent the war?"- No one supposed that Science would or could.
It was the most scientific nation on earth which brought on
the war.
It never occurred to anyone to ask,' "Why did not Big Business,
or the Newspapers, or the Universities prevent the war? No one
supposed that commerce or the press or education could avert
such disasters. These useful forms of social energy are not strong
enough. They do not go deep enough in their hold upon the lives
of men to curb those forces of evil which let loose upon the world
this frightful war. It was a magnificent tribute which men paid
to the might of spiritual forces when they asked, sometimes wist-
fully, and sometimes scornfully, "Why did not Christianity
prevent the war?"
The terrible events of the last four years have taught the
world a few lessons which it will not soon forget. They have
shown us the utter impotence of certain forces in which some
shortsighted people were inclined to put their whole trust: The
little toy gods of the Amo rites — Evolution, with a capital E, not
as the designation of a method which all intelligent people
recognize, but as a kind of home-made deity operating on its own
behalf ! The Zeitgeist, the Spirit of the Age, all in capitals ! The
"Cosmic Urge," whatever that pretentious phrase may mean in
the mouths of those who use it in grandiloquent fashion ! The
"Stream of Progress," the idea that there are certain resident
forces in the physical order itself which make inevitably for
human well-being and advance quite apart from any thought
of God !
All these have shown themselves no more able to safeguard the
welfare of society than so many stone images. They broke down
utterly in the presence of those forces of evil which now menace
the very fabric of civilization. The forces of self-interest unhal-
lowed and undirected by any finer forms of spiritual energy have
MORAL AND SPIRITUAL FORCES IN THE WAR 13
covered a whole continent with grief and pain. They have written
a most impressive commentary upon that word of the ancient
prophet, "The wicked shall be turned into hell, and all the nations
that forget God." Men are saying on all sides that unless hope
is to be found in religion, in the action of the spirit of the Living
God upon the lives of men, then hope there is none. What other
guarantee have we that the greed and the lust, the hatred and
the ambition of wrong-hearted men may not again wreck the
hopes of the race!
But still that question presses for an answer- — Why did not
these spiritual forces for which Christianity stands prevent the
war.P I have my own idea about that. It was because we did not
have enough of Christianity' on hand in those fateful summer days
of 1914, and what we had was not always o'f the right sort. In
certain countries the churches had been emphasizing the personal
and private virtues of sobriety, chastity, kindliness and the like ;
they had been preparing the souls of men for residence in a
blessed Hereafter. But they had not given adequate attention
to the organized life of men in political and economic relations.
They had not sufficiently exalted the weightier matters of justice,
mercy and truth in the social organism. These things they ought
to have done, and not to have left the other undone.
The founder of our faith in the first public address he gave
there in the synagogue at Nazareth struck the social note clearly
and firmly. "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath
anointed me to preach good tidings to the poor. He hath sent
me to bind up the broken-hearted, to preach deliverance to the
captives, to set at liberty them that are bruised, and to pro-
claim" — in all the high places of the organized life of the race^ —
"the acceptable year of the Lord."
This was the platform on which he stood. This indicated the
spirit and method of his mission. Organized and corporate
righteousness was to be an essential element in the Gospel of the
Son of God. The leaders of our Christian faith should have been
14 RELIGION AND THE WAR
voicing that same demand for social righteousness all the way!
from Berlin to Bagdad, and from London to the uttermost parts
of the earth. The only Christianity which can avert similar
disaster in the future is that Christianity which, like the Apostles
of old, goes everywhere, preaching and practising the Gospel
of the Kingdom, the sway and rule of the Divine Spirit in all the
affairs of men.
It was highly significant, however, that the one nation in
Europe which had gone farthest toward an atheistic materialism,
toward a philosophy of force, a complete reliance upon physical
efficiency and mental cleverness quite apart from any moral
considerations, toward a flat indifference to all those manifesta-
tions of the religious spirit which are found in public worship,
in missionary effort, and in the cultivation of a humble, devout
spirit — it was the nation which had gone farthest in that direction
which did more than any other nation to bring on the war.
And, conversely, it was that nation which had gone farther
than any other nation in Europe toward making the religion of
Jesus Christ a power for good in public and in private life which
did more than any other single nation in those fateful July days
to avert the war, and when war came it was that same nation
which did more than any other nation to resist the encroach-
ments of lawlessness and crime as we have seen them in Belgium
and in northern France. We have had abundant reason to thank
God for the Christianity there was in the lives of such men as
Herbert H. Asquith, Arthur J. Balfour, and David Lloyd George,
and in the lives of the brave men and women who have nobly
sustained them in their righteous contention. We could only have
wished that the world had been possessed of a hundred times as
much of that sort of Christianity ; that would have prevented
the war.
And when war came these spiritual forces still had something
to say for themselves. Christianity had been pressing home upon
the hearts of men those more vital principles until nine-tenths
MORAL AND SPIRITUAL FORCES IN THE WAR 15
of all the earth was ashamed of the war. Not a single nation was
willing to stand up and accept responsibility for bringing it on —
not even Germany. That military caste in Potsdam has tried by
all manner of intellectual shuffling to save its face by seeking to
make it appear to its own people that the war was one of self-
defense thrust upon them by unscrupulous enemies. The claim
was so absurd that the whole world laughed it to scorn, even
before the striking revelations were made by Prince Lichnowsky,
the German ambassador at London in the summer of 1914. The
effort did, however, serve to make plain the fact that the German
Government has not entirely lost the power of being ashamed of
itself.
One hundred years ago it was not so. The Napoleonic wars
dragged out their weary length for twenty-two sad years, but it
never occurred to Napoleon or to France to apologize for those
wars which were, for the most part, frankly wars of aggression
and conquest. War was taken as a matter of course. It was costly,
» irrational, inhuman, then as it is now, but it did not have arrayed
against it the moral sense of the race as that moral sense has come
to be arrayed against this method of settling international diffi-
culties in this twentieth century. In these days war is looked upon
by all right-minded nations as the devil's own business, only to be
accepted by right-minded nations as a last dire necessity when
thrust upon them by governments which scruple not at either
honor or right. It is something for the spiritual forces of earth
to have accomplished that.
Moreover, when the war came never before in all its history had
the world seen so much done in the way of humane service. It has
been done to relieve the pain of wounded soldiers and to meet the
necessities of those helpless people whose homes have been de-
stroyed by the ravages of war. It has all been done in the name
of the Red Cross — the name is significant, as is the spirit behind
it. It is the flowering out, not of Buddhism or Mohammedanism,
not of some fancy brand of atheism or some philosophy of force —
16 RELIGION AND THE WAR
men do not gather grapes of thorns nor figs from thistles. It is
the flowering out of the religion of him who died for men upon
a cross.
The people of this country alone came forward and in a single
week by voluntary contributions gave one hundred millions of
dollars for this humane service. Then within less than a year the
same people contributed a further fund of one hundred and
seventy millions of dollars for the relief of wounded soldiers and
for the relief of stricken people in Belgium and Poland, in Serbia
and Armenia, whose names we do not know, whose languages we
cannot speak, but whose sufferings we have made our own in
warmest sympathy. It was the response of a nation to the words
of its Master — "I was hungry and ye fed me. I was naked and
ye clothed me. I was sick and in prison and ye visited me. I was
a stranger and ye took me in." It is something for the spiritual
forces to have thus enthroned the spirit of humane service in the
hearts of men.
More than that, never before in military history has so much
been done to safeguard the moral welfare of the young men who
have been called to the colors. The officers of our own army and
of those armies with whom we are allied have by personal example
and by public utterance struck a clear, firm note for sobriety and
clean living, which cannot be matched in the history of any
other war.
The Young Men's Christian Association by its work for the
soldiers has leaped at a bound into a place of national and inter-
national significance. And the Young Men's Christian Association
is simply the Christian church functioning in a particular way.
Its honored head, John R. Mott, was converted in and is now a
member of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Its secretaries and
other workers are drawn, all of them, from the membership of
our churches. And the money which makes possible its world-
wide activities is given mainly by the people of the churches. The
people of this country were asked for thirty-five millions of
MORAL AND SPIRITUAL FORCES IN THE WAR 17
dollars, and in a single week they oversubscribed the request,
giving fifty millions of dollars to carry on this fine form of
Christian effort. It was the act of a nation saying to the young
men under arms, "Fight your good fight but keep your faith,
and finish your course with honor, that there may be laid up for
every man of you a crown of rejoicing."
And more than that, the spiritual forces at work in this broad
land have kept the motives of our country high and fine. We
have not entered into this war with any selfish desire for con-
quest — as God knows our hearts, we do npt covet an acre of
territory belonging to any other power on earth. We have not
entered this war with any sordid desire for material gain. We
were already becoming disgracefully rich in the manufacture of
munitions and in furnishing supplies to the belligerent nations.
If they could have fought it through without our help, it would
have been money in our purse to have stayed out — as it is, it will
cost us no one can say how many billions of dollars. We have not
entered this war in any spirit of touchiness because our national
honor- has been offended — it has been offended most grievously,
but we are too strong and too sane to plunge a whole country
into war for that.
We are not undertaking to punish Germany, greatly as we
believe the present government of Germany needs punishing. We
remember who it was who said, "Vengeance is mine. I will
repay, saith the Lord," and we are content to leave the matter
of penalty in his powerful hands. We are not undertaking to
dictate to the German people what sort of government they should
have. We are willing they should have any sort of government they
like, so*^ long as they keep it for home consumption. We believe
here that all governments derive their just powers from the con-
sent of the governed. We confess to a frank preference for the
methods of democracy, and we could wish no happier lot for any
land than to live under the reign of the common people. We like
to remember that in the year of our Lord 1815, Great Britain
18 RELIGION AND THE WAR
and her Allies put a certain island on the map — they put the
island of St. Helena on the map by banishing to that island the
disturber of the peace of Europe. And if in the year of our Lord
1919 the United States and her Allies should in similar fashion
put some other island on the map by banishing to that island the
present disturber of the peace of Europe, nine-tenths of all the
human race would rise up and thank God.
We entered upon this war because we were not willing to
stand by . and allow other nations to be crippled and broken
in the resistance they were offering to lawlessness and crime, and
in the defense they were making for those principles of justice
and freedom which are the glory of our own national history.
And so we have come forward to do our part and to fill up that
which is lacking' in the sacrifices which other nations have been
making for the sake of principle.
As I move about among my fellow citizens, north, south, east
and west, these are the questions which I find engaging their
minds : Is might to be allowed to usurp the place of right, or are
we here to see to it that in the long run right is the only might.''
Is international good faith only an empty phrase, or is it a mag-
nificent reality in the moral world to be upheld at any cost? Is
that body of usages and agreements slowly built up by centuries
of effort, which constitutes our international law, to be trampled
under foot by any nation for the sake of some immediate advan-
tage, or is it meant to be obeyed .f* Is the whole world to be per-
manently at the mercy of any military caste which may undertake
to impose its will upon the rest of mankind by the practice of
fright fulness, or is there possible some such World League of
Nations as shall have both the mind and the power to keep the
peace and good order of the world.''
These are moral questions. They are religious questions, where
there is a will of God to be ascertained and realized. And because
our people have vision for the full recognition of the place
MORAL AND SPIRITUAL FORCES IN THE WAR 19
spiritual forces have in the making of history, this struggle
enlists the complete moral support of the nation.
It was the moral idealism of the war which brought Great
Britain and all her distant colonies promptly into line the moment
the moral quality of the German Government stood revealed in
all its hideousness by its outrage upon Belgium. It was the moral
passion of Britain which enabled her to raise by voluntary
enlistment an army of more than five millions of men.
It was the moral idealism of the war which brought all sections
of our own country strongly to the support of the President
when the fact was made plain that it was a fight for the right of
free peoples to live and move and have their being in honor. It
was the moral idealism of the war which brought the choicest
youth of our land, the sons of good fortune and the sons of toil,
the young men of the colleges and the young men less privileged,
to stand shoulder to shoulder in this struggle for righteousness.
We have seen it on the Campus here at Yale, as other men have
seen it in all the colleges and universities of the land. The spirit
of our youth has been nobly expressed in those lines on "The
Spires of Oxford" :
I saw the spires of Oxford
As I was passing by,
The gray spires of Oxford
Against the pearl-gray sky;
My heart was with the Oxford men
Who went abroad to die.
The years go fast in Oxford,
The golden years and gay.
The hoary colleges look down
On careless boys at play;
But when the bugles sounded war
They put their games away.
20 RELIGION AND THE WAR
They left the peaceful river,
The cricket field, the quad,
The shaven lavrns of Oxford
To seek a bloody sod;
They gave their merry youth away
For country and for God.
God rest you happy, gentlemen.
Who laid your good lives down.
Who took the khaki and the gun
Instead of cap and gown.
God bring you to a fairer place
Than even Oxford town.
It was a great Christian statesman, it was William Ewart
Gladstone, prime minister of Great Britain, who said more than
thirty years ago, "The greatest triumph of the twentieth century
will be the enthronement of the idea of public right as the govern-
ing idea in the affairs of Europe." We are here this day to assist
with the last ounce of our strength and with the full might of
our moral purpose in the enthronement and the coronation of
that idea of public right as the governing idea in the affairs of
the whole world.
The moral values which are at stake in all this national and
international action have been made so clear in the fierce red
light which has beat upon the world that the very conscience of
the country has put on khaki. The moral sense of the whole nation
has become militant. The brave men and women of this land are
working and fighting for human betterment with their eyes upon
that social order which hath foundations whose builder and maker
is God. And because we feel that our cause is just, we feel in our
arms and in our hearts, each man of us, the strength of ten.
May we not believe that this country, strong and brave, gen-
erous and hopeful, is called of God to be in its own way a Mes-
sianic nation in whose mighty unfolding life all the nations of
the earth may be blessed .? Hear these words of an ancient prophet
MORAL AND SPIRITUAL FORCES IN THE WAR 21
and make them your own! "What people has God so nigh unto
them as the Lord our God is in all things that we call upon Him
for? Has God assayed to take him a nation from the midst of
another nation by signs, by wonders and by war, as the Lord
hath done for you? Did ever a people hear the Voice of God speak-
ing out of the midst of the fire as thou hast heard? What nation
has statutes and judgments so righteous as the law which I set
before you this day? Keep therefore and do them, for this is your
wisdom and your understanding among the nations."
It is for this country to keep its motives high and fine, to set
its affections upon those principles of action which are above the
dead level of self-interest, and to so bear itself in the service of
the higher civilization that in its purposes and methods all the
nations of the earth may be blessed.
O beautiful my country, ours once more^
What were our lives without thee,
What all our lives to save thee !
We reck not what we give thee.
We will not dare to doubt thee,
But ask whatever else and we will dare.
II
GOD AND HISTORY
DOUGLAS CLYDE MACINTOSH
Most urgent among the religious problems of the day is the ques-
tion as to the relation of God to the events of current history
As was to be expected, many erroneous notions are prevalent
concerning divine providence and the present war. Some of these
errors are owing to intellectual confusion; others, however, im-
press one as due to an almost wilful perversion of the impulsest
of religious faith. In any case, most conspicuous among the
erroneous doctrines of the day with reference to divine providence
is that voiced by the German Emperor, in speaking of the Teutonic
triumph over disorganized Russia. His words are reported as
follows : "The complete victory fills me with gratitude. It permits
us to live again one of those great moments in which we can
reverently admire God's hand in history. What turn events have!
taken is by the disposition of God." One could scarcely be blamed
for inferring that the Kaiser imagines, or affects to believe, that
the Almighty has entered into a favored-nation treaty of some
sort with Germany. But even this would seem to fall short of
what is claimed. We quote further from the same theological
authority. "The year 1917 with its great battles has proved," he,
asserts, with almost incredible simple-mindedness, "that the Ger-|
man people has in the Lord of Creation above an unconditional
and avowed ally on whom it can absolutely rely." This curious
reversion to religious tribalism in the case of the German Emperor
is not without its parallel in the belief of his subjects. Assiduously
taught, as they have been, that they are fighting a justified defen-
GOD AND HISTORY 23
sive war, and praying, as they have been, for victory over their
enemies, their conviction has come to be, pretty generally, what
a German- American in the early days of the war expressed in
these words, "If Germany doesn't win this war, there is no God !"
Well, in view of what the world knows as to the causation and the
conduct of this war on the part of Germany, the only answer so
preposterous a doctrine deserves is that given by ex-President
Taft, "Germany has mistaken the devil for God!"
But the Germans are not the only ones who are cherishing mis-
taken notions as to the providence of God in human affairs. We
and our Allies reject the idea of a national God, and any notion
of the "Lord of Creation" being our "unconditional ally." The
morally perfect God is too just and impartial to have any favor-
ites among the nations, whether Jewish, or German, or British,
or American. Might does not make right, we know; and no more
is might an infallible index to God's will. God is not necessarily
"on the side of the heaviest battalions." On the contrary, the true
God, as the God of righteousness, must be, we feel sure, on the
side of right and justice, whichever side that may be. Being con-
fident, therefore, of the justice of our cause, we feel that we have
the best of reasons for believing that we are fighting on the side
of God, as well as for the true well-being of humanity.
So far, good; but many among us proceed to put two and two
together and find that they make five. If we are on the side of
human rights and the will of God, and if God is sufficient for our '
religious needs, is it not clear that we may be absolutely certain
of winning the war, whatever temporary reverses may have to be
encountered .f' Moreover, especially since we have had our days of
prayer for victory, are we not entitled to sing.
Then conquer we must, for our cause it is just,
And this be our motto, "In God is our trust"?
Indeed, so satisfied are we with the logic of our position that mul-
titudes of us would agree with the sentiment expressed by a
24 RELIGION AND THE WAR
British- American in the early days of the war, "If Germany wins
this war, there is no God."
But there are reasons for doubting the correctness of this view.
Right makes God's will, surely enough; but is it certain that the
side whose cause is just will win the war, simply because it is the
side of right and of God.'' Ultimately, we may be sure, right must
prevail, for wrong is not the sort of thing that can permanently
succeed; it contains within itself the germs of its own ultimate
destruction. But nothing in history can be surer than that this
ultimate judgment upon evil does not necessarily involve the
defeat of all unjustified military undertakings. The side with the
greater moral justification has not always won its battles, nor
even its wars. It is not enough to have justice on our side; we
must use our might on the side of right. Right has to be worked
for, and sometimes it has to be fought for. That is the kind of
world that — not unfortunately for our development, probably —
we are living in. And the fighting is no sham battle. Its issue is
not predetermined. It is being decided while the fighting is
going on.
Moreover, with reference to prayer as a military factor, it is
only fair to note that in the present war many sincere and believ-
ing prayers for victory have been offered on both sides. It is not
intended to deny that religion of a certain sort is an important
military factor; sincere and believing prayer for a cause that
is regarded as sacred and just undoubtedly helps morale, both
in the army and throughout the nation. But it is a factor which
in this war has operated on both sides. Man has the capacity for
misusing not only physical, but even spiritual forces. But, on the
other hand, when prayer and religious faith encourage an easy-
going attitude, and are thus made to some extent a substitute
for effort, such prayer and faith cannot but prove a serious mili-
tary hindrance, no matter how just the cause may be that they
are designed to support. They may even conceivably make
GOD AND HISTORY 25
enough of a difference on the wrong side to lead to the defeat of
righteousness.
These notions as to God's providence in war, which we have
criticized as manifestly mistaken and dangerously misleading, are
symptomatic of confused and muddy thinking on the Whole subject
of the providence of God in human history. How does God secure
his adequate providential control of the course of history? One
theory is that he has secured it by having absolutely predeter-
mined from the beginning all events of nature and history, so that
all process is the simple unfolding of what has been eternally
decreed. There are the strongest ethical and religious reasons for
refusing to accept this unproved and unprovable dogma. On the
one hand, it would mean that man's consciousness of free agency
and moral responsibility would have to be regarded as quite
illusory, since what has been decided and made inevitable before
man's life began cannot have been originated by man himself. On
the other hand, this predestination doctrine would mean that God
should be regarded as the real and responsible cause of all evil,
including what we call human sin. No such God would be moral
enough to be trustworthy or deserving of human adoration.
Another theory as to how God secures his adequate providential
control of the course of events is that it is by various sorts of
arbitrary or unconditioned interventions in external nature, as
well as in human life, in order to realize the ends he may desire
to accomplish from time to time. It has often been suggested, for
instance, that a miracle of this sort took place at the Marne,
preventing the German entry into Paris. But this theory is open
to the objection that it raises three unanswerable questions. In
the first place, how can we be sure that such interventions have
taken place, particularly in the external world? How do you
suppose it will ever be established sufficiently for confident rational
belief, that only by special miracle were the German armies turned
back from Paris in 1914? In the second place, if such special
miraculous interventions do take place for the sake of preventing
26 RELIGION AND THE WAR
evil, why do they not take place oftener, especially in these times
of unprecedented disaster to human life? A miracle like that of
the Marne, such as would have turned the Turks back from the
helpless Armenians, would haA^e been much appreciated. But, for
a third question, if such miracles were to take place as often as
this theory of providence would seem to call for, what would
become of the order of nature, and how could man learn what to
expect, or how to adjust himself to his environment?
As against these theories of absolute predetermination and
arbitrary intervention, we may point out that God secures his
adequate providential control of the course of history in two
principal ways, viz., by enough predetermination of events to give
man a dependable universe to live in and learn from, and by
enough intervention to admit of a response to man's need of the
religious experience of salvation, that is, of being inwardly or
spiritually prepared to meet in the right way and with triumphant
spirit the very worst that the future may bring. The predeter-
mined order of the laws of nature and mind exhibits the general
providence of God. By means of this order, or in the light of conse-
quences, God is teaching man both science and morality, that is,
how to adapt means to the realization of ends, and what ideals
and principles of action must be employed if the most desirable
results are to be obtained. The "intervention enough" of which
we spoke — if indeed it is to be called intervention — or, in other
words, the response, of the divine Reality to the right religious
attitude on the part of man, is an exhibition of the special provi-
dence of God. When one has found the right relation to God and
gained access to the divine power for the inner life, one is virtually
prepared for whatever can happen to him. But, as we have indi-
cated, his preparedness is primarily inner, spiritual. He is in a
position to meet danger with moral courage, to gain the victory
over temptation; to make the most of opportunities for service;
to endure hardship, pain and privation, as a good soldier, with
patience and cheerfulness ; to face death — his own or that of
I
GOD AND HISTORY 27
others — and whatever there may be after death, with faith and
equanimity.
There are two possible ways, then, in which God may exercise
his providence in the events of human history. There is his shorter
and preferred method, and his longer and more roundabout
method. If the individuals concerned come into the right relation
to God, there is the best possible guarantee that they will be made
ready for all there may be for them to do and to experience, and
thus conditions will be most favorable for the speedy realization
of the will of God. But if this shorter, preferred method cannot
be employed, because men fail to rise to the occasion as they might
if they would rightly relate themselves to God, the divine provi-
dence will still be exercised, although necessarily in the less desir-
able, more roundabout way. God will let man choose the wrong
way, through thoughtlessness or wilfulness, and then let him take
the bitter consequences of failure, that he may finally learn to
guard against similar mistakes and faults in the future.
Let us now return to the more particular question of the rela-
tion of the providence of God to the present war. Before dis-
cussing again the question with which we started, viz., as to the
final outcome of the conflict, we may deal with some other aspects
of the problem. In the light of what has been said of the two pos-
sible methods of divine providence, it may be denied that the war
was providentially caused by God in order to curb other evils,
such as softness and idleness, or the selfish pursuit of wealth and
pleasure, or drunkenness and vice, or thoughtlessness and irre-
ligion. It is true enough that in the face of war conditions some
of these evils have been decreased, and the martial qualities of
self-sacrificing courage and fortitude have been stimulated. But
it is notoriously true that the advent of war introduces a host
of evils, in some cases necessarily, in others almost as inevitably.
Drunkenness tends to increase greatly, unless stern measures are
taken for its repression. Vice, with the resulting transmissible
diseases, ordinarily becomes much more prevalent. Hatred,
28 RELIGION AND THE WAR
cruelty, and even the most fiendish brutality are given ample
opportunity to develop, and in many instances they become rela-
tively fixed attitudes and attributes of character. So far from the
biologically fittest tending to survive, under modern war condi-
tions these are the very ones who, for the most part and to the
incalculable detriment of the future of the race, are killed off,
even granting that of those who are "fit" enough to get to the
front, the weakest are those who have the poorest chance of sur-
vival. And finally, when the stress of war conditions becomes
acute, innumerable enterprises for social betterment are con-
strained to be given up, at least for the time being. In view, then,
of all this, not to dwell upon the unspeakable suffering, physical
and mental, on the part not only of combatants, but of non-
combatants as well, and considering the merely problematical
nature of the good to which the crisis involved in a state of war
may prove a stimulus, it must be regarded as incredible that a
God good enough and wise enough to be worthy of absolute
dependence and worship could have ordered so stupendous a
catastrophe as a possible means of human salvation. Neither is
it reasonable to suppose that God is prolonging the war, in order
that some social evils, such as drunkenness, may be eradicated
before victory is finally secured. This might, perhaps, be the out-
come, if the war were greatly prolonged; but it could not be at
all certain beforehand that any such improvement would be per-
manent enough to offset the evils involved in the continuation of
the war. We cannot suppose anyone who was wise enough and
good enough to be God would be so far below our best human
standards as to will either the existence or the continuation of
the war as a whole, with all its attendant evils, in order that final
good might abound. Any God who might be thought of as doing
so would be a false God; his condemnation would be just.
Understanding, then, that in so far as human hatred, selfish-
ness and stupidity have been factors in leading to the war, it has
been originated, not by the will or in the providence of God, but
GOD AND HISTORY 29
against his will and providence ; understanding also that in so far
as it has been prolonged by human inefficiency or stupidity, or
by the efficiency of evil wills, or of wills in the service of wrong,
its continuation has not been in accordance with but in opposition
to his will and providence, let us turn to the more positive aspect
of the divine providence in connection with the war. It may be
said to begin with, that in so far as going into this war has been
correctly judged by any party to it to be the necessary alternative
to national perfidy, or ignoble servitude, or any other evil greater
than those involved in passing through the ordeal of war, and
in so far as the task has been accepted as a solemn duty and
entered upon in brave and self-sacrificing spirit, the act of going
to war is to be regarded as in accord with the will of God. Indeed,
if we may regard the divine spirit as immanent whe]*e we find the
divine qualities present in human life, we may go further and say
that such righteous participation in the war is the work of God
within the soul of man, fighting against the forces of evil. More-
over, in so far as the war is prolonged by the fortitude of men of
good intentions and their fidelity to a just cause, the war may
similarly be said to be prolonged in accord with the will and even
by the work of God in and through the good will and work of men.
But of providence in relation to the war as a whole, it can only
be said that man's evil choice has compelled God to use the long,
roundabout method. It is the second best method, although the
best possible under the circumstances. The sinful choices of men
and nations were not, of course, divinely predetermined. What
has been divinely predetermined, we may well believe, is the law-
abiding order of nature and of individual and social mind, accord-
ing to which the disasters and sufferings incidental to war are
the inevitable consequences of certain forms of individual and
corporate wrong doing. In this roundabout way certain reforms
may be providentially forced upon the nations by the war. The
evil consequences of certain former evils tend to be more acutely
felt under the strain and stress of severe and prolonged warfare.
30 RELIGION AND THE WAR
Let us suppose that in order to win the war we and our Allies
may yet find it necessary to take drastic steps to eradicate
drunkenness with its attendant evils, or even to prohibit the waste
of food-stuffs and fuel involved in the manufacture of alcoholic
beverages. This would not mean that the war had been divinely
caused in order to realize this end, but only that it was and always
is the divine will that man should learn the lessons of the law of
consequences, which lessons are in some instances more readily
learned in time of war.
But what God is teaching most directly through the law of
consequences in connection with the war is the necessity of cor-
recting certain immoral international relations. He is teaching
the nations through bitter experience how imperative are inter-
national righteousness and some practicable and adequately
democratic scheme of world-government.
But we must not close our eyes to the possibility that through
our failure to do our part, God may be forced to take the long,
sad, roundabout way of exercising his providence in connection
with the end, as he had to in the beginning of the war. What we
must wake up to is this, that in spite of the justice of our cause,
in spite of its being the cause of humanity and in essential accord
with the will of God, and in spite of our days of prayer and our
optimistic religious faith, Germany may win this war ! If our
consciousness of being right and our religious optimism make us
so complacent that we shall fail to exert our utmost strength on
behalf of our righteous cause, they may be the very factors that
will turn the tide of war against us. We have resources enough for
the winning of victory. If we fail it will be a moral failure. If we
fail to rise to the moral demands of this great occasion, God may
have to let us fail to win the war and then learn what we can from
the bitter consequences of this failure. We and future generations
may have to learn through tragic experience how imperative it
is that right be not left to enforce itself, but that we devote our
full might to the cause of right, and that before it is too late.
GOD AND HISTORY 31
At the time of writing these words — in the early days of May,
1918 — it seems not yet too late, however critical the situation,
for the winning of victory for the cause of liberty and justice.
But the surest way of providing for success would be for all who
recognize the right so to surrender themselves to the will of God
for self-sacrificing service, and so to depend upon the indwelling
power of God for inner preparedness for whatever may have to
be faced and whatever may have to be done, that their whole might
may be made use of in this warfare for the right. Our primary need
is morale — morale in the government, morale in the shipyards,
morale in the munitions factories, morale among all our people
in their business and home life, as well as fighting spirit in our
army and navy abroad. Enough religion of the right sort may
make enough difference in morale to make all the difference between
defeat and victory as the outcome of this war. And if in this way
victory for the right should come as a result of religion, it would
be not only a crowning example of the short an-d preferred method
of divine providence; it would be, literally speaking, victory by
the Grace of God.
In any case, the situation for the Western Allies is such that
neither faith without works nor works without faith can accom-
plish what waits to be done. There must be, if we would win, faith
and works together.
Before leaving this topic of God and history, a word may be
said on the question of what, on this interpretation of providence,
we may expect to be the final outcome of this war for the future
of the race. Will the result be more harm than good, or more
good than harm? It is very certain that the war will need to be
the occasion of an immense amount of good to balance up to the
race the evils that have been involved in it thus far and that will
be involved in its prolongation. Much possible evil will be avoided
if the immoral Prussian militaristic ideal is finally crushed. More-
over, there will be the tendency for humanity to learn, at least tem-
porarily and as an intellectual conviction, the undesirability of
32 RELIGION AND THE WAR
war and of the conditions that make for war. But attention and
moral effort will be necessary to retain this lesson with sufficient
impressiveness, and to put it into effect, and the best power of
thought will be needed to determine just how this putting it into
effect may be most fully and lastingly secured. There seems real
danger that the human race on earth will be permanently poorer
and worse off, spiritually and socially as well as biologically and
economically, as a result of this nearest approach to racial suicide.
Undoubtedly it will be so, if the nations fail to learn and to put
into effect the lesson of the necessity of international righteous-
ness and a just and efficient system of wo rid- government.
It is perhaps still possible for the race to learn enough from
this period of strife and carnage for the resultant good to out-
balance the total evil. But even then no one would have the right
to credit the war with having been the means of greater good than
could have been accomplished without it. All its moral evil at any
rate will be regrettable forever. And the only possible way of
guaranteeing beforehand greater good than evil as an outcome
of the war, even supposing the side of justice and liberty to be
victorious, will be for individuals and groups so to relate them-
selves to truth, to right and to God that flagrantly immoral inter-
national relations will become practically impossible. The only
safety of the race lies in an essentially Christian international
morality, and the only adequate guarantee of this is an essen-
tially Christian personal religion. The only failure of essential
Christianity of which the war may fairly be regarded as evidence
was its failure to be given an adequate trial; which means, of
course, not a failure of Christianity as an ethical or as a religious
system, but a failure of the human will to be adequately Christian.
Ill
THE CHRISTIAN HOPE IN TIMES OF WAR
FRANK CHAMBERLIN PORTER
Of Paul's three things that abide, hope is the one of which we are
now most conscious of our need. Never before in our experience
has hope been so much the center of our inner life and the heart
of our religion. Our mood alternates between hope and depression,
hope and fear; and we look to our religion to make hope strong,
and turn to our sacred book to seek secure grounds and satis-
fying expressions for our hope. We hope for the winning of the
war. We hope for the safety and the home-coming of those we
love. We hope for a new world-order organized to make war
impossible, inspired by a spirit of cooperation and good will
between classes and between nations. We hope as never before for
an assured and abundant life after death. We put these hopes
in some relation to each other, weighing one against another,
subordinating one to another. And when we seek their right
relationship and look for their ultimate grounds, we ask what
Christianity has to say and to do about them. What is Christian
in these hopes that are filling the mind and heart of the world.''
The importance of this question is very great. The future of
the world depends on the truth and the strength of the hopes
that now inspire and direct men's purposes and efforts. The
future of the Christian religion turns in no small measure on its
ability now to keep the hope of mankind high and pure, free from
self-seeking and from material interests, and true to the ultimate
1 reality of things, and to give this hope confidence and prevailing
I strength.
34 RELIGION AND THE WAR
Christians are not at one over the question what, as Christians,
they have a right to hope for. Most evidently is this the case
between us and our enemy. We differ in things hoped for; and it
is perhaps not too much to say that the truth of our hope and
the strength of our hope constitute and measure our spiritual
equipment for the winning of the war. The Germans are fighting
for their hope of national expansion and domination, for their
dream of a new world empire of the chosen and fit people of
God. We cannot question the strength of this hope of theirs, and
its powerful influence toward bringing itself to realization. We
and our Allies are resisting these nationalistic and arrogant
hopes, and are appealing to the contrary hope of an inclusive
human brotherhood, in which good will shall prevail between
nations, and hence right and peace. The hope that is truer,
more in accordance with the nature of things, the nature of man,
the will of God, and the hope that is most deeply felt and most
loyally served, with most conviction and most sacrifice, will prevail
in the end. That is the Jiope that will come true. Ours is inevitably
a religious hope, for it is universal in range, big as the world,
and needs not only every power of ours but the Power not our-
selves to bring it about. It is for every one who holds it intensely,
in a real sense, a hope in God and a hope for God. But is it cer-
tain that it is also a Christian hope, a hope in Christ and a hope
for Christ .f"
There are, not only between us and our enemy, but among
ourselves, radical differences as to what a Christian should hope
for in the present world crisis. There are those who search the
Scriptures for predictions of the Kaiser and his overthrow, and
see in the anti-Christian philosophy and in the anti-Christian
arrogance and cruelty of his militaristic state, a sign that the
end of this evil world-age is near, and that Christ will come quickly
and set up his reign on earth. And there are those to whom such
literalism in the use of Scripture and such externality in the hope
for Christ's coming are intellectually impossible and untrue, and
THE CHRISTIAN HOPE IN TIMES OF WAR 35
religiously harmful. To them the meaning of the Bible is to be
found in the tendency and spirit of its teachings, and their hope
is for the presence and rule of the spirit of Christ and the domi-
nance of his principles in the common life of humanity. This
involves a radical difference in the hope of Christians for a new
world, a new human society, and in the ways in which this hope
will affect their motives and efforts. There are also deep-going
differences in regard to the hope for a life 'after death. That man}'^
are looking eagerly for material, "scientific" proof through
physical communications from the dead, while many, on the
other hand, are feeling that immortality belongs to the race and
not to the individual, and that the sacrifice of the young and the
strong finds its only and sufficient end and justification in the
new humanity they die to create, indicates that Christ has not
yet brought life and immortality to clear light for humanity.
Such differences are not to be desired. If Christianity is to be
the religion of the present eager and pressing hopes of mankind
and give these hopes elevation, truth, and victorious endurance
and enthusiasm. Christians should be clear and united in the
contents and character of their hope.
Among these hopes of mankind there can be no doubt which
one has the first place in the minds of the intellectual leaders
and the actual rulers of the allied nations. Never before has a
truly prophetic note been so clearly sounded by leading men of
affairs, and by the press and the leaders of public opinion, as
well as by the poets and preachers to whom prophecy naturally
belongs. From all sides we have expressions of a hope which four
years ago was judged to be the dream of impractical idealists,
the hope for a new order of human life, in which good will and
mutual cooperation shall take the place of suspicion and com-
petitive struggle. We need not be blind to whatever motives of
self-interest may have entered into the action of this or that one
of our Allies in undertaking the war. The outstanding fact
remains that while the German Government appeals to the self-
36 RELIGION AND THE WAR
^
assertion of the German State and seeks its aggrandizement
through force at the expense of its neighbors, the allied govern-
ments appeal to national self-sacrifice for the sake of international
redemption. It is to this appeal on behalf of the rights, the free-
dom, the happiness of mankind, that our soldiers respond; for
humanity, not for national gain, that our peoples are prepared
to give and to suffer. This hope takes concrete form in the word
Democracy, and in the "idea of a League or Federation of free,
democratic nations, bound together for the defense of human
rights, for cooperation in all that concerns human welfare and
progress, and the repression of every attack upon the peace of
the world. So viewed the war becomes definitely a war to end war,
and as such it is engaged in and supported by peace-loving
peoples, against the nation that glorifies war and would per-
petuate it.
Is this great hope Christian.? Is Christianity the religion which
a hope so high and so difficult needs if it is to keep its height amid
the many influences that tend to lower it, and if it is to prove
possible and become actual in spite of powerful forces that work
against it.? It is not self-evident that Christianity will prove
equal to this which is clearly the greatest task that the present
imposes upon it. There are many who doubt its adequacy; many
who see that it has brought division and warfare, and think it
unfitted to create unity; many who see that it has withdrawn
from the world, and think it unadapted to provide the moral
principles and spiritual energies of the new social and political
world-order. It is for us who believe in the sufficiency of Christ
to prove that he alone provides those religious and moral prin-
ciples and forces without which no - democracy, still less any
federation of democracies, can stand.
The ideal of human brotherhood which the war has revealed
as the deepest desire and faith of men and has put before us as
a goal that we must now set out to reach is of course old in
its beginnings, and for a generation it has been taking ever
THE CHRISTIAN HOPE IN TIMES OF WAR 37
stronger hold on the minds of men. Prophetic utterances of this
ideal could be quoted in abundance. A striking example is a saying
of Alexander Dumas in 1893: "I believe our world is about to
begin to realize the words 'Love one another,' without, however,
being concerned whether a man or a God uttered them. . . .
Mankind, which does nothing moderately, is about to be seized
with a frenzy, a madness, of love." And Tolstoy's comment on
this at the time of the Russian revolution, in 1905 : "I believe
that this thought, however strange the expression, 'seized with a
frenzy of love,' may seem, is perfectly true and is felt more or
less clearly by all men of our day. A time must come when love,
which forms the fundamental essence of the soul, will take the
place natural to it in the life of mankind, and will become the
chief basis of the relations between man and man. That time is
coming; it is at hand."
The world war seems like a violent contradiction of the truth
of such prophecies. It seems for the time to have made love
inadequate as a summing up of morals and religion. We almost
feel that the Sermon on the Mount must be kept in reserve for
other times. The war has made love itself a hope. We renounce
it for a time that we may resist a power that threatens to de-
stroy it altogether and put selfishness and cruelty on the throne
of the world. But the war has not in fact disproved the faith
that God is love and that love is the supreme law and power
among men. It has made mankind more conscious of its ideal of
community and fellowship, and seems to be carrjang us faster
toward the realization of human brotherhood than peace and
prosperity were doing. The greatest and most widely approved
sentences of President Wilson's war papers are those that give
expression to "what the thinking peoples of the world desire, with
their longing hope for justice and for social freedom and oppor-
tunity." On the anniversary of our entering the war, Gilbert
Murray declared that England needed our help in battle, but
even more in upholding their true faith. "Americans instinctively
38 RELIGION AND THE WAR i
believe ... in freedom, peace, democracy, arbitration, and'
international good will. . . . When the war is over there will be
a world to rebuild, and the only principles on which to rebuild
it are these principles." Germany denies the truth of these prin-
ciples, but in doing so it denies human nature and derives from
physical nature a state-ethics of struggle and the survival of
the strong. It denies the prophet of Galilee, and looks for its
example to Rome. Sometimes it has seemed as if the German
denial of humanity and affirmation of material and brute force
were in danger of justifying itself by the only test they admit,
that of physical success. Where can we look for help toward a
living faith in liberty and brotherhood over against the powerful
demonstration we are offered of faith in material force and in
the progress of nations through aggression and tyranny? We
must look no doubt first of all to our own souls and oppose to
the faith in physical and animal nature a faith in human nature
and in the truth of its best instincts and ideals ; and then to those
who know best and most worthily express the human soul and the
reality of its spiritual possessions. Not from the Bible alone, and
not only from Christ are such reassuring testimonies to be
gained ; and we are not renouncing the unique value of the Chris-
tian religion when we find that the faith and hope which it teaches
are the faith and the hope of the universal heart of man.
The poet laureate of England made his special contribution
to his nation's needs in time of war in the anthology, "The Spirit
of Man." "Our country," he says, "is called of God to stand for
the truth of man's hope." "Truly it is the hope of man's great
desire, the desire for brotherhood and universal peace to men of
good will, that is at stake in this struggle." From the miseries
and slaughter and hate of war, "we can turn," he says, "to seek
comfort only in the quiet confidence of our souls ; and we look
instinctively to the seers and poets of mankind, whose sayings
are the oracles and prophecies of loveliness and loving kindness."
They help us gain the conviction our time most needs, "that
THE CHRISTIAN HOPE IN TIMES OF WAR 39
spirituality is the basis and foundation of human life," that
"man is a spiritual being, and the proper work of his mind is
to interpret the world according to his higher nature, and to
conquer the material aspects of the world so as to bring them
into submission to the spirit."
But the Bible also is a witness to just these convictions and
contains prophecies of just such hopes. Bridges includes very
few citations from the Bible, chiefly because it is so well known,
but also because "this familiarity implies deep-rooted associations,
which would be likely to distort the context." Alas, for these
associations, for the interpretations that confuse and the preju-
dices that blind the readers of the greatest literature of spirit-
uality and of hope which the world contains. In spite of this,
the Bible will be looked to b}'^ multitudes for guidance and support
in those hopes on which the future turns, while the poet's fine
work will be prized by few. It is only too possible to fail to find
in the Bible its testimony to that "hope of man's great desire of
brotherhood and peace" which constitutes the most living religion
of our time; and this failure will mean loss to the hope itself
of its most powerful support, and loss to the Christian religion
of contact and sympathy with the most urgent spiritual need
and aspiration of men to-day.
The Bible does contain various and contradictory hopes, and
can encourage expectations that are not in accordance with the
best conscience of our age, nor with our knowledge of the way in
which human progress is achieved. But there is nothing more
instructive than the relation of these different hopes to each other
as the historian understands them and there is nothing more
worthy and inspiring than the language in which the most
spiritual and the most universal of these hopes are expressed.
The original hope of the religion of Israel was that involved in
the unique and exclusive relation between the nation Israel and
Yahweh, its God. It was the hope of Israel's prosperity and
power through the certain favor of Yahweh, and his intervening
40 RELIGION AND THE WAR
help in times of danger, most of all his help in the nation's wars.
-These were "the Wars of Yahweh." Both the strength and the
defect of the Old Testament religion lie in this fundamental faith,
the peculiarity and exclusiveness of the relation between Israel i
and its God. It inspired its early victories and created the king- f
dom of David. It sustained the nation amid calamities and en-
abled it to maintain itself when other small nations disappeared
before the great world empires, and while these also came and-
passed. It was a natural and not unreasonable faith for its time,
so long as Yahweh was only Israel's national God, even though
he was believed to be better and stronger than the gods of other
nations and destined to triumph over them ; but when Israel's God
was believed to be the one and only God of all the world the
doctrine of Israel as his peculiar people must either lead to false
claims and have bad effects upon temper and conduct, or else be
reinterpreted and radically changed. Nothing can be more
instructive as to the nature of religious hope than to follow out
two main lines of development by which an adjustment was
attempted between this primitive nationalism and the later, larger
thought of God and the world.
The great prophets before the exile, Amos, Hosea, Isaiah,
Jeremiah, and after exile Deutero-Isaiah, were those through
whom the faith was attained that Yahweh is the one and only
God ; and the modification of the national exclusiveness of Israel
which they made was in the direction of its complete subordination
to ethical and spiritual ideals. The one God of all was the God
of righteousness, and of Israel only on the condition and for the
end of righteousness. But an ethical in place of a national relation
to God meant, if it was carried through consistently, a universal
relation of God to all men as individuals, instead of a peculiar
relation to one favored nation. Consistency was not reached, yet
glimpses, sometimes clear momentary visions, of this individual,
universal, ethical religion are to be found in the great prophets ;
and in them the Old Testament religion reaches its height. It is
THE CHRISTIAN HOPE IN TIMES OF WAR 41
the prophetic denial of national claims and hopes, not the older
and always prevalent assertion of them, that constitutes the reality
and truth of the Old Testament hope. It is hope for Yahweh and
his righteousness, not for Israel and its glory. It finds its highest
expression in such predictions as Isaiah's promise of security to
the humble and believing; and Jeremiah's expectation of the time
when no special revelation will make known the will of God to a
chosen few, but when everyone will have his own inward knowl-
edge of God ; and Ezekiel's belief that the new inward nature which
every man requires if he is to do that will of God which he knows,
will be achieved not only by his own free moral choice (18:31),
but also by the divine spirit, the transforming presence and
power of God (36: 26, 27) ; and in Deutero-Isaiah's interpretation
of the peculiar relation of Israel to the one God of all the world
as that of Yahweh's Servant, his prophet to all nations, who
brings light to the heathen and deliverance from bondage, and
who effects this ministry even through his own shame and suffer-
ing for others' sins.
But there was a second still later way of adjusting the original
nationalism of Israel's faith and hope to monotheism and the
conception of a unity in nature and histor}'^; and this proved
easier and more popular than the other. In late prophecy and
apocalypse the hope of Israel's national and worldly prosperity
and power takes on an unearthly character. Instead of righteous-
ness and spirituality as in the earlier prophets, transcendence and
heavenliness interpret or displace the primitive hope. The heavenly
region to which apocalyptic prophecy transferred Israel's hope
was a refinement of the physical, but it was still essentially
physical, a region whose riches could be as sensibly enjoyed and
as selfishly desired as the palace and throne of an earthly king-
dom. The heavenly powers by which this hope was to be realized
were divine, yet they were essentially material forces. The
prophetic hopes at their highest rest on human nature at its
highest, on the conscience and reason of man recognized as the
42 RELIGION AND THE WAR
will and thought of God. But the apocalyptic hope, though it
strains language to magnify the contrast between its two worlds,
the earthly and the heavenly, the present and the future, does not
succeed in making them really different. Supernaturalism always
fails to find the real difference between man and God and so the
way in which the difference is to be overcome. This super-
naturalism of the apocalypse is seen also in the ways in which
the hope is revealed. The seer interprets in literal or artful ways
the language of prophetic scriptures regarded as divine oracles,
or he is translated in ecstasy to heaven and shown the secrets of
the upper world and the future. The coming of this new heavenly
world men may pray for, and the time of its coming they may
seek to discover from sacred writings and traditions and from
the signs of the times, but only divine powers can bring this evil
world to an end, and only from heaven where they already are
can descend, in heaven's own time and wayi, the scenery and the
actors in the last great drama of history. There is in this hope
no strong ethical appeal, no prevailing sense that in the inward
region of the heart and in its instincts and desires and wills, God's
presence is to be found and his work for man experienced. More-
over this hope for a new heavenly world means no hope for the
present world. It is evil and must grow more evil until God inter-
venes to destroy it and brings down from heaven the realm of
good. To renounce the world and withdraw from it is the course
of wisdom and holiness. As a way of adjusting Israel's national
hope to monotheism it is not comparable with the prophetic way
of ethics and inwardness. It is still Israel, or the true Israel, that
is to inherit the world to come ; and at its coming the world
empire must first of all be overthrown, for the new kingdom,
heavenly and supernatural though it is, is enough like the kingdom
of Greece or of Rome to require its fall and to take its place. The
apocalyptic hope is the end of Old Testament prophecy, but not
its height. It was no doubt in some sense fitted for its times, hard
times, always, when the evils of life seemed irremediable. It knew
THE CHRISTIAN HOPE IN TIMES OF WAR 43
the need of divine help, and it encouraged endurance and fidelity
even to death. But it was not grounded in the nature of men, and
it was mistaken in its conception of the nature of the world. It
never quite escapes this inherent falseness and confusion in its
fundamental assumptions.
It cannot be hard to pass judgment on the relative value of
these three main hopes of the Old Testament. The primitive hope
for God's special favor to his own peculiar people who are destined
to have dominion over all others would have seemed, before the
war, safely outgrown by humanity. If the world still needed a
demonstration of the danger and falsity of any nation's belief
in its peculiar excellence and in its exclusive right and destiny
to rule, and the intolerable morals and preposterous religion that
finally result from such claims, the aggressors in the present war
have supplied it, and the rest of the world is united in the resolve
that no further demonstration of this hope be undertaken. The
early histories of the Old Testament and parts of its laws, its
psalms and even its prophecies, contain expressions of just this
belief in a peculiar people, for whom God made the world, and to
whom the right belongs, secured by the divine favor and promise,
to rule over all other nations. Some of the inferences and conse-
quences of this faith that now shock the world, something of the
hatred and the cruelty toward foreign peoples, the exaltation of
vengeance, the arrogance and the inhumanity, find unreserved
expression in this literature. But the meaning of the Old Testa-
ment is to be found in the denial and overcoming of this doc-
trine and of its results.
In regard to the two ways in which this denial and correction
were chiefly undertaken, there can be no question where the greater
value and truth are to be found. The prophet's criticism of the
national hope and reinterpretation of it as the hope for righteous-
ness really struck at the heart of the materialism and selfishness
of the popular national hope, its false pride and its denial of
trust and of good will toward mankind. But the apocalyptic
44 RELIGION AND THE WAR
modification of the older hope, though it fitted it for a wider
view of the world and of history and a deeper experience of the
power of evil, did not correct those moral and spiritual faults
which were inherent in the older hope. There is no generosity, 1
no faith in human nature, no sense of the present prevailing '
rule of God and power of good, no thought of the "secret of
inwardness" and "the method of self-renouncement," in the religion
of the apocalypse. The righteous kernel of Judaism, the holy
few who feared the Lord, expected an invasion of divine forces
on their behalf, the destruction of their oppressors and their own
elevation to angel-like natures and God-like authority and
blessedness. It could hardly be expected that they would exhibit
Isaiah's virtue of humility, or Jeremiah's of inwardness and
satisfaction in the communion of the soul with God, or Deuterp-
Isaiah's impulse to turn their present lowliness to greatness by ■
ministry to those who persecuted them and even by death for
others' transgressions. The greatest of the apocalypses are no
doubt the canonical ones, Daniel and Revelation ; and they are
great in their confidence in the divine government of the world,
and in its final vindication, and in their assertion of the martyr
virtues. But they do not believe in man, and in God in man, though
their belief in a God above is heroic. They do not hope for the
world, or find God in the world; nor do they feel that they are
in any sense responsible for the evil of the world and for its
salvation from evil. Righteousness and blessedness belong only to
heaven, and can come only from heaven to earth, and only by an
act of God which will bring the present world to a sudden end.
The faults of materialism and of self-interest which belong to
the naive nationalism of Israel's beginnings are still present in
the conscious and sophisticated other-worldliness of the apoca-
lyptic hopes, and reveal the inner untruth of a supernaturalism
which reckons in terms of place and time, and looks above and
ahead instead of about and within for the Kingdom of God.
The post-canonical apocalypses of Judaism fall within the
THE CHRISTIAN HOPE IN TIMES OF WAR 45
period beginning with the attempt of Antiochus IV to make the
Jews Greeks, and the successful resistance of the Maccabees and
their establishment of an independent Jewish kingdom, and ending
with the Jewish-Roman wars, the destruction of Jerusalem and
the suppression by Hadrian of the final Messianic, political
uprising under Bar Cochba; that is, from 168 B, C. to 135 A. D.
It is of the highest importance to note that Christianity took its
rise in the midst of this period, and that the apocalyptic hopes
which these events encouraged and which in turn partly shaped
the events, formed the immediate environment and inheritance of
the new religion. The question as to the nature of the hope of the
New Testament becomes therefore largely the question of the
place which Jewish apocalyptical expectations had in the new
religion and in the mind of its founder.
There are three elements in the hope of the New Testament
which are found in the later Jewish apocalypses, but not in the
Old Testament: 1. The coming of the Son of Man as judge of
men and angels at the last day, which is always thought to he
near at hand. 2. The reign on earth of Messiah and his saints,
the living and the risen dead, for a certain period, during which
they will overcome all the powers of evil. 3. The immortality of
the spirit, the transformation of the righteous into angelic
natures, fitting them to be companions of heavenly beings in the
final consummation. For our understanding of these hopes and
for our decision as to their truth and value it is necessary to look
at them as they arise in Jewish writings and not only in their
appearance in the New Testament.
The Son of Man appears first in Daniel, but there he is not an
individual, but the symbol of a nation, "the people of the saints
of the Most High" ; and the vision pictures Israel as coming on
a cloud, not from heaven, but to God, to receive from him
authority to rule over the world. It is first in a part of the Book
of Enoch, the "Parables," chapters 37-71, dating probably from
the reign of Herod, that Daniel's "Son of Man" becomes an
46 RELIGION AND THE WAR
individual. It is important to understand the religion of this
writer in order to appreciate the significance of this heavenly
Messiah, His religion consists in faith in the reality of a spiritual
world which is destined to displace the present world and to be
the blessed abode of the righteous. God is "the Lord of Spirits,"
and the voice of Isaiah's seraphim becomes, "Holy, holy, holy, is
the Lord of Spirits: he filleth the earth with spirits." The sin
of the kings and mighty of the earth is that they deny the Lord
of Spirits and the hidden dwelling places of the righteous. This
is a religion of faith in heaven and its God and its angelic inhabit-
ants, and in the destiny of the righteous soon to share its beauty
and blessedness. Among those whom Enoch sees there, one is above
all significant for man. He has the appearance of a man, with a
face of graciousness and beauty, like an angel's. He is described
as the Son of Man to whom righteousness and wisdom belong. He
has existed from before the creation, and has been revealed to the
righteous. Faith in him and hope for his coming have sustained
the righteous in times of trouble, and by faith in him and in the
Lord of Spirits and the heavenly dwelling places, they "have
hated and despised the world of unrighteousness and have hated
all its works and ways." Here is a religion of pure other-worldli-
ness. The calling of this heavenly Son of Man is to be the judge
of the world at the last day. He will then "sit on the throne of
his glory," will "choose the righteous and holy" from among the
risen dead, will condemn and send away to destruction the kings
and mighty of the earth, who because of their unbelief in the
unseen world have been proud and worldly and unjust. The
righteous will dwell in the new heaven and earth, with the Lord
of Spirits over them and the Son of Man as their companion,
having been clothed with garments of glory and immortal life.
The likeness between this religion and the apocalyptic type of
New Testament Christianity is striking. But it is not Christian
because it is without Jesus himself. This Son of Man has not
already come and lived among men. The righteous have not
THE CHRISTIAN HOPE IN TIMES OF WAR 47
learned of him that God is in this world as well as in the other,
that he is a God of human beings, even the lowliest, and of birds
and grass, of rain and growth. They have not learned that good
is already stronger than evil ; least of all do they know the greatest
thing, that love is supreme, and that not by hating the world
and its ways but by the ministry of love is the new world to be
brought in. The religion of Enoch presents in pure and simple
form, in pre-Christian Judaism, just that religion of dualism and
pessimism, of despair of the present and the renunciation of effort
to better the world, of strained expectation of divine intervention,
which sometimes, and even now in some quarters, claims to be
the only true Christianity. It is, in fact, Christianity with Christ
left out.
The second element which the apocalypses add to the hope
of the Old Testament and which the New Testament Apocalypse
adopts, is the conception of a millennial earthly kingdom. This
appears in probably an earlier part of Enoch, chapters 91-104.
In a short Apocalypse of Weeks, after seven weeks of world-
history up to the writer's present, an eighth week is predicted, in
which the righteous shall wield the sword against their oppressors
and establish the Messianic kingdom; then a ninth week in which
the preaching of judgment to come will convert all men to
righteousness; finally, a tenth week of final judgment against all
angelic powers of evil, ending with a new heaven and an eternity
of blessedness.
It is not only the fact that here and elsewhere these two hopes
are proved to be Jewish, not Christian, in origin, that influences
our judgment on them when they reappear in the New Testament ;
it is also the understanding of them which their Jewish form
makes possible. They are two forms of adjusting the old national
and earthly hope of Israel to a new, more universal and tran-
scendent form of faith and hope. In the religion of the "Parables"
of Enoch the transcendent practically transforms and displaces
the earthly. In the millennial scheme, the heavenly follows the
48 RELIGION AND THE WAR
earthly in time. Resurrection enables some of the dead to have
part in the earthly, while translation into angel-like, immortal
natures fits men for the final heavenly life. The understanding of
the origin and purpose of these hopes makes it unnatural and
irrational to regard them as literal disclosures of the unseen!
world and of future events.
The third hope which Judaism added to what its sacred i
scriptures contained was the hope for immortality of the spirit.!
It happens that this also appears earliest in Judaism in the Book
of Enoch (especially chapters 102-104). Enoch solemnly assures
his readers that he has seen it written in heavenly books that joy
and glory are prepared for the spirits of those who have died in
righteousness. This is not a resurrection of the body to enable
one to have a share in the earthly kingdom, but a transformation
which fits men for the realm of spirits.
When we turn in the light of the older hopes to the New Testa-
ment and ask what are the hopes that belong properly to Chris-
tianity, knd how are they related to the present hopes of the
world, we meet the problem presented by the importance of
properly apocalyptical expectations in the first Christian com-
munity. The case is something like that which meets us in the Old
Testament, and we have here no less than there to distinguish
and to choose. The hope of the early Christian community was
no doubt first of all for the physical coming of Christ and the
establishment of his kingdom; but there developed also within
the New Testament period two movements away from this, one in
an ethical and spiritual direction, and the other toward emphasis
on the individual life after death. The first of these is more char-
acteristic of the New Testament religion than the other. It is the
tendency of Paul to emphasize the present inward experience of
Christ, and the transforming power of his spirit more than the
hope of his eoming, though he receives this from primitive Chris-
tianity and does not doubt its literal and early fulfilment. It is,
I believe, beyond question that Paul's Christian hope is chiefly,
THE CHRISTIAN HOPE IN TIMES OF WAR 49
as Royce has argued, the hope for a new humanity created by the
spirit of Christ, which is the spirit of love. This is in a measure
already experienced. Christ dwells in the Christian and makes
him a center and source of love. His spirit breaks down barriers
and ends divisions. Unity and peace are its effects. Through this
one, present spirit of Christ. each man becomes a distinct but
essential member of the new body; and Paul's greatest hope is
for the completion of this unification of man in mutual helpful-
ness and brotherhood. Paul attests also the other tendency away
from the outward future coming of Christ to the hope for a life
with Christ and like Christ's after death. This eternal life with
Christ is also experienced by Paul as in some real sense present.
The indwelling spirit of Christ is already transforming the
Christian into his own immortal nature. In the Johannine writings
these two tendencies of hope away from the apocalyptic toward
the spiritual go still further. The Christ in whom the Christian
now abides creates a distinctive unity among his disciples, a love
one to another which the world has not known; and at the same
time the experience of this present Christ is already the possession
of eternal life. According to this which we might call the
prophetic in distinction from the apocalyptic hope of the New
Testament the new world of human unity in love and cooperation
is to be brought about not only by the present spirit of Christ,
but also by the moral choice and endeavor of man. It is through
human love that the divine love works, and the rule of God is
present so far as men overcome evil and create good. And even
the immortal life is not solely a hope in God, but is to be attained
by each soul here and now through its choice of the will of God
and in the degree of its moral oneness with God.
That which most concerns us is no doubt the qiiestion which
of these hopes, the eschatological or the ethical and inward, was
held and taught by Christ. My own conviction is that the new
and distinct hope, the spiritual, belongs to him and proceeds from
him, and not the familiar Jewish apocalyptic. Two opinions
50 RELIGION AND THE WAR
stand in the way of this judgment; two opposite types of liter-
alism in Biblical interpretation. Dogmatic literalism accepts
scripture throughout, and refuses to distinguish between higher
and lower, between truth and error, in what is written. In regard
to hope, this view leads to great stress on prediction and fulfil-
ment. The assumption is that the Biblical predictions that have
not been fulfilled will come to pass in the future. This is precisel}'
a fundamental assumption of the apocalypse. It is solely upon this
conception of scripture that many devout Christians rest their
expectations of the outward coming of Christ and his thousand-
year reign on earth, just as the same idea of Biblical predictions
leads orthodox Jews to expect that Jerusalem will be the capital
and Israel the ruling nation of the world. This literalism stands
in the way of the world's present acceptance of Christianity as
the religion of its highest hopes.
But there is a like danger in the opposite literalism of the
historian. We have already seen how the history of Jewish hopes
makes the literal acceptance of similar New Testament hopes
unnatural if not impossible. The literalism of the historian is,
of course, to us true and immediately helpful in liberating us
from bondage to the letter of an ancient book. It leaves us free
to apply our own reason and conscience and experience to the
interpretation of our own life and times. It turns us back upon
our own souls, upon our faith, our desire, our will, to unveil and
shape the future. But the historian is in danger of doing less than
justice to the ethical and spiritual contents of the hopes of the
Bible because of his very love of truth and willingness to sacrifice
his wishes to it. The unpardonable sin to him is the modernizing of
an ancient writing because of reverence for it, and the effort to
find in it what he likes rather than things outgrown and unwel-
come. This conscientious fear, I cannot but believe, has resulted
in a one-sided interpretation of the New Testament, especially
the teachings of Jesus and of Paul, as essentially apocalyptic in
contents and spirit, and a hesitation to recognize the essentially
THE CHRISTIAN HOPE IN TIMES OF WAR 51
inward, rational and ethical quality, the prophetic character of
the New Testament as a whole, and to make due allowance for
the ease and naturalness with which the current apocalyptic ideas
of early Jewish Christians could persist and be applied to Jesus
and attributed to him.
This problem over which New Testament scholars are divided
into two groups or tendencies is of course much too complicated
to discuss here. But it is necessary at least to point out that there
is a danger in the historian's anxiety to be without prejudice,
and to view the past as past. The greatness of great men and
great books is to be found in the eternal meaning, not in the mere
form, of what they say. Historians no less than other men have
the right and duty to ask in what direction an ancient teacher
is looking, toward what goal the movement of his mind is tending,
what final effects he produced, what therefore he would think
and say if he lived in our time. We are told that it is unhistorical
to seek in the New Testament for "the modern liberal Christ" ;
but it is not unhistorical to look for the human beneath the
Jewish, the eternal and universal within the temporary and
limited. The mind of Christ, his manner and mood, his quality,
his spirit, is not less a historical reality than his literal words.
This is of course true also of Paul, and, in his measure, of every
man.
There can be no doubt that like the great prophets before him
Jesus was chiefly a critic and corrector of the hopes of his time.
He did not approve the national hopes that had been kindled by
the Maccabean kingdom and were soon to issue in the suicidal
revolt against Rome. Whether Jesus expected the speedy coming
of the Son of Man and the end of the world, and whether he
identified himself with this transcendent Messiah-eTudge, are
questions made difficult, not by our wishes, but by the nature of
the evidence. My own inclination is, at this point, to attribute
more to the influence of Jewish expectations on the gospel tradi-
tions than to Jesus' own words. What seems to me certain is that
52 RELIGION AND THE WAR
the bearing of the teaching of Jesus was in the direction of the
spiritual hopes of Paul and John rather than the apocalyptic
hopes which they still held in common with the first disciples.
It is the fundamental principle of the apocalyptic hope that
God made not one world but two (II Esdras T: 50). This world
must end and the other world must come if evil is to end and good-
prevail. But Jesus believed that this world is already God's world'
and that in it good is already stronger than evil. The Kingdom
of God is indeed still to come, but it is already within. It is already
upon us when by the spirit of God evil is cast out. It has been said
that it was the Greeks who believed in one world in contrast to
the Jews who believed in two ; and that Poseidonius, the Platonic
Stoic, an oriental, of the century before Christ, wrote to make
men at home in the universe. But it is surely not a mistake to
say that Jesus felt at home in the world and meant to make others
at home. This is precisely the meaning of the word Father, of
which Paul testifies that Jesus' use was to a Jew new, and that it
meant freedom from mental bondage and fear. Poseidonius made
men feel at home in the universe by denying the existence of evil,
which is of course one way of making one world out of two ;
Jesus by affirming the reality of a goodness in God and in man
capable of conquering evil. That God is Father, the Father of
all men, even, and especially, of sinners, is not the basis' of an
apocalyptic hope. Jesus did not chiefly foretell the end of the
world through the catastrophic intervention of God or of the
Son of Man. He did chiefly teach that the power not ourselves
is fatherly, that it is human, that we can trust our own souls
at their best to teach us the nature of God, that our highest
human values are the ultimate realities of the universe. Jesus
found that the chief fears and hopes of men were concerned with
bodily welfare and possessions and with power over others. Mam-
mon and dominion were the false gods men worshipped. Wealth and
power seem now the objects of the hope and the religious devotion
of the Central Powers. Jesus declared that it is the heathen who
THE CHRISTIAN HOPE IN TIMES OF WAR 53
are anxious about food and raiment. It is the heathen who lord
it over their fellow men. Not so was it to be among his disciples.
Since the Father knows our needs and wills to give good things,
since the outer world belongs to him and since 'the things of the
soul are of the greater value, we men are free to put first things
first, to seek God's Kingdom and righteousness. And since God's
rule consists in love and in doing good, without reserve or regard
for deserts or for returns, the only real rulership among men
also must be the renunciation of rulership for the sake of min-
istry. Not to be masters over others, not to be strong by making
others weak, but to serve and to give is the divine plan, the real
nature of things. This is not what the war lords learn from
physical and animal nature as to the way to success and primacy,
but it is true to that human nature to which they do violence.
The Christian hope is therefore not for material possessions nor
I for authority and power ; it is that spiritual realities shall vindi-
; cate and make effectual their preeminence, and shall master matter
! and all outward things for their own ends ; and that unselfish love
, shall measure greatness among men and shall destroy hatred and
fear and create a human family,
I If this, according to Christ, is the Christian hope, then Chris-
j tianity is certainly the religion for the present hope of the world.
The hope of a league of free nations, of a federated world in which
democracy is safe, is clearly seen by those who see best what it
involves and what obstacles stand in its way to be first of all the
I hope for a new spirit among men, a new inward temper, a new
I will; it is also seen to be something universal in its range. Not
I again one league against another, but a league that at least aims
I at being inclusive of humanity. Spirituality and universality,
inwardness and good-will, belong to the hope that is now inspiring
the nations ; and these are just the marks of the religion of Christ ;
they are what Matthew Arnold called the method of inwardness
I and the secret of self-renouncement, controlled by the mildness
land sweet reasonableness of Christ; reverence for the soul, mean-
54 RELIGION AND THE WAR
ing both the preeminent worth of every individual and the primacy
in each of the things of the soul ; and among these the chief great-
ness and God-likeness of love. However one attempts to sum up the
religion of Jesus it is sure to mean in the end the same two things
which the world now sees to be its great needs and the ground
and heart of its hope.
It would be tragic indeed if Christianity should lose its supreme
opportunity by failing to lead and inspire this newly emerging
and Christ-like hope of men. It can fail if it confuses itself in the
details of Biblical predictions, if it becomes involved in apoca-
lyptic fancies. It can fail if in reaction against these and under
the influence of an equally literalistic criticism men turn from
the Bible altogether as a book of the past.
The men of our time are shaping the hope of a united and
friendly human family of free peoples, united not only against
war but for all kinds of mutual help and cooperative progress ;
and the Bible, the prophets of the Old Testament, Jesus and Paul
in the New, are the chief creative sources of just such hopes.
These hopes must have religion beneath them if they are to endure
and be realized in spite of their powerful foes, the fears and
hatreds which materialism and selfishness create. And Christianity
is the only religion which has the quality and the right to meet
this need.
The Christian hope is also the hope of immortality; and just
now the reality and power of this hope are put to the test. Paul,
who knew how far Judaism had gone toward faith in the eternal
life of the spirit, testifies that it was only as a Christian and
because of Christ that this hope had become to him a certainty,
almost a present experience. The nature of God as Christ knew
him, and the nature of man's sonship to God, carry immortality
with them as an inward and immediate assurance. God is not the
God of the dead, but of the living. Plere again the Christian
religion has an opportunity and an obligation in times of war.
Men are seeking assurance of life to come for those who have
THE CHRISTIAN HOPE IN TIMES OF WAR 55
given their lives for human right and liberty. It is not to be
desired that this pressing religious need of our day should turn
to physical evidences, to messages from the dead through abnormal
experiences and dubious agencies. The Christian faith in immor-
tality is to be experienced as faith in the God who loves as a
father, and who gives as love must give his best to his children.
If God is love, then our love does not deceive us. If God is spirit,
then our spirits are from God and will return to him. If the soul,
the person, is of supreme worth and reality, then it will not be
involved in the body's destruction, nor lost as a drop in the ocean
or as a breath in the wind, either in the divine being from whom
it came, or in the human race, "the beloved community," to which
its service is given. *
It is perhaps in the relation to each other of the hope for a
new human brotherhood and the hope for the life of the soul with
God, that the distinction and preeminence of the religion of Jesus
come most clearly to light. He feels no need of sacrificing one to
the other, but holds his hope for this world and the oneness of
men in love side by side with the hope for the other world. He
does call upon individuals to give their lives in ministry to others,
but in the losing of lifeiie declares that life is gained. Paradoxes
express his faith and insight, and the nature of love in God and
in man brings with it the key to the solution of the paradox.
The Christian hopes for a new human brotherhood on earth
and for the immortality of the individual are involved, and their
principles given, in the simple and profound sayings of Jesus,
and no other testimony as to their nature and certainty can be
compared with his. To no other words is the response of our own
spirits so instant and sure. Blessed are the poor in spirit, the
meek, the merciful, the pure in heart: theirs is the kingdom of
heaven ; they shall see God. Love your enemies, that ye may be
sons of your Father. Ye shall be perfect as your heavenly Father
is perfect. Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth. Ye
cannot serve God and mammon. Be not anxious for your life what
56 RELIGION AND THE WAR
ye shall eat or what ye shall drink, nor yet for your body what
ye shall put on. Is not the life more than food and the body than
raiment? Behold the birds of the heaven . . . Are not ye of
much more value than they? Your Father knoweth that ye have
need of all these things. But seek ye his kingdom and righteous-
ness. Be not afraid of them that kill the body. The very hairs of
your head are all numbered. Fear not therefore. If 3'^e being evil
know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more
shall your Father give good things to them that ask him. All
things whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you, even so
do ye also unto them. Not every one that saith unto me, Lord . . .
but he that doeth the will of my Father. Freely ye have received,
freely give. It is more blessed to give than to receive. He that
findeth his life shall lose it : and he that loseth his life for my sake
shall find it. I thank thee. Father . . . that thou hast hid these
things from the wise . . . and revealed them unto babes. Except
ye turn and become as little children ye shall in no wise enter into
the kingdom of heaven. Forbid them not . . . for to such be-
longeth the kingdom of heaven. What shall a man be profited if
he shall gain the whole world and forfeit his life? It is hard for
the Tich man to enter into the kingdom of God. Keep yourselves
from all covetousness : for a man's life consisteth not in the
abundance of the things which he possesseth. The rulers of the
Gentiles lord it over them, . . . but whosoever would be great
among you shall be your minister; and whosoever would be first
among you shall be your servant. Render unto Csesar the things
that are Caesar's and unto God the things that are God's. Inas-
much as ye did it unto one of the least of these my brethren ye
did it unto me. Nevertheless not as I will, but as thou wilt. Father,
forgive them, for they know not what the}'^ do.
Here is the Christian hope ; here its grounds and motives ; here
rather than in apocalyptic foretellings of the coming of the Son
of Man and the near end of the world. Here is an anthology of
testimonies to the faith which a world at war to end war most
THE CHRISTIAN HOPE IN TIMES OF WAR 57
needs, that man is a spiritual being and that his proper work is
"to interpret the world according to his higher nature," and to
bring the material aspects of the world into subjection to the '
spirit. Other "oracles and prophecies of loveliness and loving-
kindness" in the Bible and in the world's literature have their
abiding worth, but no othef- of "the seers and poets of mankind"
reach humanity so- widely and none so deeply.
Certain marks and tests of the Christian hope come clearly
into view in these characteristic sayings of Jesus. It is a hope
not imposed upon the mind by the outward authority of a book
or even of Christ himself, but one that appeals to conscience.
Our spirit answers to it, and our answer is not only the consent
of the mind but the disclosure of character and the choice of the
will. It is a hope for which we cannot merely wait, for we are
ourselves challenged to bring it to realization. The Christian
hope is fundamentally inward, and is always in part already
experienced. Paul and John knew the mind of Christ in this
striking quality of it better than later generations. The spirit
of God is already a love that creates unity and fellowship among
men; and it is already the presence and power of divine and
eternal life. The Christian hope unites the community and the
individual, and contains the clue to the mystery that now ob-
scures our minds. We know that the ruthless sacrifice of indi-
viduals for the abstract idol called the State is a denial of Christ's
reverence for the human personality. But we know also that the
devotion of the soldier's life to the cause of human liberty and
right, to the destruction of the idol of nationality and the
creation of the ideal brotherhood of man, is in accordance with
that giving of life for many which Jesus taught, and is that loss
which is the true finding of life. The Christian hope is too inward
and too secure to depend on outward success. The doctrine of
physical force is judged by physical success, but not the doctrine
of love. Yet though superior to outward fortune, the hope of
Christ is certain of ultimate vindication, because it is hope in
58 RELIGION AND THE WAR
God. It is a hope according to Christ, and for Christ's coming
as the ruling spirit in the life of humanity. But if it is a hope for
Christ, if it is Christ's hope for the coming Kingdom of God, it
is a hope for radical change, and for the sacrifice of our preju-
dices and customs, our personal wishes and our material
advantage.
The hope for a new world-order which is the most significant
spiritual event of our age, requires religion if it is to maintain
itself and work powerfully for its own realization. For it is the
hope for a purified human nature as well as for a changed human
organization. Christianity is the chief source of this hope, and
is summoned to prove itself equal to the task of keeping the hope
high and giving it inward energy and resource. But it will require
boldness of faith and the spirit of sacrifice, a sense of the excel-
lence and worth of spiritual things, and willingness to trust our
own souls and the souls of our fellow men, to trust ourselves to
the instincts and ways of a Christ-like love, if the Christian hope
is to prove able to create a new world.
IV
NON-RESISTANCE: CHRISTIAN OR PAGAN?
BENJAMIN WISNER BACON
All forms of peace propaganda are at present justh'^ and prop-
erly repressed by the Government as a war measure. This has
served in some degree to silence the voice of the pacifist, but mani-
festly it cannot serve to quiet the disturbed feeling in the minds
of many Christians, that to engage in war under any conditions
is to come short of the idealism of Jesus. Forcible measures pro-
duce the reverse effect, if any.
Non-resistance, under some circumstances and conditions if not
under all, is a duty which Jesus undeniably taught. Moreover, his
conduct was fully in accord with his principles ; otherwise his
following could not have maintained their unparalleled loyalty to
him. The manifest inconsistency between these non-resistance
sayings (taken by themselves) and the method advocated and used
by our Government in defence of democracy and righteousness
remains ever present. The grave extent of its inroads upon the
national morale may be judged by the circulation attained by a
typical pacifistic book, whose principal basis of argument is noth-
ing else than these non-resistance sayings, and which if it does
not attempt to square them in all cases with the conduct of Jesus,
but rather accords to Buddha, Confucius, and Lao-tse the merit
of greater consistency, nevertheless owes all its real effect to the
fact that its author speaks as a well-known and authorized ex-
ponent of Christian teaching, and leaves in his readers' minds the
conviction not of the alleged inconsistency, but of an absolute
60 RELIGION AND THE WAR
and unqualified doctrine of non-resistance as supported by both
the teaching and the conduct of Jesus.
The single year 1915-1916 witnessed the appearance of no
less than five successive editions of the book entitled "New Wars
for Old," by Rev, John Haynes Holmes, and its propaganda of
absolute and unconditional non-resistance was certainly not with-
out effect in the military cantonments, if not among the public
at large where its influence is less easy to trace. Recently the
Government itself has given public and official warning against
this type of pacifistic propaganda; and there is only too much
reason to believe that (quite without the intention or knowledge
of its authors) those eminent pacifists, the Potsdam conspirators,
have made large financial contributions to its success.
"New Wars for Old" may be taken as representative. It is the
best example of its type. It seems to be the most effective. At
all events, it gives concrete and tangible form to that interpreta-
tion of the teaching of Jesus which we regard as misleading and
dangerous ; it may therefore well form our starting-point toward
the attainment of another interpretation, truer at once to his-
torical fact and to the ethical sense of the religious-minded.
Recognizing the need for meeting present conditions of the public
mind by other than merely repressive measures we may frankly
face the question raised in Dr. Holmes' book, whether the doctrine
of absolute and unqualified non-resistance, traced by him to more
than one revered teacher of pre-Christian paganism, is indeed
identical with that of Jesus ; or whether, with Israel's Messianic
hope, some new factor enters in, to differentiate the Biblical ideal.
Isaiah and Jesus are for this champion of pacifism — and doubt-
less for others — the two supreme "exemplars of non-resistance,"
and the eloquence with which his thesis is maintained might well
win an assent which would not be granted were account taken of
his authority to pronounce upon questions of historical criticism.
However, few Americans, competent to form a moral judgment
of their own, will hold in light esteem the authority of Isaiah and
NON-RESISTANCE: CHRISTIAN OR PAGAN? 61
Jesus. We therefore accept the exemplars at the risk of seeing
our native hue of resolution all sicklied o'er with this pale cast
of thought. But is their teaching justly and fairl}^ interpreted.?
That is the question to which we now address ourselves.
" 'Resist not evil,' means never resist, never oppose violence."
Such is the motto, quoted from Tolstoy, with which our propa-
gandist heads his pages. As he cites no other scholar, critic, or
interpreter of the Sermon on the Mount, in support of this decla-
ration of the meaning, the inference is perhaps allowable that the
reader is expected to endow Tolstoy with a credit for scientific
attainments in the difficult field of historical criticism and inter-
pretation equally great with that which all men gladly accord to
his noble disposition and sincere humanity. Whether authority
as convincing can be cited for the contention that Buddha and
Lao-tse taught the same doctrine of absolute non-resistance we
are not competent to say. It seems at least to be beautifully
expressed in the saying quoted from Buddha:
With mercy and forbearance shalt thou disarm every foe. For want of
fuel the fire expires: mercy and forbearance bring violence to naught.
What Christian will deny the Christ-likeness of this teaching.''
What reader of the Old Testament will not hasten to add with
Paul from Jewish "wisdom" :
If'thine enemy hunger feed him^ if he thirst give him drink; for by so
doing thou shalt heap coals of fire upon his head.-*^
If, indeed, the duty in question be that of forbearance, all great
religious teachers, whether of Christian or pre-Christian times,
will be at one. "Hymns of hate" are unknown to the ritual of any
religion, unless it be the ultra-modern of Prussian militarism.
One must go to Nietzsche before attaining to the gospel that it
is virtuous to have a giant's strength and use it like a giant.
iRom. 12:20, citing Prov. 25:21-22.
62 RELIGION AND THE WAR
Teachers such as Buddha and Lao-tse may well have added to the
well-nigh universal religious tenet of mercy, forgiveness, forbear-
ance, the further doctrine of consistent, unqualified non-resistance.
We accept it for the obvious reason that their systems of thought,
which are philosophies rather than religions, contain (so far as
the present writer is aware) no principle of active, but only of
passive obligation. The chief end of man is for them not to ■
achieve, in loyal service to the Creator's ideal, but to abstain and
refrain, to put the brakes on life, and to teach others to do the
like. According to the author of "New Wars for Old," Buddha and
Lao-tse lived up to their gospel of non-resistance. Contrariwise,
"The Nazarene had his inconsistent moments like the rest of us,"
and showed it at this point. Our propagandist is too honest to
palter with the quibble of Adin Ballou, who in his "Christian Non-
Resistance" argues that Jesus in cleansing the temple may have
driven the money-changers from the courtyard, but that there
is no evidence that he struck any one of them. With such apolo-
getic special pleading he has no patience, preferring to give the
act of Jesus its full weight in the following straightforward
words :
What we have here is a well-authenticated violation of the principle
of non-resistance — and why not accept it as such? The episode is
chiefly remarkable in the life of the Nazarene, not for anything which
it teaches in itself, but for its inconsistency with the rest of his career.
Never at any other time, so far as we know, did he precipitate riot
or himself assault his enemies. But this time he did — this time he
failed to live up to the inordinately exacting demands of his own gospel
of brotherhood. Nor is the circumstance at all difficult to understand!
Jesus came to Jerusalem tired, worn, hunted. He knew that he
walked straight into the arms of his enemies, and undoubtedly there-
fore straight to his own death. Weary, desperate, confused, he came
to the temple to pray — and here, right before the altars of his God,
were the money-changers — here in the sacred places, the type and I
symbol of that commercialized religion which he most abhorred, and
which he knew was certain in the end to destroy him. What wonder
NON-RESISTANCE: CHRISTIAN OR PAGAN? 63
that a mighty flood of anger surged up in his soul^ and for the moment
overwhelmed him.
In short, the weary Jesus was so irritated by the unexpected ( ?)
sight of the traders, that he threw to the winds not only his prin-
ciples, but the dictates of the most ordinary prudence, giving his
enemies not only their desired opportunity, but provoking the
issue at just the point where he himself had been betrayed into the
violation of his own teaching. Verily, great is the insight of the
modern psychologist. To the observer of the phenomena of petu-
lance an incident like the cleansing of the temple is "easy to under-
stand." The scientific imagination required is easily attained.
One acquires it by observing the irritability of tired children.
How needless, then, to inform oneself as to the historical condi-
tions which made this great symbolic act of the Galilean prophet
full of meaning to every patriot Jew that witnessed it. How
needless to raise the question why every one of our four evangelists
should report the act and give it the prominence they do. For
our evangelists record it reluctantly, minimizing its political
significance and its insurrectionary flavor. They naturally dis-
liked to give color of justice to Pilate's judicial murder, and to
Jewish denunciations of the new religion as a rebellion against
established authority.
Let us then take as our point of departure this admitted "in-
consistency." It is not historical interpretation, but the subjec-
tive variety sometimes self-designated "psychological" which finds
it "easy" to set aside the representation of the oldest and most
reliable of our sources, that Jesus was not "weary, desperate, con-
fused," and was not in the least taken unawares, when he drove
the traders from the temple ; but that he planned his coup de main
with careful deliberation. The evening before, saj^s Mark, "he
entered the temple and looked round upon all things." Jesus was
not unaware of the conditions he would find, for they were an abuse
as notorious as hateful to every right-minded Israelite. This even
the Talmud attests. He was not a hunted fugitive seeking asylum
64 RELIGION AND THE WAR
at the altar. On the contrary, for weeks past he had set his face
steadfastly to go to Jerusalem and there lift up the standard of
the Son of David. The initiative was his. He had planned a new
campaign for his ideal, the Kingdom of God, a campaign no
longer of mere teaching but of action, and he was now carrying it
to the very seat of hostile power. Long since, probably before
he left Galilee, he had planned this very act, a challenge to the
corrupt priestly control of his Father's house, an act as full of
meaning and as deliberate as Luther's nailing of his theses to the
church doors of Wittenberg.
And when the blow had been struck Jesus stood courageously
by it. He met the inevitable demand of the hierocracy, "By what
authority doest thou these things.'^" with a counter demand.
Whence had the Baptist authority to inaugurate his prophetic
reform, making ready for Jehovah a purified people prepared for
his coming.^ The Sanhedrin evaded this counter demand, and
answered only (as Jesus had foreseen they would) by secret de-
nunciation of him to Pilate. But Pilate understood the case. We
have the Roman governor's official interpretation of its signifi-
cance in a certain superscription written aloft in Hebrew and
Greek and Latin on the gibbet of an insurrectionist. This, too,
Jesus seems to have foreseen.
All this was not a mere "episode." It was the culminating effort
and crisis of Jesus' career, and richly rewards a just under-
standing. We are told that it was "inconsistent with the rest
of Jesus' career." His mission, we infer, was to be a rabbi. His
attempt at active leadership in achieving the Kingdom he
preached was an unfortunate aberration. He should not have
tried to be "the Christ," and thereby incurred a needless martyr-
dom. The cross is still a stumblingblock.
Strange that the evangelists who omit so much, who would
have so strong a motive for omitting this particular "inconsis-
tency" no less for their Master's good name than for the safety
of the Church, should one and all record it. The disposition to
NON-RESISTANCE: CHRISTIAN OR PAGAN? 65
minimize everything savoring of political action on Jesus' part is
very marked in all our evangelists, for obvious reasons. To the
evidences of this belong, for example, Mark's denial, and the
fourth evangelist's explanation, of the saying about destroying '
the temple, together with the latter's description of the whip "of
small cords" as Jesus' only weapon in the purging of the temple."
Are we then to admit the "inconsistency" — not casual and inci-
dental, as conceived in this pacifistic interpretation, but deliberate
and flagrant.^ Or may we perhaps now raise the question whether
the "inconsistency" is not rather chargeable to the interpreter's
account ?
The interpretation with which we are dealing makes the teach-
ing of Jesus regarding the use of force identical with the non-
resistance doctrine of Buddha and Lao-tse. On the other hand,
it very justly relates it to that of the great prophet of the Davidic
kingdom of righteousness and peace, Isaiah, the son of Amoz.
From the point of view of the historical critic the relation of
Jesus' teaching to that of Isaiah is absolutely sound. But the
effect of this relation is fatal to its identification with the non-
resistance doctrine of Buddha and Lao-tse.
Apart from the circumstances which for the time being made
non-resistance, or rather mere passive resistance, the policy of true
statesmanship alike against Assyrian and against Roman domina-
tion, Isaiah and Jesus stood together upon the most fundamental
point of all, unqualified, unlimited loyalty to the God of Right-
eousness and to his sovereignty upon earth. Their pacifism differs
from that of Lao-tse and of Buddha in the important respect of
having a pronounced theistic basis. Buddha and Lao-tse can
preach consistently a doctrine of absolute non-resistance because
their systems are destitute of the social ideal of Israel's religion,
and indeed ignore the very existence of a "Power not ourselves
2 See below as to the fourth evangelist's explanation of Jesus' claim to be
the Davidic Shepherd of Israel only in the sense of uniting the scattered
flock of God.
66 RELIGION AND THE WAR
that makes for Righteousness." Contrariwise with the great
prophets of the Kingdom of God. Whether of the Christian or
pre-Christian dispensation, so far as they advocate non-resistance
it cannot be unhmited, because their religious aim is not merely
individual hut social.
The non-resistance of Isaiah and of Jesus is not self-centered
but God-centered. It is bound to consider what is expedient for
others, for the weak and dependent, as well as for the individual,
and for the present time. It seeks^ the welfare of the world and of
generations to come. It is always subsidiary to the paramount
interest of the Kingdom of God.
Just because it regards non-resistance not as an end in itself
but only as one of the divinest means to an end, Biblical pacifism
can hold before men's eyes the moving figure of the martyred
Servant, dumb as the lamb in the shearer's hands, while it can in
the same breath commend the men of violence that take the King-
dom of Heaven by force. Christian or pre-Christian, it rests upon
the foundation of utter, absolute loyalty to a world-wide Republic
of God, a cosmic sovereignty of righteousness, and having this
social aim for its religious ideal it can and does nourish to the
highest pitch of devotion the heroic virtues of patriotism, of ser-
vice and of sacrifice. The summons to the standard (not men's
but God's) is ever the same. The weapon may be the sword or
the cross, as the times require. Under mere self-centered philos-
ophies such as those of Buddha and Lao-tse the contrary is true.
Notoriously, where these control patriotism and all its heroic
virtues tend to dwindle, approaching often the verge of extinction.
The pacifism (not non-resistance) of Isaiah hardly requires
elucidation. Two or three very familiar quotations will suffice.
There is, for example, the prophet's vision of a universal peace
based on international law. This vision of the world's willing f
acceptance of the sovereignty of Jehovah's justice Isaiah shares
with his contemporary, Micah, both prophets seeming to choose
it as a text from some forgotten earlier pacifist.
NON-RESISTANCE: CHRISTIAN OR PAGAN? 67
It shall come to pass in the latter days
That the mountain of Jehovah's house shall be
stablished at the head of mountains.
And shall be exalted above the hills.
And all nations shall flow unto it.
And many peoples shall go and say. Come, let us
go up to the mountain of Jehovah,
To the house of the God of Jacob,
And he will teach us of his ways, and we will walk
in his paths.
For out of Zion shall go forth law, and the word of
Jehovah from Jerusalem.
And he shall judge between the nations, and will
be arbiter for many peoples;
And they shall beat their swords into plow-shares,
and their spears into pruning-hooks.
Nation shall not lift up sword against nation.
Neither shall they learn war any more.
Manifestly the ideal of an international tribunal as the basis
of a League of Peace is not so novel as some modern statesman-
ship seems to conceive.
But the consistent, thoroughgoing advocate of non-resistance
rejects even the coercion of magisterial and police constraint. To
Russian idealism restraint of the individual as well as the national
criminal is tainted with the same poison of violence. Since Isaiah
is the exemplar of non-resistance he should be permitted again to
speak for himself. His words seem, to have a singular applica-
bility to the land which is now testing to the limit the theory of
Proudhon, the individualist of individualists, the gospel of anar-
chism :
For behold the Lord, Jehovah of Hosts, doth take away from
Jerusalem and from Judah stay and staff,
The whole stay of bread and the whole stay of water.
The mighty man, and the man of war;
68 RELIGION AND THE WAR
The judge and the prophet, the diviner and the elder;
The captain of fifty and the honorable man and the counsellor . . .
And I will give children to be their princes,
And with childishness shall they rule over them,
And the people shall be oppressed every one by another, and
every one by his neighbor:
The child shall be arrogant against the old man, and the base
against the honorable.
But Isaiah, too, expects deliverance from these miseries of for-
eign servitude and domestic anarchy. He looks for the dawn of
a just and lasting peace; only the means of its attainment seem
strange for an "exemplar of non-resistance."
The people that walked in darkness have seen a great light;
They that dwelt in the land of the shadow of death, upon them
hath the light shined.
Thou hast multiplied the nation and increased their joy.
They joy before thee according to the rejoicing at harvest-time.
As men rejoice when they divide the spoil.
For the yoke of (Israel's) burden, and the rod laid to his shoulder,
The staff of his oppressor, thou hast broken as in the day of
Midian.
For all the armor of the armed man in the tumult
And the garments rolled in blood shall be for burning, for fuel
of fire.
For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given.
And the government shall be upon his shoulder:
And his name shall be called: Wonderful-counsellor;
The-Mighty-God-the-Everlasting (my) -Father;
The Prince of Peace.
Of the increase of his government and of peace there shall be
no end.
Upon the throne of David and upon his kingdom, '
To establish it, and to uphold it with justice and with righteous-
ness from henceforth even forever.
The zeal of Jehovah of Hosts will perform this.
NON-RESISTANCE: CHRISTIAN OR PAGAN? 69
Even with the devout restraint of the closing line it must be
admitted that these verses have a somewhat martial ring.
Doubtless the pacifist will emphasize the line, "The zeal of
Jehovah of Hosts will perform this," taking here the view of the
Pharisees, who in contrast with the fanatical nationalism of the
Zealots opposed the aggressive militarism of the later Maccabees
with a doctrine of quietism. Their cry was, "Leave all to God."
Against the Zealot they appealed to the proverb: "They that
take the sword shall perish by the sword," from which the infer-
ence is plain that if the aim be never to lose one's life one should
never take weapons. But perhaps Isaiah the "non-resistant" is
entitled to one more chance to prove himself not a Pharisee, even
when he expects "the zeal of Jehovah of Hosts" to win the victory
of peace. Fortunately he tells us Jww he expects the zeal of
Jehovah to operate, in the doom he pronounces upon "drunkard"
Samaria, the city whose luxuriant mountain-top was crowned
with mingled towers and olive groves, like the fading wreaths upon
the heads of drunken revellers. In contrast to Samaria's fate
Isaiah has this promise for the temple-crowned hill of Zion,
shadowed under its altar smoke:
In that day will Jehovah of Hosts become a crown of glory
And a diadem o£ beauty unto the residue of his people,
A spirit of justice to him that sitteth in judgment.
And a spirit of strength to them that turn back the battle at the
gate.^
II
It should hardly be necessary to explain that Jesus in deliberately
giving up the career of purely non-political preacher, teacher, and
healer, to assume the careei* of Christ and Son of David, fully
3 The citations are all from the unquestioned writings of the First Isaiah,
Isa. 2:2-4; 3:1-5; 9:2-7 and 28:1-6. The rendering is made independently
from the Hebrew.
70 RELIGION AND THE WAR
conscious as he was of all the dangers it implied, was neither ig-
norant of the Isaian ideal, nor out of sympathy with it. When
he rode into Jerusalem accepting the acclamation : "Blessed be
the kingdom that cometh, the kingdom of our father David," he
was not betraying the national hope ; he was lifting it toward ulti-
mate realization at the cost of Calvary.
It is true that he avoided suicidal collision with Roman author-
ity on the one side, as prudently as he forestalled the sweeping
off of his following into the insane fanaticism of the Zealot
nationalists on the other. The prophet's method of a symbolic
purifying of the temple was exactly suited to this purpose. In
the temple Roman authority explicitly renounced control. The
policing of this combined fortress, sanctuary, and treasure house
was left, even to the power of life and death, in the hands of the
Sadducean hierocracy. It was administered by a numerous and
efficient Levite police commanded by a "captain of the temple."
On the other hand, Sadducean control was notoriously and infa-
mously corrupt. The abuses by which (with their connivance)
money was extorted from the worshippers made it so hateful that
a worthy reformer might be sure of popular support strong
enough to cow "the hissing brood of Annas" into an interval of
"fear of the people." And the reform might even be accomplished
without unchaining the red fool-fury of the Zealot mob, if it was
seen to be the work of a prophet, by authority "from heaven" and
not "of men," consistent, even if regarded as a messianic act, with
the course of one who had come "meek and lowly and having salva-
tion, riding upon an ass, and on a colt the foal of an ass."
It is of vital importance to a historical appreciation of Jesus'
sense of his mission to realize fully and adequately what he meant
by this one public overt act of his career; for by it he signalized
to all Israel assembled at the Passover his purpose to achieve
a national deliverance such as the feast commemorated. From it
every loyal Israelite might infer that the hope of "the kingdom
of David" was now about to be realized. Jesus thus entered de-
NON-RESISTANCE: CHRISTIAN OR PAGAN? 71
liberately upon the stormy and dangerous seas of messianistic
agitation, as a claimant to leadership in the achievement of the
national hope.
To herald such a reform as Jesus proposed, reviving the na-
tional ideal, the purification of the temple was a symbolic act
worthy of the greatest of prophets. It was exactly fitted to raise
and define the issues at stake. It would convey just the right
impression to the multitude, whose attention could be reached by
this time-honored method, and by this method alone. It was also
free from the worst dangers of messianistic agitation. It would
avoid on the one hand the Scylla of needless collision with Roman
authority, and on the other the Charybdis of Zealot turbulence.
The calm and fearless "authority from heaven" with which it was
effected overawed resistance, so that even while asserted hy force
it attained its result with the shedding of no other blood than the
Messenger's own.
To show the exact meaning to contemporary Jewish minds of
this act of the Prophet of Nazareth we must recall not merely the
Isaian ideal of the "Davidic" reign as a universal kingdom of
righteousness and peace based on divine law going forth from
Zion, but also the later apocalyptic hopes. We must remember
that all expectation in Jesus' time was focussed on the prophecies
of Malachi, which made the purified temple the scene of Jehovah's
visitation of his people, after they should have been brought to
a "great repentance" by the coming of Elias. A rabbinic parable
of the period will give us the point of view. It is an answer to
the reproach so bitterly resented by Isaiah, "Israel is a wife for-
saken," and is based on Malachi 1 : 6-14, and 3: 1-12 interpreting
the designation "Tent of Witness" applied to the tabernacle in
Exodus 38 : 21 :
A king was angry with his wife and forsook her. The neighbors de-
clared, "He will not return" (of. Isa. 49: 14). Then the king sent
word to her (Mai. 1 : 10 ff) : "Cleanse my palace, and on such and such
a day I will return to thee." He came and was reconciled to her.
72 RELIGION AND THE WAR
Therefore is the sanctuary called the Tent of "Witness" — a witness
to the Gentiles that God is no longer wroth.*
Jesus' act was the assertion of authority "from heaven" to make
Jehovah's will supreme upon earth, beginning at his own sanc-
tuary. It was effected by direct appeal to the conscience of
the masses, which to the extent of their understanding responded
overwhelmingly. Jesus did not expect his act to be more than
"a witness to the peoples." But on the other hand, for the time
being at least, he sacrificed no life save his oAvn. One close parallel
could be cited from modern times if the demonstration could be
freed from its unfortunate association with really fanatical revolt
and real intention to provoke a servile insurrection. In keeping
his demonstration in the temple free from entangling alliance with
Zealot nationalism, Jesus showed a moderation and foresight
which were unfortunately lacking to the demonstration of John
Brown at Harpers Ferry; otherwise the two have many points
of affinity. It was while the governor of Virginia was still hesitat-
ing to sign the death warrant of the champion of negro emancipa-
tion, long before his martyr spirit marched on before great armies
of liberation', that Ralph Waldo Emerson, once himself a non-
resistant pacifist, wrote in his journal:
If John Brown shall suffer^ he will make the gallows glorious like the
cross.
Ill
That Jesus intended to raise the standard of David by his public
act at the Passover is certain. His pacifism was of the type of
Micah's and Isaiah's. That he meant the act to convey a religious
sense differentiating it from the merely political ideal of the
Zealots is also certain. His doctrine of reliance on spiritual
methods in the pursuit of the God-given aim exalts forbearance
as a means in terms not less noble than the foremost champions
of non-resistance. We may question whether he actually counted
4 Mai. 3:1-4; 4:1-6.
NON-RESISTANCE: CHRISTIAN OR PAGAN? 73
upon his own only too probable fate of crucifixion at Roman
hands as destined to serve the precise end which it actually has
subserved in human history. Those who see it with the wisdom
of retrospect know that it has furnished to all devotees of Israel's
ideal of the Kingdom of God, in all races, unto all successive gen-
erations, a rallying point and a symbol of final victory. But
Jesus was looking forward with the eye of faith, not backward
with the eye of knowledge. He believed that even through death
God would give victory to those who sacrificed life and all to his
kingdom's cause, and that it would be given ere their generation
had passed into oblivion. How much further than this his
prophetic insight into the ways of God with men extended is a
question which will be variously answered in accordance with
varying views of his personality. It need be no matter of surprise,
however, to any discerning mind, that the fourth evangelist should
also look backAvard at the significance of the cross, interpreting
it in the light of its actual results. The fourth evangelist is the
successor of Paul at Ephesus. Like Paul he naturally empha-
sizes its effect in "reconciliation," a twofold atonement, "breaking
down the enmity" between man and God, and also that between
man and man; and the great barrier of Paul's experience was
that erected by the Mosaic law between Jew and Gentile. By the
cross, says Paul to the Ephesians, Christ who is "our peace"^
made both one, and brake down the middle wall of partition, having
abolished in his flesh the enmity; even the law of commandments con-
tained in ordinances, that he might create in himself of the twain one
new man, so making peace ; and might reconcile them both in one body
unto God through the cross, having slain the enmity thereby.
No wonder Paul thinks of God as "the God of peace," the gospel
as "the gospel of peace" and Christ as "our peace" proclaimed
to the nations near and far.
That is the pacifism of Christianity. No wonder Paul's great
successor at Ephesus compares this healing and reconciling cross
5 Paul is elaborating Isa. 57: 19.
74 RELIGION AND THE WAR
to the token of forgiveness and faith which Moses lifted up in the
wilderness, and repeatedly presents as its divinely appointed aim
the "gathering into one the children of God that are scattered
abroad" (John 11 : 51-52).
The fourth evangelist devotes the closing section of his story
of the public ministry to this great question, Why Jesus came for-
ward as the Christ? The scene he chooses is Jerusalem at the
Feast of Dedication, that festival which commemorated the death
and resurrection of the Maccabean martyrs who had given their
lives for the national ideal. The story begins with the Jews' de-
mand of Jesus that he "tell them plainly" whether he is the Christ.
It ends with the mystical utterance of the high priest :
that Jesus should die for the nation^ and not for that nation only^ but
that he might gather together into one the children of God which are
scattered abroad.
To show what alternative lay before him we are told of a delega-
tion of Greeks who wait upon Jesus, apparently to invite him to
"go to the Gentiles and teach them," but who receive as their
answer, after a momentary soul-conflict paralleling the scene of
Gethsemane, that Jesus "must be lifted up," and thus through his
martyr death "will draw all men unto him." The central scene of
the raising of Lazarus is of course directed to the resurrection
theme appropriate to this feast, the theme of the Christ who as
Messenger of God brings life and immortality to light. But the
whole section rests back on an opening parable, that of the Good
Shepherd who lays down his life for the sheep (John 10: 11-18).
Our concern is with this parable; for it is not an invention of
the fourth evangelist, but an authentic comparison of Jesus
attested by the preceding evangelists,® and merely developed in
the later interpretative gospel along the lines of the original
prophecy,^ and with special reference to the cross as a token of
6 Mk. 6: 34; 14: 27 and parallels.
7 Ezek. 34.
NON-RESISTANCE: CHRISTIAN OR PAGAN? 75
unity in estranged and warring humanity evoked by Joyalty to a
common higher ideal.
In the parable of the Good Shepherd, as elsewhere, the fourth
evangelist shows that his view of the tragedy of Calvary is deter-
mined by its actual result. The function of the Shepherd is to
gather a flock now scattered, and which includes "other sheep
that are not of this fold." The aim is "that there may be one
flock; one Shepherd," an aim suggested by Paul. But primarily
the parable is simply an adaptation of Ezekiel's famous indict-
ment of the hireling shepherds of Israel, who had first exploited
Jehovah's flock, and then abandoned it to the ravening of wild
beasts. Because of this, the prophet declares, Jehovah himself
will seek out the scattered and bleeding remnant and will set up
over them a worthy shepherd, the son of David.
The special application made by the fourth evangelist is to
the gathering of a flock already scattered, bleeding, and torn
of beasts, because of the faithlessness of hireling shepherds. Such
was in truth the task imposed by the conditions of the time. Such
was in the experience of Paul and his generation the actual effect
of the cross. But primarily and in Jesus' mind it was simply the
token of the last supreme measure of devotion which he, and all
who would follow him, must be prepared to pay in loyalty to the
Kingdom of God. Its comparison is purely and simply a contrast
between two types of leadership. On the one side is he who lays
down his life in defence of the helpless, be it in conflict, as when
David the shepherd lad with sling and stone rescued his sheep
*'out of the paw of the lion and the bear," or be it in search for
the lost lamb upon the mountainside. On the other side is he who
"when he seeth the wolf coming leave th the sheep and fleeth." The
special need of the time, that which appealed to Jesus as the
supreme need of those to whom he was sent, was his people's need
of a standard and leadership, rescue of the scattered and lost.
When he saw the multitude he had compassion on them because they
were distressed and scattered as sheep that have no shepherd.
76 RELIGION AND THE WAR
He gave them the needed rallying point, a sign in which afterward
they should conquer. He also gave them the needed leadership.
The former was the need of the first age of the Church. The
second need is ours ; for defence of the flock is as much a shep-
herd's task as seeking out the lost. They who abandon it in the
face of wolfish attack need expect no approval from the Son of
David.
IV
There is a certain magnificence of logical consistency in the non-
resistance doctrine of the pacifist who chooses the Empire of
China (!) as the example of its perfect work in the field of interna-
tional relations.® With the blessed example of the Celestial King-
dom before us we are asked :
What did it avail Belgium to marshal her armies and hold her forts
against the irresistible advance of the German legions ?^
The question has an extraordinary resemblance to that ad-
dressed by the Kaiser to King Albert in Punch's famous car-
toon: "Don't you see that Belgium has lost everything .f^" And
Albert's answer is taken from Christ's own lips : "She has not lost
her soul." The Celestial Empire on the other hand seems to this
champion of the pacifism of Lao-tse to have practically realized
the blessings of the Kingdom of Heaven. Peacefully non-resistant
under the corrupt domination of its Manchu conquerors it had
attained the climax of earthly felicity. It had a name to live,
and was dead.
The Chinese and the Quakers, each in their own way, are finished
products. What they are is all they ever can be. Which means from
the standpoint of national idealism, that non-resistarice is the "saving
element."^"
This eulogy of China, however, . was written before the new
Republic of China, stirring the long dormant instincts of Chinese
8 "New Wars for Old," pp. 253-258.
^Ihid. p. 223.
10 Ibid. p. 258.
NON-RESISTANCE: CHRISTIAN OR PAGAN? 77
patriotism, had roused to new hopes and visions of world achieve-
ment the body that had become as one dead, insomuch that the
more part said. He is dead. But non-resistant pacifism is ever
rich in paradox. Today China herself, so long inert, blessed for
so many centuries with all the felicity of submission, has thrown
off the Manchu yoke of domination. And in the first surge of new-
found strength she declares war against Attila and his Huns, and
in the declaration itself avows that she is "fighting to establish
peace." To such inconsistency does non-resistance seem fated as
soon as life triumphs over death, as soon as the Christian gospel
of a world kingdom of righteousness and peace triumphs over
Buddha's pessimistic obliteration of desire and hope together in
the gray nirvana of extinction. "Eternal life" through death-
defying loyalty to a divine ideal begins at last to seem preferable,
even in China, to mere indefinite "survival."
Not Quakerdom itself seems able to maintain consistency with
its non-resistant ideals. Alas,
they were abandoned by those who could not and would not see the
connection between these principles and the uninterrupted peace which
had long blessed the Pennsylvania colony.
Becoming itself directly responsible for the order and security
hitherto guaranteed by the sovereign British power the Quaker
commonwealth followed the example of its neighbor states and girt
on the sword.^^ For this, doubtless, we may hold the influx of alien
immigrants more responsible than the genuine followers of Fox
and Penn. But it must at least be admitted that Quaker leaven
showed little power to work, so far as the doctrine and policy of
non-resistance are concerned.
Inconsistencies such as these on the part of the greatest modern
exemplars of non-resistance are saddening to its champions, but
there remains ever a more ethereal realm, where philosophy can
build without fear of the stern realities of life, the limbo of utopias.
11 "New Wars for Old," p. 241.
78 RELIGION AND THE WAR
Jesus, too, they tell us, though greatest of all non-resistants,
was also "inconsistent." Was he, then, inconsistent with himself?
Or was his pacifism the active pacifism of those who give their
lives for just and lasting peace, the peace that is real and not
mere devastation, not destruction and tyranny miscalled Kultur;
not might triumphant over right and unashamed ; but a peace that
endures because justice and right have been enthroned?
Jesus closed his public teaching with the doctrine that all reli-
gion, all duty to God and man, is summed up in the two com-
mandments : Unreserved, unqualified, unfaltering devotion to the
One God of Righteousness and Truth; unselfish devotion to the
common weal of man. One who in obedience to this law of love
took up the succession of Moses, David and the prophets, raising
the standard of God's real sovereignty on earth, and paying to
it the last full measure of his own devotion, has not deserved
the accusation of inconsistency. Jesus was sublimely consistent.
That interpretation of his words which refuses the witness of his
heroic deeds to their true meaning is guilty of the inconsistency.
■ It is true, as Tolstoy finely says, that Jesus' noble depiction
in the Sermon on the Mount of the forbearance of God as the
standard of the higher righteousness means that we should "never
do anything contrary to the law of love." But by what right does
the great Russian pacifist (or any other who claims for his theory
the authority of Jesus) omit from that law of love its "first and
great commandment"? How can we ignore the demand of supreme
and unqualified devotion to the God of Righteousness, whose king-
dom of righteous peace Jesus gave his life to establish, and limit
our obedience to acquiescence in the demands of men, be they
righteous or the reverse? The second commandment of the Law
of Love is dependent on the first, and in separation from it will
assuredly be misconstrued. Equal love of neighbor can be no
requirement of religion, save as it depends on the prior obligation
NON-RESISTANCE: CHRISTIAN OR PAGAN? 79
of supreme devotion to a common Father, whose forbearing, for-
giving love extends equally to all. Imitation of that Father's
goodness and forbearance, overcoming the evil of the world with
good, is the one teaching, the comprehensive, unifying principle,
of the Sermon on the Mount. But the God whose goodness this
great discourse sets up as the standard of the righteousness of all
"sons and daughters of the Highest" is not a non-resistant God.
It is the just and merciful God depicted in those Scriptures
wherein Jesus read his beneficent will and purpose for the world.
It is not enough for the Christian merely "to do nothing con-
trary to the law of love" ; he must actively toil and suffer in its
service, fighting to the death. His personal enemy he may and
must forgive. Enemies have thus been won to the kingdom. The
enemy of the weak and defenceless brother he must resist. The
enemy of God's kingdom he must fight to the death. It is true
that this foe of God is no human or visible foe. Our wrestling is
not against flesh and blood; it is against the principalities and
powers of darkness in the heavenly places. But we do not beat the
air. This power of darkness finds incarnation in human form at
least as readily as the Power of light. He fights with real and con-
crete weapons, and this reality is the ultimate test. For the foe
who thus incarnates the evil power the Christian has no hatred
as brother-man ; only as agent of the evil power. The hatred ceases
when the man renounces the evil allegiance. Hence the paradox of
love that may necessitate a blow. Self-deception is here all too
easy, but absolutely selfless devotion may be trusted even here
not to substitute its own cause for God's.
The very paragraph from which the non-resistants draw their
doctrine has this conclusion :
Wherefore seek ye first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and
all these (outward blessings) shall be added unto you.
It is because Jesus sought first the kingdom, which means right-
eousness, peace and good will among men, sovereignty of right over
80 RELIGION AND THE WAR
might, overthrow of the powers of darkness which claim as their
own the kingdoms of the world and the glory of them, that he
could teach as the best means to its attainment forbearance and
loving-kindness to the limit. For a limit there is — the divine limit
of the welfare of all. Loj^alty to this ideal led Jesus to crown
his sublime teaching with action sublimer still. When the scenes
of his earlier ministry were closed, he left the quiet paths of
teacher and healer in Galilee to tread the martyr's road, and to
set up in his own cross an ensign to rally the scattered and bleed-
ing flock of God. Because he sought "first the kingdom of God"
Jesus held back his disciples from the bloody and disastrous path
of Zealot fanaticism, and bade Peter return his futile sword to
its sheath. For the same reason and no other he depicted to his
disciples the Good Shepherd laying down his life in defence of the
flock, and poured scorn upon the hireling who "when he seeth the
wolf coming, leaveth the sheep and fleeth." It is for the same
reason and no other that he also warned them of days to come
when it should be the duty of the disciple unprovided with a sword
\o "sell his garment and buy one," days when onh^ he that endured
unto the end, fighting to the death against the powers of darkness,
should be saved.
Jesus teaches unlimited non-resistance where only personal and
selfish interests are at stake ; but resistance unto blood for the
sake of the Kingdom of God and his righteousness. In this he is
inconsistent with non-resistant pacifism that can see no diff^erence
between this doctrine and that of Buddha or Lao-tse. Jesus even
reverses that Bolshevist pacifism that to save its own skin throws
to the Turkish-Teuton wolves the bleeding remnant of the earliest
historic flock of Christ. He approves rather shepherds that give
their lives fighting in defence of their helpless charge. He is incon-
sistent with the theories and philosophies of non-resistance ; but he
is consistent, sublimely consistent, with his own gospel of the
sovereignty of God.
NON-RESISTANCE: CHRISTIAN OR PAGAN? 81
The rule of truly Christian pacifism is not hard to understand
when we approach it from the standpoint of those who after the
precept and example of Jesus seek ^rst the Kingdom of God. Men
of this type are ready like "all the saints who nobly fought of old"
to lose their lives in this high cause, that they may save them unto
life eternal. For individuals and for nations the rule is the same:
"In thine own cause strike never, not even in self-defence ; in God's
cause strike when he bids thee strike and cease not, come victory
or death." There is, no doubt, an easy self-delusion, prone to
identify its own cause with God's. But against this blasphemous
egotism human history henceforth will ever set up the abhorrent
warning of a certain imperial attitudinizer whom we do not need
to name. There is a time for forbearance, patience, longsuffering,
up to the limit of the forbearance of that God who seeks only the
good of all, and who seeks it in wisdom and justice as well as in
forbearance. The time is up to that limit, and not beyond it. If
the enemy can be won, win him. Turn the other cheek, surrender
tunic along with cloak. But forbearance is not meant to play
into the hands of the evil power. There is also a time when it only
gluts the ravenous maw of inhuman, soulless tyranny, a time when
incarnate evil sits in the very temple of God, setting itself forth
as God, a time when the law of violence is openly avowed and
exalted above the law of mercy and right, a time of the beast and
the false prophet, threatening to turn civilization back again to
the age of Lamech and Tubal-cain. That is a time to remember
also the commandment, "Let him that hath no sword sell his cloak
and buy one," and the promise : "He that overcometh, I will give
to him to sit down with me on my throne, as I also overcame, and
sat down with my Father on his throne."
V
THE MINISTRY AND THE WAR
HENRY HALLAM TWEEDY
When the greatest crime in all history was perpetrated and the
wo rid- war began, it was natural and necessary that the min-
istry of all lands should buckle on the Christian armor and take its
place in the fighting ranks. Thousands volunteered as chaplains
and Y. M. C. A. workers. Thousands more — two thousand at one
•time in Canada alone — equally eager to don the khaki and endure
their share of the hardships, waited impatiently until a door could
be opened for them to go. In the training camps and in the
trenches, in hut and in hospital, these men found new parishes and
pulpits, ministering in a multitude of -ways, and finding oppor-
tunities for Christ-like service in the soldier's ever}"^ need. They did
more than preach sermons, hold Bible classes, and act as spiritual
comforters and advisers. To them, as to Donald Hankey's "beloved
captain," no task was too petty or too menial, no lowly service
beneath them, if it lightened the burdens or added to the comfort
and efficiency of the fighters. At all times and everywhere, in all
ways and by all means, they strove to represent the Master, who
cared for bodies as well as for souls, for the resting times and food
and tired feet as well as for the thoughts and motives and ambi-
tions of his disciples. They were the ambassadors of the Prince of
Peace and the army's public friends.
All this was only what might have been expected. The arresting
fact was to find these prophets of peace, with comparatively few
exceptions, proclaiming the righteousness of our participation in
the war. In 1915 when the Continent, of Chicago, sent out a
THE MINISTRY AND THE WAR 83
questionnaire among the Presbyterian ministers of the country,
an overwhelming majority declared themselves in favor of pre-
paredness. A vote in Brooklyn, embracing ministers in something
like twenty denominations, showed one hundred and fifty-one in
favor of preparedness, while six qualified their approval and only
fourteen were opposed. These are indications of the trend of
thought among the ministers of America ; and though they may
not give direct and unimpeachable evidence of how these men would
have viewed the entrance of the United States into the European
debacle, it would seem to be a legitimate inference that their atti-
tude would be the same. When a nation, patient and forbearing
until her enemies scoffed and her friends grieved, found herself
compelled to defend her unquestioned rights against lawless and
brutal pirates, minds which approved of preparedness for war
would naturally, almost inevitably, approve of war. Nor was it
our rights only. We entered the struggle not through pride or
greed or hatred, but as the champion of international law, right-
eousness, liberty, democracy, and a world peace that shall be
abiding and just for all.
To the few pacifists among the clergy all this seems quite un-
necessary. Why should not America walk in the footsteps of Jesus,
set her face steadfastly toward her Jerusalem, and for the world's
salvation suffer Germany and Austria and Turkey to drive the
spikes through her hands .'^ Why not permit the Central Powers
to seize and possess our country, even though they dealt with
those of us, who could not and would not submit to the ethics of
Nietzsche and the diplomacy of Bernhardi and the rule of
von Hindenburg, as they treated the fathers and mothers and
little children of Armenia and Belgium and Poland.'' "Resist not
evil !" The cure of Christ's time is the cure of our time ! The age
of Judas and of Pilate, of the scribes and brutal Roman soldiers,
has never passed.
This is not the place to attempt to settle the dispute between
the champions of peace at any price and those of a war which.
84 RELIGION AND THE WAR
rightly or wrongly, they regard as righteous and unavoidable.
It certainly will never be decided by calling all pacifists cowards
and slackers, and all defenders of the course pursued by President
Wilson, the son of a clergyman, exponents of Prussian militarism.
The plain fact is that there is no path open to us which presents
no moral difficulties. It is not a choice between absolute right and
absolute wrong, but between the preponderance of right and the
preponderance of wrong. As some one has phrased it, "War is a
moral enterprise, if it redeems a state from a condition worse than
war" ; and that — so it seemed to thousands of ethical and religious
teachers — was the situation in America. To have watched the
violation of Belgium, the massacre of Armenia, the destruction
of England, France and Italy, the absorption of Russia, and
ultimately the forging of the chains of our own servitude, without
striking a blow to protect the world against the unspeakable
barbarism of a megalomaniac would have been ethical madness.
Granting the culprit's sanity, it would have been a kind of reli-
gious paranoia not to bring the international butcher and brigand
to terms. The man who stands by, while a thug robs his neighbor's
house and murders the wife and children, practically cooperates
with the criminal. If he is a saint, he is a saintly Raffles. Though
he never strike a blow, he bears the mark of Cain. Leaders like
the Rev. Charles A. Eaton, D.D., of the Madison Avenue Baptist
Church in New York City, have ventured to characterize our
participation in the struggle as "our Christian duty." Many even
of our Quakers vigorously champion it. Mr. John L. Carver, the
head of the Friends' School in New York and Brooklyn, writes :
"First and last, let us have no compromise or suggestion of com-
promise as to the justice of the American cause^ — no admixture
of false pacifism in relation to one of the few absolutely just and
unavoidable wars that the world has ever seen, unmarred by
fanaticism, mistaken hatred, or lust of gain. Let us permit no
confusion of ideas between old time wars of aggression or revenge,
and this present war of unselfish sacrifice to save humanity from
THE MINISTRY AND THE WAR 85
the reign of the beast." With this it is safe to say the great
majority of Christians, la}^ and clerical, heartily agree. War is
always bad ; but there are situations when to decline to give battle,
permitting the foe to work his immoral will, is not only still more
terrible in its cost but more awful in its moral degradation. To
kill is always an evil ; but it is less of an evil, both for society and
for the evil doer, than to permit a band of deluded assassins to
run amuck in the ranks of civilization and to practice their marks-
manship on the gentlest of women and the noblest of men. Almost
to a man the leaders of thought in the allied countries, with un-
willing minds and breaking hearts, have reached this decision.
Rightly or wrongly, it is the answer which has come to their
agonized petition, "Lord, what wilt thou have me to do.?"
But there is a still more striking fact. Not only are our min-
isters like Sir George Adam Smith in khaki and Dr. Henry
Van Dyke in the uniform of the navy, toiling as spiritual special-
ists for our soldiers and sailors. Not only ai-e teachers like
Principal Forsyth and ex-President Taft proclaiming our moral
duty and legal right to participate in the greatest and most
terrible of wars. After careful deliberation an ever-increasing
number of ministers, especially among those of draft age, both
in the pastorate and in the seminary, have given up their dis-
tinctive work, donned the uniform of the soldier, and sailed for the
trenches of France. To some minds this seems incredible foil}',
a species of ministerial madness. War is so tigerish in its ruth-
lessness, so demoniacal in its treatment of ethical principles, so
un-Christian in matter and in method, that it appears impossible
to characterize any participation as righteous. It is, no doubt,
1 the minister's duty to play the role of Good Samaritan when, with
I nations as his victims, the modern Hun repeats the parable. But
can he still bear the title of minister if he joins the police force
I and attempts, even at the cost of killing the robbers, to clean up
I the Jericho road ?
The answer of these men has been an enthusiastic affirmative.
86 RELIGION AND THE WiVR
To them their clerical exemption was something more than what
Dean Shailer Mathews called it, "an insult or a challenge." No
doubt there were good reasons why certain trained specialists,
and themselves among them, should be set to work with tools other
than bayonets. The physician, the engineer, the munitions expert,
the ship-builder and the chaplain will all have their part in the
triumph. Mr. Hoover, Mr. Schwab and the Archbishop of York
will do more in their present positions than they could behind a
machine gun or in an aeroplane. They, and millions of men and
women in lowly stations, can fight at home for peace and for
freedom ; and when the burden is heaviest and the strain almost
unendurable, call cheerily, as Harry Lauder did to the Scotch
Highlander: "No, man, I'm no tired! If you can die fighting for
me, I can die working for you !"
But this patent plea did not satisfy some militant ministers.
Their religion as well as their patriotism carried them beyond
Dean Mathews' interpretation of the phrase. Grant that their
exemption is an insult if it "implies that ministers are not as
ready to serve their country as any other citizens, that they are
slackers, or that they are* so effeminate that they would not make
good soldiers ; that if they go about their work with no increase
of labor or of sacrifice, making an excuse out of their holy calling,
they accept their exemption as an insult to their calling." Grant
that, if this is not true, it comes to them as a great challenge to
do and to dare as much in their spiritual work as the soldier does
in his, toiling to the limit of costly sacrifice, possibly to overwork
and to death. They are quite ready to burn out, and that quickly,
when the age demands the heat and light of their lives. But there
was still in their hearts a service unexpressed, an intense desire
ungratified. One hears the call in the following letter from a
minister, who is now a lieutenant with a Canadian regiment in
France :
"I expect to go to the front in Europe in the near future," he
wrote to the editor of the Outlook. "For six years I was a Presby-
THE MINISTRY AND THE WAR 87
terian minister, although a Canadian, in the Presbyterian Church
of the United States. When the cause of liberty and the ideals
of democracy were at stake, I could not withstand the 'call' — not
so much of my country as of civilization — any longer. I resigned
my charge and came to Nova Scotia, my boyhood home. It seems
strange, but true nevertheless, that today I am a happy man. I
hate war and know something about it — I served through the
South African War and saw its results — but there are things
worse than war. I am going, as I find many of my comrades going,
not because we hate the German people, but because we believe
that Prussian militarism would be an intolerable system for the
world to live under."
"Is this a psychological and moral paradox .P" comments the
editor. "We think not. Every man who really grasps the meaning
of the words righteousness, justice and peace, and their true rela-
tions, will understand the state of mind of this Canadian clergy-
man." It is the decision of one who loves and honors the calling
of the ministry, and yet feels that in this crisis there is a place
where he, whatever may be true of his fellows, is more greatly
needed. It is the confession of faith on the part of a Christian
who knows war and hates it, and yet is happy to make it because
he loves peace, and believes, rightly or wrongly, that if the woi4d
is to possess it in our time, it must be won with the sword. It is
the deed of a brother of all men who declines to be limited by his
cloth, who cannot preach to the soldier without drinking the
soldier's cup and being baptized with his baptism of mud and of
blood. It is the spirit of a true Christian preacher, who cannot
urge Christian laymen to "go over the top" unless at least some
Christian ministers go with them. It is the jubilant response to
the call of the heroic, the comradeship which knows no secular and
no sacred, and which covets the most intimate fellowship in the
life and sufferings of brave men.
The same attitude is being increasingly taken by the peace-
loving Friends. "The young Quaker of the present day," writes
88 RELIGION AND THE WAR
one of them, "is so true to his inheritance— that of being allowed
to act as his conscience dictates — that there are already many
in the service, and that, too, with the fervent cooperation of their
Quaker parents. . . . When one of these young Friends — now a
trusted officer in the American infantry, who enlisted before war
was declared by our Government — was challenged by a Quaker
friend, he promptly replied: 'I am showing my regard for my
Quaker ancestry and training in the fact that I cannot and will
not allow war to stalk upon the earth unchecked. Only by meeting
the Devil face to face can we hope to crush him.' "
Sir George Adam Smith in'an American address stated that in
Scotland 90 per cent of the ministers' sons of military age entered
the army before conscription. Would it be strange if some fathers
decided to go with them.? He also said that of the sixty thousand
Catholic priests engaged in war work in France, twenty-five thou-
sand are fighting in the ranks. Some Chinese missionaries are
serving behind the lines as officers of detachments of Chinese
artisans and laborers. Other missionaries, however, and sons of
missionaries are reported to have gone directly into military ser-
vice. Our country's Roll of Honor contains the names of men like
Captain Jewett Williams, an Episcopal rector and the son-in-law
of Dr. David J. Barrows, Chancellor of the University of Georgia,
who declined a chaplaincy, trained at Fort Oglethorpe, and was
killed in action. Of recent graduates and members of the Yale
School of Religion, forty-four are now in khaki. Of these nineteen
are chaplains and Y. M. C. A. workers, while eighteen are in the
regular army, one each in the British and Canadian armies, two
in the Ambulance Corps, one in aviation and one in the navy.
Already the School Roll of Honor bears one name, that of a young
Englishman of rare promise, who died in the hospital from wounds
received on the battlefields of France.
These men are following in the footsteps of ministers of other
generations. Yale's records show that there is scarcely a campaign
of note, or an important battle in American history, in which her
THE MINISTRY AND THE WAR 89
sons among the clergy did not share the hardships and dangers
of the soldier's lot. Besides the more than one hundred and thirty
who served as chaplains, in the thick of the fight as well as in
camp and hospital, are those who fought shoulder to shoulder
with their parishioners. When the news of the approach of the
enemy reached Thomas Brockway (1768) during service, he dis-
missed his congregation, shouldered his long gun, and marched
away. Of John Cleaveland (1745) it is said that he preached all
the men of his parish into the army and then went himself. They
helped to take Louisburg in the campaign against Cape Breton
Island. They marched in the Crown Point Expedition, fought at
Ticonderoga, and shared with Wolfe the hardships of the cam-
paign against Quebec. The record of the Revolutionary days is
a stirring one. Edmund Foster (1778) joined the Minute Men
on the sounding of the alarm in Lexington. Ebenezer Mosely
(1763) enlisted in Israel Putnam's regiment, and with Joseph
Badger (1785), who served with General Arnold in Canada,
fought at the Battle of Bunker Hill. They were in the ranks at
Germantown and at Monmouth. Samuel Eells (1765) was elected
the captain of a company formed among his parishioners to aid
General Washington, who was then retreating through New
Jersey. Elisha Scott Williams (1775) crossed the Delaware in
the boat with Washington, and is so depicted in Trumbull's
painting. He also fought at the battles of White Plains, Trenton
and Princeton, and shared with William Stone (1785) and Benja-
min Wooster (1790) the hardships and sufferings at Valley Forge.
Levi Lankton (1777) was present at Burgoyne's surrender.
In the Civil War this record is repeated. The ministers of Yale
fought at Bull Run, South Mountain, Antietam, Fredericksburg,
Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, the Wilderness, Spottsylvania and
Cold Harbor. They rode with Sheridan's cavalry in the Army of
the Potomac; they marched with General Sherman to the sea.
Several, like Erastus Blakeslee (1863), well known for his services
to the work of the Sunday school, rose to the rank of general.
90 RELIGION AND THE WAR
Moses Smith (1852) entered in 1865 with the first troops into
Richmond, while Samuel W, Eaton (1842), after fighting in some
of the hardest battles, was present at Appomattox Court House on
the surrender of General Lee.
In all this there is no thought of glorifying war, or of haloing
the head of the minister who lays down his Bible to take up his
bayonet. Quite the contrary. These fighting chaplains condemned
war and hated it. They never proclaimed that organized slaughter
was a sane method of settling international disputes or ethical
questions. They would have marched to their own Calvaries gladly
if this would have saved them from the horror of the task
of the soldier and at the same time helped to bring in the Kingdom
of God. But to their minds there was a time when a Christian
ought to put up his sword, and another when his duty was to buy
one. Devilishness is not usually overcome by allowing the Devil
to have his way. If the powers of evil attempt by force to over-
throw righteousness, righteousness may well by force oppose and
thwart them ; not that it may escape martyrdom, or vent its
anger, but with the clear purpose of rescuing the evil doer from
his devastating delusion, and of saving the most precious treasures
of civilization from the axe of a vandalism, which can and ought
to be restrained. The thought finds a crude but characteristic
expression in Kipling's poem of Mulholland, the coarse sailor,
who, in fulfilment of the vow made during a storm on the cattle-
ship, goes back to preach religion to the brutal and unsympathetic
I didn't want to do it^ for I knew what I should get,
An' I wanted to preach religion, handsome an' out of the wet;
But the Word of the Lord were lain on me, and I done what I was set.
I have been smit and bruised, as warned would be the case.
An' turned my cheek to the smiter, exactly as Scripture says ;
But following that, I knocked him down an' led him up to grace.
THE MINISTRY AND THE WAR 91
An' we have preaching on Sundays whenever the sea is calm^
An' I use no knife nor pistol^ an' I never take no harm;
For the Lord abideth back of me to guide my fighting arm.
It is devoutly to be wished that it was never necessary for the
preacher to use knife or pistol; but at present apparently there
is no other means by which the smiter may be knocked down.
This teaching is what might be called, in Dr. Van Dyke's
phrase, "Fighting for Peace." It is the kind of militant pacifism
which Paul hints at. "If it be possible, as much as in you lieth,
be at peace with all men." Sometimes it is not possible. It is
neither wise nor saintly to attempt to negotiate with a tiger. It
would be something worse than folly to allow the I. W. W. to
dictate the economic policy of our country, or to suffer philo-
sophical and practical anarchism to work its will with the law
and order of the world. War as mere war deserves all the vitriolic
epithets which have been heaped upon it. It is the scourge of
scourges, the father of piracy and of murder, the mother of havoc,
desolation and woe. It stands clearly revealed as "a monstrous
crime, man's crowning imbecility and folly." But when through
war the attempt is made to tear down law, overthrow justice and
shackle the world's liberty, shall not war be met by war in order
to preserve these priceless possessions, and perchance end all wars
by rendering its mad champions powerless. ^^ No minister can be
called Christian who does not hate war. But most of them hate
still more the sinking of the Lusitania, the rape of Belgium, the
massacre of the peaceful people of Armenia. They cannot with
clear conscience sit still and watch the fulfilment of the plot of
"the Potsdam gang" without striking a blow. Peace proposals
from the successful marauders sound to them too much like Dr.
Van Dyke's imaginary conversation between an outraged house-
holder and his triumphant pacifistic burglar. It is not a question
of Christ or Cassar. There is something of the Sermon on the
Mount in pacifist and militarist alike. But in the choice our
ministers in the army have registered their vote for what seems
92 RELIGION AND THE WAR
to be by far the lesser of two evils. They with their fellows have
chosen to tread the new Via Sacra, as the road is now called
which made the salvation of Verdun possible; and today they
stand facing the forces of autocracy, greed and military oppres-
sion, uttering that great battle cry which broke from the heart
of France, "They shall not pass !"
Whatever the verdict of history upon this decision of brave
men in the ministry, certain effects of the war upon them and
upon their work are sure. These again are both good and evil.
On the debit side of the ledger will be the loss of many in whose
future service lay much of the hope and strength of the church.
A large proportion of the best men, who were looking forward
to the ministry, are in the training camps and trenches. Some
may now be diverted to other callings ; some will never come back.
Their vacant places in the ranks will be saddening and for a time
crippling. Great tasks which might have been done must needs be
left undone. New Elishas will wear the prophet's mantle; but
the memory of many a vanished face will waken the old cry upon
their lips : "My father, my father, the chariots of Israel and the
horsemen thereof!" If the church does not begrudge them, it will
mourn them among its multitude of sons who
laid the world away; poured out the red,
Sweet wine of youth: gave up the years to be
Of work and joy, and that unhoped serene
That men call age; and those who would have been
Their sons they gave — their immortality.
A second regrettable result in the minds of some will be the
discrediting of the ministry. There have been too many un-
christian utterances from the pulpits of all lands, though we are
naturally especially sensitive to those "made in Germany" ; too
many petty, superstitious prayers addressed to tribal deities as
little like the God of Jesus as Moloch and Mars; too reckless
dealing with "high literary explosives" on the part of preachers
THE MINISTRY AND THE WAR 93
possessing neither the wisdom of Solomon nor the restraint of
Paul; too flamboyantly patriotic utterances from orators who
apparently forgot their obligations as citizens of heaven and
makers of a new world. So far as the writer knows, there have
been no blasphemies from the pulpits of the Allies equal to the
saying of Pastor W. Lehmann : "The German soul is God's soul ;
it shall and will rule over mankind" ; or that still more brutal and
unblushing pronouncement of Pastor D. Baumgarten : "Whoever
cannot prevail upon himself to approve from the bottom of his
heart the sinking of the 'Lusitania,' whoever cannot conquer his
sense of the gigantic cruelty to unnumbered innocent victims, and
give himself up to the honest delight at the victorious exploit of
German defensive power — him we judge to be no true German."
But if none have descended to these depths of theological blind-
ness and ethical madness, there has been a certain kinship with
the spirit of the imprecatory psalms, used as convenient and
refreshing outlets for pent-up tempers, together with more or
less pagan treatment of ethical and religious questions, camou-
flaged with felicitous phrases, which lulled the listener with the
assurance that the preacher was quoting from the Litany. All
this has not redounded to the respect of the thoughtful for the
pulpit, or for the leadership of men supposed to be specialists in
the rules of right and teachers of the counsels of a fatherly God.
Furthermore, while the mass of Christian unity and cooperation
has been unprecedented, there have been here and there expres-
sions of denominational rivalries. It is not an inspiring spectacle
when a few — and fortunately only a few — bigoted denomination-
alists are seen storming certain camps, not because the religious
welfare of the soldiers is not being amply cared for, but because
the accredited purveyor of their ecclesiastical shibboleth is not
teaching his patois and peddling his wares. Neither our best lay-
men nor our wisest religious leaders have either patience or sym-
pathy with modern denominational Pharisees. They recognize
temperamental, psychological and national differences among
94 RELIGION AND THE WAR
fellow Christians, and are content that Quaker and High Church-
man, shouting Methodist and dignified Scotch Presbyterian, Sal-
vation Army lassie and devout Romanist should choose their own
liturgy and polity, and go to heaven each in his own way. But to
their minds, in everyday life usually and in camp life always,
sectarian squabbling and doctrinal hair-splitting are merely
rocks of stumbling and stones of offense; and whenever they wit-
ness, especially in war time, such wrangling in the porch of the
sanctuary, they discount the utterances and even the calling of
the minister, and, instead of entering the edifice and joining in
the service, pass by on the other side.
Still more damning will be the accusation, made even by loyal
sons of the church's own household, that not only has the ministry
failed to prevent war, but that it neglected to mass its forces and
measure its might in the great task. To reply to the charge in
its undiscriminating, blunderbuss form is easy. Many ministers
gave up their lives to the cause, notably in the various forms of
the peace movement. Others proclaimed and urged a cure, which
the laity declined to put into operation and the governments
ignored. The prevention of war should have been the work of the
educator, the lawyer, the scientist, the promoters of commerce and
the prophets of international socialism as well as of the minister.
If he is blameworthy, so are they. Men who love to sit in the seat
of the scornful and jeer at Christianity should enlarge the scope
of their humor. If, as G. K. Chesterton puts it, "Christianity has
not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult and
not tried," it is equally true that the ministry has not been
trusted and found incompetent; it has been the herald of an
unwelcome message and ignored. No one class in the community
could work the miracle of a world-peace ; it could be wrought only
through the faith and works of all. To attribute to the ministers
the failure to achieve it is in part fair; some of them are guilty.
As Dean Hodges said of the much-discussed article, "Peter Sat
by the Fire Warming Himself," the charges are richly deserved
THE MINISTRY AND THE WAR 95
by those by whom they are deserved. In part, however, it is mani-
festly unfair; multitudes honestly tried. In part it is one of the
greatest compliments ever paid them ; for it suggests their power,
acknowledges their leadership, and honors their task as the con-
structive statesmen of the world. No one ever before hinted that
the clergy ought to have stopped the wars of Charlemagne or of
Napoleon. During the Civil War neither the conflict nor the cause
was laid at the minister's door. But in our day many clamor for
priests after the order of Joshua as well as of Moses, men at the
head of great bodies of Christian soldiers, who shall participate
vigorously in domestic politics and international relations, until
they actually bring in the reign of righteousness and of love and
truth among men. As ministers we accept the compliment while
we confess our sins and shortcomings. The burthen of having done
the things we ought not to have done and of having left undone
the things which we ought to haA^e done is one that we carry
shamefacedly but not exclusively. It is shared by all mankind.
But if the war kills some and discredits others, the credit page
in the ledger looms large. The experiences and tasks of the present
can hardly fail to make the manliest among us still more virile
and vigorous. They will purge the leaders in every profession of
all softness and sentimentalism, and lift them above a great danger
in peace times, that of living a
ghastly, smooth life^ dead at heart.
No sane and unprejudiced mind, possessing first-hand knowledge
of the ministry, accepts as a representative of the profession the
clergyman of the stage comedy and the popular novel. He may
be a "sport," in the biological sense ; but it would be equally easy
to find as ludicrous and despicable examples in law, medicine or
business. So far as the average, normal type is concerned, this
popular clerical clown is a wretched caricature, possessing humor
because endowed with the exaggeration and distortion of a politi-
cal cartoon. But removing all such weaklings from the discussion,
96 RELIGION AND THE WAR
and granting that there are no more lax fellows, lolling through
life, in the ministry than in any other profession, there isj as
Donald Hankey points out, a certain directness and sternness in
camp and military life which is singularly invigorating and even
Christ-like. It stiffens a man's back to shoulder heavy burdens,
trains the eye to face steadily and without flinching disagreeable
and terrifying duties. It tenses muscles with great and glorious
resolves. It girds up the loins for a race the issues of which are
life and death, throttles any idea of sneaking sinuously through
the world avoiding large and costly obligations, and at the end
of the day's labor demands visible and tangible results. If any
minister was in danger of becoming what Horace Greeley called
"a pretty man," or what Holmes described as "a wailing poitri-
naire," his experience as chaplain and as soldier will effectually
cure him. We should have more prophets after the order of Amos
as well as of Hosea when the men who have been under fire come
home.
Such men will increasingly merit and possess the respect of
laymen and of soldiers. Their lives have been knit together in the
fellowship of suffering. Their bodies are inured to the same hard-
ships, their faces lined with the same grim marks of dangers
laughed at and of conquered pain. In the democracy of the trenches
the sons of the Pilgrims and the immigrant sons of the slums have
come to know and to understand one another. The pagan, illiterate
dock-hand has fought shoulder to shoulder with the teacher of
religion, trained in the first universities of our own and other
lands. When such laymen attend plays like "The Hypocrites" or
read novels like "The Pastor's Wife," they will never be per-
suaded that the clerical cartoons represent reality. Each will
recall days in the dugouts and nights in the hospitals, when they
came to know a different type of minister, a "beloved captain,"
who marched through the mire with song and laughter, and crept
with them through the darkness and shadow of death in No Man's
Land. An almost irresistible attraction will draw them to the
THE MINISTRY AND THE WAR 97
churches of such ministers. To their leadership they will be in-
clined to render obedience; to their messages they will listen with
respect. No scoffing jests at the minister will be allowed to go by
them unchallenged. For the first time in their lives they have been
brought into touch with the preachers of religion, and their hearts
have burned within them while they talked with these disciples of
Jesus by the way.
Furthermore, they will seek them out in the intercourse of
ordinary fellowship. For the ministers have shown themselves
friendly, approachable — no wan ascetics, no unhuman monks or
superstitious other-worldlings, but jolly good fellows in camp
life, sane and wholesome counsellors in times of perplexity, com-
forters in the hours of sorrow, efficient and tireless fellow workers ;
in brief, the best type of men among men. With such a minister
there will be no social uneasiness, no camouflaged conversation
during a pastoral visit or upon his entrance into the club. When
he opens the front door, the father will not be so apt to call,
"Mother, the dominie has come to see you!" It will be no longer
the pastor who wishes to meet and to know the male parishioner ;
the male parishioner will be equally eager to meet and to know
the pastor. One soldier phrased the difference in this way: "Well,
sir, I like our services out here, and the church is all right ; but
our parson at home, sir — ! You couldn't go to church or have
anything to do with him!" All this will come to the minister as
a reward for having realized the picture as painted by an English
chaplain. "I like to think of the parish priest as fulfilling the
Shakespearean stage direction — 'Scene : a public place. Enter
First Citizen' ; — for his ministry should mostly be spent neither in
church nor in the homes of the faithful, but in public places ; and
he should be the First Citizen of his parish, sufficiently well known
to all to be absolutely at home with each. . . . And so the word
'parson' will revert to its old proud meaning of 'persona,' and the
priest will take in his parish a position analogous to that of the
best chaplains in the army." That is the gift which true ministers
98 RELIGION AND THE WAR
have always coveted. Many have already won it, turning from the
fascination of their studies "to waste time wisely in the market-
place, gossiping like Socrates with all comers." After the war
many more will possess it, having gladly paid the price.
To the spiritual practitioner, moreover, will have come increased
skill in that most difficult of all arts, personal work. He will have
had daily hospital training in ministering to the souls of men.
He will speak their language, even their lingo, rather than what
is to multitudes the unintelligible patois of the seminary Canaan.
He will know not only his own theories but their difficulties and
experiences in regard to a belief in immortality and the practice
of prayer. Like Jesus at the well, he will have learned the method
and value of gaining a point of contact in teaching. Formerly it
was easy to discourse from the pulpit concerning the being and
nature of God and to champion theories of the atonement. The
prophet of the regiment will have learned what is far more difficult
and more necessary — to persuade a man to follow the teaching
and to practice the friendship of Jesus. That is his task, and he
"will have become efficient in its accomplishment— so to bring
modern prodigals to themselves that they loathe the far country,
and arise, and go home to their Father's house.
Another gain will be that of a deeper appreciation of denomi-
national cooperation and an enlarged scope for the practice of
it. Sectarian rivalries and ecclesiastical trivialities vanish in the
trenches. Man-made walls between Christian brethren are crum-
bling. Petty partisanship becomes first ridiculous and then wicked
in the light of the universal church's ambition. "We need a
standard so universal," writes H. G. Wells, "that the plate-layer
may say to the barrister or the duchess, or the Red Indian to the
Limehouse sailor, or the Anzac soldier to the Sinn Feiner or the
Chinaman, 'What are we two doing for it.?' And to fill the place
of that 'It' no other idea is great enough or commanding enough,
but only the world Kingdom of God." The same buildings are
now serving congregations of Jews, Protestants and Romanists.
THE MINISTRY AND THE WAR 99
Instant calls come when rabbis, priests, rectors, and representa-
tives of every hue in the rainbow of Protestantism minister to men
of other creeds and of no creed. Partisan politics in the field of
pure religion are seen to be essentially irreligious ; and chaplains
of every ilk and kirk are working together like "Bill' and "Alf,"
two cockney soldiers, one of whom had lost a right arm and the
other a left. They always sat side by side at the C. C. S. concerts
"so as we can have a clap," as "Alf" put it. "Bill puts 'is 'and
out, an' I smacks it with mine." Such men cannot come home and
take part in the heresy trials and ecclesiastical hecklings of men
whom at heart they recognize as Christian brethren. It is per-
fectly safe to prophesy that there, will be more of church unity,
and possibly more of uniformity, so far as this is desirable, when
these apostles of hundreds of churches come home from the war.
With this enlarged cooperation will come also an enlarged ambi-
tion. The pastor who has been plodding along the familiar ways of
an uninspiring parish will never be content to suffer his people to
travel in the old ruts or to countenance out-worn and inefficient
methods. That way, he now knows, lies ministerial melancholia
and the present situation, something far worse than Lear's mad-
ness. His task, and that of his people, is nothing less than to
transform their portion of the world into heaven. Singing and
praying about it are good and necessary; but in the words of the
old negro spiritual, it is perfectly patent that "Eberybody talks
'bout heaben ain't a-gwine dah," and the work of the church is
to see to it that they go. Some of the strongest and most venture-
some among the clergy, unwilling to turn back to the safe life after
the thrill of the trenches, will seek adventure in pioneer work in
our own land and abroad. Home missions will come as a challenge
to men inured to danger and hardship. Foreign missions will have
a new and poignant meaning for all the world. We knew before
that the bubonic plague in Calcutta was a menace to San Fran-
cisco ; we know now that the cult of militarism in a single group
in Germany can crucify mankind. No chaplain will ever settle
100 RELIGION AND THE WAR
down into a parish as if it were a "pent-up Utica." No cultivation
of individual piety will atone for the failure to Christianize
society, leaven industry with the principles of Jesus, and convert
from its Machiavellian heathendom and Bismarckian brutality
the diplomacy of the old-time state. Nothing less than the
ambition to take the world and its kingdoms for Christ can ever
satisfy his soldiers ; not, like the Central Powers, in order that
they may be enslaved and exploited, but that they may know the
fullness of joy and of freedom, and possess the true riches of
that divine life which is life indeed.
Almost of necessity the experience at the front will simplify
and vitalize the minister's message. For many all discussion of
the future of unbaptized infants, and premillenialism, and the
verbal inspiration of the Pentateuch had long ago lost interest.
In the minds of others, matters regarded by some earnest Chris-
. tians as of vital importance, like the Virgin Birth and the physical
resurrection of Jesus, had ceased to function. To them Jesus
would still be the unique Son of God, the divine Saviour of the
world, whatever the method of his human generation; and he
would still be alive, their unseen friend and present helper,
whether or not his body had remained in the tomb. Belief or dis-
belief in such articles of faith would never transform a demon
into a saint or a saint into a demon. Even to those accepting
them, they had no visible effect upon character or upon the course
of ordinary daily life. No soldiers ever asked about such scholastic
problems as they faced going over the top on the morrow. In the
hospital they never mentioned them, as they lay lonely and fearful
on their beds of pain. But they did ask, or long to ask, had shyness
not prevented them, about the treasures for which the heart
hungers and to which religion alone holds the key.
"Dear Sir," wrote a wounded soldier to the chaplain of his
battalion; "I often used to wish that you would talk seriously
and privately to me about religion, though I never dared to ask
you, and I must admit that I seemed to be very antagonistic when
THE MINISTRY AND THE WAR 101
you did start." "I wish you'd tell me what you think about
it, padre," said another. "Is there anything really after-
wards ? . . . I'd like you to tell me as man to man what you really
think about it. Do we go on living afterwards in any sort of way
or — !" He struck a match to light a cigarette. A gust of wind,
which carried a gust of snow round our legs, blew the match out
again. I daresay it was that which suggested his next words :
"Or do we just go out.? I know the creed," he went on. ". . . But
that's not what I want. I want to know what you really believe
yourself, as a man, you know."
Is there a God, and can we actually lead men to experience
him and to grow like him.'^ Is there any power in Jesus to save
a brute and a drunkard, a selfish worldling and a contented prig,
not from a hell of fire after death from which he is snatched by
some theological transaction, but from his degradation and mean-
ness in the present, until he is fit to be a husband and a father,
a patriot and a friend .^^ Are the fruits of the Christian spirit
"love, joy, peace, long-suffering, goodness, meekness, faithful-
ness, and self-control," the qualities of character which alone can
make heaven anywhere, and without which a potential Paradise
would be transformed into an actual hell.'' Are the wages of sin
death, or does the good man simply lose a deal of fun and prove
himself to be a foolish prig and superstitious other- wo riding .?
Does death end all, or are there many mansions in the Father's
house? Such are the great questions; and to them Christianity
has very definite answers, capable of being tried out in experience.
In the past much of so-called religion has seemed to thoughtful
minds remote from the facts of life, unreal, a bit queer if not
abnormal. If the flames of war are purging it from such unreali-
ties and abnormalities, the facts which lie at the heart of the
world's faith are being saved, yet so as by fire. The Christianity
of the camp is no pious sentimentalism, no sweet dream or unvirile
worship of a "gentle Jesus." It is a living, indubitable experience,
full of strength and of joy. Men are fighting to the death a
102 RELIGION AND THE WAR
thought and a purpose in the German armies which Prince
Lichnowsky, their own ambassador to the British Court, charac-
terized as "perfidy and the sin against the Holy Ghost" ; and in
that fight they hunger and thirst for the power of a religion of
the Spirit, which — however the battle of bodies and of brute
force may be decided — in God's good time is bound to win the day.
The last effect of the war upon the work and message of the
minister will be to furnish it with a new dynamic. As he returns
from the battle with sin in the trenches, he will find in the same
battle at home William James' "moral equivalent for war." The
call to arms has revealed the fact, seen in the success of the
Student Volunteer Movement, that the church has not sufficiently
appealed to men's latent heroism. The ordinary individual has
revealed an enthusiastic readiness for high adventure and an
almost limitless capacity for self-sacrifice, qualities upon which
the work and preaching of the average parish made practically
negligible demands. There was a contrast as noticeable as it was
lamentable between the pompous phrases of certain militant
hymns, sung chiefly by the choir, and the lack of ethical passion
and aggressive righteousness on the part of the pews. There was
too little doing of brave deeds and too much flabby irresolution
and orthodox laziness. Christianity seemed to act as a narcotic
rather than a stimulant. Any preacher might say to any congre-
gation with perfect safety, "Ye have not yet resisted unto blood,
striving against sin."
For the chaplain fresh from the front all this will be changed.
Not only will he be the flaming apostle of a new enthusiasm; his
church will have been saved from the old lethargy and lukewarm-
ness of Laodicea, the minds of his people purged from the dolce
far niente pietism, which dreamed sweet dreams while the
wreckers of the world prepared for war. For today religion
stands revealed as the greatest of all adventures. Christianity is
history's crowning crusade. The greed, the brutality, the imbecile
and devilish lawlessness, which have revelled in an orgy of spiritual
THE MINISTRY AND THE WAR 103
vandalism, are not peculiar to war. They have long been with us,
in city and in country, in the slums and on the avenue, among
peoples supposed to be civilized and enjoying the blessings of an
era of prosperity and of peace. It was an amazed world, rudely
roused from its comfortable slumbers, which found these forces
organized for battle ; it will be a bloody and dishevelled but
determined and aggressive world that, when our men have laid
aside their khaki, will strive to hold them in the ranks of an
equally fearless and fighting army, which will never retreat from
its trenches until these enemies of the world's peace and happiness
are driven from the field. Men who hated dirt and discomfort,
blood and vermin, have endured and laughed at them for the sake
of their cause and their country. When the call comes to carry
on the same fight in the homeland, such heroic souls will scarcely
decline to sacrifice something of their peace and comfort, or to
attack the forces entrenched in saloon and dive and political cave
of Adullam, because in the struggle they may be shorn of delights
and dollars, know the shame and agony of temporary defeat, and
as victors find themselves with mire upon their garments and
blood upon their hands. "Never was there a religion more com-
bative than Christianity," wrote Bernhardi. That is false as the
apostle of carnage meant it ; but it is true to the disciple of Jesus,
who has heard Paul's summons to don the full panoply of the
Christian armor, and who so loves the Lord as to hate evil with
the just but terrible wrath of the Lamb. Here is a new dynamic,
an irresistible appeal, which should and must be utilized by the
minister. If the Christian Church is an army with the greatest
of fights on its hands, there will be a place for the soldier. With
the church service of the religious slacker he may be pardoned
if he declines to have anything to do.
T. R. Glover in "The Jesus of History" has said that the Chris-
tian conquered because he out-lived and out-thought and out-died
the pagan. It is beginning to dawn upon the ministry that we
must out-fight him, if he is to be conquered in our day. The clergy
104 RELIGION AND THE WAR
have seen their opportunity pictured in the words with which
John Masefield in "Gallipoli" has told the story of the final attack
upon Suvla Bay. "There was the storm," he writes, "there was
the crisis, the one picked hour, to which this death and agony . . .
had led. Then was the hour for the casting off of self, and a
setting aside of every pain and longing and sweet affection, a
giving up of all that makes a man to the something which makes
a race, and a going forth to death resolvedly to help out their
brothers high above in the shell bursts and the blazing gorse."
The thousands who are responding to that call are the priests
of today and the prophets of tomorrow. They can cry to us,
with their fellow soldiers, living and dead, in the words of
Lawrence Binyon :
O you that still have rain and sun.
Kisses of children and of wife.
And the good earth to tread upon,
And the mere sweetness that is life.
Forget not us who gave all these
For something dearer, and for you !
Think in what cause we crossed the seas !
. Remember, he who fails the challenge
Fails us, too.
Now in the hour that shows the strong —
The soul no evil powers affray —
Drive straight against embattled Wrong:
Faith knows but one, the hardest, way.
Endure; the end is worth the throw.
Give, give ; and dare, and again dare !
On, to the Wrong's great overthrow !
We are with you, of you; we the pain and
Victory share.
VI
THE EFFECT OF THE WAR UPON RELIGIOUS
EDUCATION
LUTHER ALLAN WEIGLE
The term "religious education" stands for two ideas that are
ultimately one: for the inclusion of religion in our educational
program, and for the use of educational methods in the propa-
gation of religion from generation to generation.
Over seventy years ago, Horace Bushnell pointed out the folly
of reliance upon the revival method of dealing with the children
of Christian homes, and urged the educational method of Chris-
tian nurture. He did more than any other one man to determine
the present trend in religious education. Yet his work was
prophetic ; it took fifty years more of "ostrich nurture," as he
called it, to reveal to Christian people generally the full truth
of his position.
The past twenty years, however, have witnessed a great move-
ment among the Protestant churches of America toward clearer
aims and better methods in religious education. A situation had
developed that bid fair to let religion drop out of the education
of American children. Changed social, economic and industrial
conditions had transferred to the school many of the educational
functions once fulfilled by the home, and had wrought a change
in the forms of family religion. The public schools had become
increasingly secular in aim, in control, and in material taught.
The development of science and philosophy in independence of
religion had made it possible for college students to get the idea
that religion is not a significant part of the life and culture of
106 RELIGION AND THE WAR
the time. The Sunday school, indeed, was at work, teaching
children of God and his will. But its curriculum was ungraded,
its teachers untrained, and its instruction limited to one period
of half an hour in each week.
Roughly speaking, the beginning of the present century may
be taken as the date when the Christian people of America began
to awake to the danger involved in this situation. As early as the
late eighties. President W. R. Harper, then Woolsey Professor
of Biblical Literature at Yale, had organized the American
Institute of Sacred Literature, and had begun to publish a graded
series of Inductive Studies in the Bible. In 1900, under his leader-
ship, the University of Chicago published the first of its present
series of Constructive Studies, which provides text-books for a
graded curriculum of religious education. In 1903, the Religious
Education Association was organized, its membership drawn
from the whole of the United States and Canada, and its purpose
declared to be threefold: "To inspire the educational forces of
our country with the religious ideal ; to inspire the religious forces
of our country with the educational ideal; and to keep before the
public mind the ideal of religious education, and the sense of its
need and value." In 1908, the International Sunday School Asso-
ciation authorized its Lesson Committee to construct and issue
a graded series of Sunday school lessons in addition to the uni-
form series which it had issued year after year since 1872. In
1910 the Sunday School Council of Evangelical Denominations
was organized, a mark of the more definite assumption by the
several denominations of responsibility for the educational work
of their Sunday schools and for the training of teachers. In 1912,
the Council of Church Boards of Education came into being,
which has devoted its energies thus far mainly to cooperative
effort in behalf of Christian colleges and for the religious welfare
of college and university students generally.
These are but a few outstanding factors in a movement greater
far than any single organization or group of organizations. There
EFFECT UPON RELIGIOUS EDUCATION 107
has been an awakening of the spirit of education in religion.
Sunday schools the country over have been graded, and here and
there week-day schools of religion have been begun ; problems of
curriculum, method and organization have been studied and
graded curricula devised; classes and schools for' the training
of teachers have been organized; and attempts of various sorts
have been made to correlate public and religious education.
Churches in general have come to see that they have an educational
as well as a religious function in the community, and that there
is a sense in which they share with the public school a common
task. The public school can teach the "three R's," the sciences,
arts and vocations ; the church must teach religion. Both are
needed if the education of our children is to be complete. Many
churches are employing paid teachers of religion and directors
of religious education. Courses in religious education have been
organized and professorships of religious education established
in colleges and theological seminaries. "The Educational Ideal
in the Christian Ministry" was the subject of the Lyman Beecher
Lectures on Preaching, in the Yale School of Religion, a few
years ago. The young men who are entering the Christian ministry
in these days are being trained, not simply to preach and to care
for a parish, but to teach and to direct the educational work of
a church.
The immediate effect of the war has been to retard this move-
ment in some degree. Preoccupation with the war itself and with
more immediately pressing needs, has made more difficult the
work of the churches in this as in other respects. Churches that
had planned new buildings for their schools are postponing their
erection till the war is over. Training classes for teachers are
harder to keep up. Ministers are going into war service ; and
those who stay at home are doing double work or more. Churches,
like business houses and factories, have found their organizations
broken by the departure of members of military age. Many of
their best teachers and leaders have gone to war; and it is not
108 RELIGION AND THE WAR
easy, in these days of urgency and stress, to discover others to
take their places.
It is probable, however, that a deeper effect of the war will
be to intensify our sense of the importance of religious education
and to clarify the church's educational program, in point both of
content and method. This conviction rests upon these funda-
mental facts : that the world is achieving democracy ; that it
believes in and relies upon education; that it is experiencing what
may prove to be a renewal of religion.
Education, democracy, religion — these three, we have long
professed and more or less fully believed, belong together. The
full life of each of the three is bound up in that of the other two.
Education without religion is incomplete and abortive; it falls
short of that life more abundant which is education's goal. Reli-
gion without education lacks intelligence and power, and condemns
itself to what Horace Bushnell called conquest from without, as
contrasted with growth from within.
Democracy without education cannot long hold together or be
saved from mediocrity and caprice. Education without democracy
perpetuates caste divisions, or else breeds discontent and class
hatred.
Democracy without religion is doomed to fail; and religion
without democracy cannot realize the Fatherhood of God and the
brotherhood of man.
These, I say, are familiar convictions. They are natural to
Protestantism; they have entered into the very making of
America. Yet just these old convictions are gaining a new force
and a deeper meaning in and through the experiences of these
years of war. The struggle for democracy is not only leading us
to a new comprehension of the meaning of democracy itself; it
is helping us to understand better both education and religion.
It does not lie within the limits of this paper to canvass the
wider and deeper meaning of democracy which is opening before
us. The messages and addresses of President Wilson have inter-
EFFECT UPON RELIGIOUS EDUCATION 109
preted that meaning not simply to America but to the world. No
one yet knows the full promise of life after the war, when Pan-
Germanism shall have been not only balked but destroyed. The
democracy for which we fight to make the world safe will be a
chastened, changed, completer democracy. It will be a democracy
between nations as well as within nations, for the doctrine of the
irresponsible, beyond-moral sovereignty of the state must return
to the perdition whence it came. It will be a democracy applied
more fully to the whole of life, social, economic and industrial as
well as political. It will be a democracy of completer citizenship,
that gives place to women as to men. It will be a democracy of
duties as well as of rights.
The world is acquiring a new conscience. Just as the nineteenth
century made slavery abhorrent to the moral sense of men in
general, the twentieth century will likely be looked back to as the
time when the world's conscience decided that the exploitation
of man by man is wrong. The general moral sense of men has not
been over-tender on this point hitherto. They have checkmated
the exploiter if they could, as they did checkmate Napoleon, but
they have not always, or even usually, looked upon him as a
wrong doer. It required Germany's attempts at conquest and
subjugation to wake the world to the absolute wrong of that
monstrous thing — that one man should use another as a mere
means to his own pleasure or aggrandizement, or that one people
should so determine the destiny of another people.
Here lies the supreme moral issue of the war. Shall the world,
which has become a neighborhood, organize itself into a great
community of mutual respect, good will and brotherhood, or shall
its structure be that of restless orders of exploiters and ex-
ploited.'' It is over-f amiliar ; yet, lest we forget, hear some random
verses from various P^n-Germanist scriptures : "Not to live and
let live, but to live and direct the lives of others, that is
power." "To compel men to a state of right, to put them under
the yoke of right by force, is not only the right but the sacred
110 RELIGION AND THE WAR
duty of every man who has the knowledge and the power." "The
German race is called to bind the earth under its control, to
exploit the natural resources and the physical powers of man,
to use the passive races in subordinate capacity for the develop-
ment of its Kultur." "Life is essentially appropriation, injury,
conquest of the strange and weak, suppression, severity, obtrusion
of its own forms, incorporation at the least, and in its mildest
form exploitation."
Contrast with this the words of Jesus : "Ye know that they
who are accounted to rule over the Gentiles lord it over them;
and their great ones exercise authority over them. But it is not
so among you : but whosoever would become great among you,
shall be your minister; and whosoever would be first among you,
shall be servant of all." The present struggle is not merely
between democracy and autocracy as rival systems of govern-
ment. It is a struggle between opposed philosophies of life.
Nietzsche was more consistent than the Kaiser who has followed
him, for Nietzsche did not claim to be a Christian. He frankly
proposed a "transvaluation of values" which would do away with
the religion of Jesus as fit only for slaves. That proposed trans-
valuation of values the Kaiser is trying to bring about, however
piously he may lie about it or claim God's partnership in his
enterprise.
Prophecies are always hazardous ; never more so than now. The
outlook for religion has been discussed both by puzzled pacifists
and by facile forecasters of the fulfilment of their own wishes.
One may perhaps question whether there will be any one trend
of the churches in the immediate future. Yet this is clear : that
the interests of democracy and the interests of true religion are
ultimately one. We may confidently expect the churches of to-
morrow to realize this more fully, not simply in the ideals they
preach, but in the temper and quality of their own life. One effect
of the war upon religious education, undoubtedly, will he to make
it more democratic in aim, content and method.
EFFECT UPON RELIGIOUS EDUCATION 111
Education in general will become more democratic. The expe-
riences of these years are helping us to understand education and
to estimate its values. Our eyes are being opened to the diametri-
cal difference between democratic and undemocratic education.
We have come to see that the latter may be as great a menace to
the world as the former is a vital resource.
The time was, not long ago, when Germany was deemed the
school-master of the world. German efficiency and German
obedience to authority were seen to be the products of German
teachers and German schools. In methods of teaching and in
school organization, as well as in ideals of scholarship, the world
sought to follow Germany. If here and there one objected that
German education seemed to sacrifice the individual to the system
and to beget an obedience too implicit, we felt that it was only
because the Germans are such docile, pious, family folk, and we
rather chided ourselves for our rougher ways and for that self-
will that made us unholily thankful that we had been born in a
freer land.
But now the character of German education stands revealed.
We are no longer as hopeful as we once were of the possible suc-
cess of an appeal to the German people over the heads of their
military masters. They seem on the whole to like the kind of
government they have, and to want to be exploited by Prussia.
They are perilously near to what Mr. H. G. Wells has given as
his definition of damnation — satisfaction with existing things
when existing things are bad. They are experiencing what Mr.
Edmond Holmes has called the Nemesis of docility.
And it is their system of education that has brought about
this result. If the German people are damned to satisfaction with
irresponsible autocracy and fatuous docility, their schools have
damned them. For a century, German education has been at work
to breed the present world-menace. The German schools have made
the German people what they are. They have sought to develop
habits of mind rather than free intelligence ; they have valued
112 RELIGION AND THE WAR
efficiency in a given task above initiative and power to think for
oneself. They have set children in vocational grooves and molded
them to pattern. They have educated the few to exert authority,
and have trained the many to obey. They have nurtured the
young upon hatred of other peoples ; and, much as the Jews of
old awaited the Messiah, they have lived and labored in expecta-
tion of "The Day." They have exalted Vaterland into a religion,
and have degraded God into a German tutelary deity. The German
schools have welded the German people into a compact, efficient,
military machine. The desires of the State are their desires ; the
Kaiser's will is their will.
We have been following false gods, therefore, in so far as we
have sought to shape our schools upon German models. "The
German teacher teaches," wrote one of our great educators some
years ago, in criticism of our American way of giving to children
text-book assignments which they are expected to study for
themselves ; yet the text-book method, fumblingly as we have so
often used it, gives better training in initiative and intelligence
than the German teacher's dictation methods. Professor Charles
H. Judd has recently pointed out the confusion and waste of
time brought about by the fact that our eight-year elementary
school was modeled upon the German Volksschule, which is a
school for the lower classes, and not intended to lead on to higher
education. Our purpose, on the contrary, is to maintain for every
American child an open ladder through elementary school, sec-
ondary school and college to the university; and to that purpose
a six-year period of elementary education is much better
adapted — a plan which many of our school systems have adopted
within the last decade. We need better vocational education in
this country and better systems of vocational guidance; but we
are becoming clear that these must not be of the German sort,
that compel a choice before the teens.
Education in a democracy must be education for democracy;
and education for democracy must itself be democratic in content
EFFECT UPON RELIGIOUS EDUCATION 113
and method. Such education practices and aims at intelligence
rather than habit of mind. It trains its pupils to think and choose
for themselves. It prizes initiative above conformity, responsibility
above mere efficiency, social good will above unthinking obedience.
Such education is more difficult, of course, than education of
the undemocratic type. We shall at times be tempted to fall back
into the ways of the German schools in some respect or other,
because they represent the line of least resistance in education.
Specious arguments will be presented in favor of these ways by
short-sighted "practical" men. Education of the German type is
more efficient, they will say ; it is more direct and practical ; it
brings more immediate results. It is more patriotic, moreover,
they will insist ; it better serves the ends of authority ; it makes
people more prosperous and contented, each in his appointed
niche. But such arguments, we may well hope, will no longer win
the uncritical assent that they have sometimes found. German
education may be more efficient in the fulfilment of its end than
American education — ^but what an end it has sought and reached !
In the moment of our temptation to undemocratic short cuts in
education, we shall henceforth look to the Germany of yesterday
and today, and shall be strengthened to resist. Her ways are
not our ways. Her schools cannot be ours. Education must mean
to America something quite different from what it has meant to
Germany.
The contrast between democratic and undemocratic types of
education is as great with respect to religion as with respect to
the rest of life. Germany has been most careful to maintain reli-
gion as a subject of instruction in her schools. But the content
of this instruction in religion has been intellectualistic and
formal. It has pressed upon German children a body of historical
facts, moral precepts and theological dogmas ; but it has not
begotten the freedom of inward spiritual initiative. State-
controlled, it has bent religion to state uses, and has in time
114 RELIGION AND THE WAR
begotten a generation who can believe in the "good old German
God."
Religious education in America has been and will be more
democratic. Horace Bushnell used to say that the aim of all
education is the emancipation of the child. We teach and train
our children in order that they may in due time be set free from
paternal discipline. We fail in the religious education of our
children if our teaching does not result in their final emancipation
from a religion of mere authority and convention and their
growth into a religion of the spirit. We aim, not simply to win
their assent to a given body of beliefs or to attach them to the
church as a saving institution, but to help them to become men
and women who can think and choose for themselves. The Prot-
estant principle of the universal priesthood of believers involves
democracy in religion. And just as democracy can look forward
only to failure unless it can educate its citizens, Protestantism
will fail unless it can educate men and women fit to stand on their
own feet before God, able to understand his will and ready to
enter intelligently and effectively into the common human enter-
prises of Christian living.
A second effect of the war, closely related to this, is that reli-
gious education will concern itself more directly with life, and
will put less emphasis upon dogma, especially upon those refine-
ments of creed which have operated divisively in the life of the
Christian Church. Its method will be more vital, and less intel-
lectualistic. Instead of proceeding upon the assumption that true
belief comes first and that right life is the expression of prior
belief, it will recognize that adequate insight and true belief are
more often the result of right life and action. "If any man willeth
to do his will, he shall know of the teaching." If this be true of
adults, it is even more true of children. Our plans of religious
education will first seek to influence the life, and will deal with
beliefs as an explanation of life's purposes and motives and an
interpretation of its realities and values.
EFFECT UPON RELIGIOUS EDUCATION 115
If they will realize this primacy of life, the Christian churches
stand in the presence of a great opportunity. The experiences of
these years have shown us how much more of Christian living
there is in the world than bears the label. Religion is being tested,
stripped of sham and embroidery, and reduced to reality. And
there are being revealed breadths and depths of real religion that
we had not understood. There is a vast amount of inarticulate
religion actually moving the lives of men which the churches may
lift to the level of intelligent and articulate belief if they will but
approach it with understanding and a willingness to be taught
as well as to teach.
In Jesus' story of the last judgment, there is surprise all
around. Both those on the right hand and those on the left stand
fully revealed to themselves for the first time, it seems. "Lord,
when saw we thee . . ." they cry on both sides. This war has
constituted such a judgment day. A great moral issue has stood
out, sharp, clean-cut and clear. It has set men on the right hand
and on the left. It brooks no moral hyphenates ; it permits no half-
allegiance, either to country or to God. Beneath all pretense and
profession, it lays bare the real man. It reveals the hidden quali-
ties of nations. There have been many surprises. It has shown far
more of evil in the world that we had deemed possible; but it has
shown, too, far more of goodness and courage and true religion
than we had thought was there.
Evil is here— real, powerful, poignant, and more unutterably
bad than the farthest stretch of imagination had hitherto con-
ceived that evil could be. Since the world began it was never so
full of pain and suffering in body and mind, of needless death and
of mothers brave but broken-hearted. And most of this is the
result of supreme moral evil, the work of a power deliberately
seeking world-domination and exploitation of the rest of man-
kind, even though it involve the extermination of other peoples,
determined to use any methods that bid fair to bring about this
116 RELIGION AND THE WAR
result, and organizing deceit and lust and murder as the instru-
ments of S chrecMichkeit .
But goodness is here too — strong, calm, cheerful, brave, self-
devoting goodness. These years of war have revealed to us thej
supreme power of the human spirit to endure pain, to resist evil,
and to count all else naught for sake of the right in which it
believes and the good upon which its heart is set.
This goodness does not always call itself Christian, be it
granted, or even know itself to be such. A chaplain in the English ■
army writes: "There is in the army a very large amount of truef
religion. It is not, certainly, what people before the war were
accustomed to call religion, but perhaps it may be nearer the real
. thing. It is startling, no doubt, and humiliating to find out how
very little hold traditional Christianity has upon men. ... So
far as I am able to estimate, we are faced now with this situation,
a Christian life combined with a pagan creed. For while men's i
conduct and their outlook are to a large extent unconsciously!
Christian, their creed (or what they think to be their creed) most
emphatically is not. . . . Nevertheless I feel that out here one
is very near to the spirit of Christ. There is a general wholesome-
ness of outlook, a sense of justice, honor and sincerity, a readiness
to take what comes and carry on, a power of endurance genuinelyl
sublime, a light-heartedness and cheeriness (nearly always, I
believe, put on for the sake of other people), a generosity and
comradeship which are obviously Christ-like."^
There is strength and goodness at home, too. We had become
accustomed in late years to hear it said that the churches were
losing their hold upon the people of America. Whether or not that
be true, the war has begun to reveal to America, as it has to our
Allies, the depth and power of the real moral and spiritual life
beneath the surface. Granted that we are witnessing no wide-
spread evangelistic stirrings, no indications of a great revival.
It seems probable, indeed, that the itinerant evangelists who had
1 "The Church in the Furnace," pp. 53-54.
EFFECT UPON RELIGIOUS EDUCATION 117
lately become the fashion among us, have passed the heyday of
their power. Neither are the "prophetic" folk who misunderstand
their Bibles so persistently and look so confidently for the second
coming of the Lord, winning an assent at all commensurate with
their effort. But there is a vast amount of quiet, sensible, devoted
Christian living in America. There is more of genuine religion
among us than we had realized. That religion, for the most part
inarticulate, and hardly knowing itself to be Christian, is finding
expression in action. The spirit in which America entered the war ;
the high moral aims which President Wilson, interpreter yet
leader of his people, has set before the world; the quiet, matter-of-
fact and matter-of-duty way in which the principle of selective
service was accepted and carried out as democracy's method of
mobilizing its power; the cooperation and the giving; the uncom-
plaining solemn pride of homes that have already made the
supreme sacrifice — these are but the first evidences in America
of a moral virility, a real religion, which, we may confidently hope,
will strengthen us, with our Allies, not only to carry on to
victory, but to resist the victor's temptations.
Will this deep, elemental, common religion of America come to
understand itself, and to recognize its fundamentally Christian
character.? The answer to that question lies Avith the churches.
And there are clear indications that many of them, at least, will
not fail to realize and meet their opportunity.
j Not that we shall do without dogmas. Religion cannot maintain
I itself as mere ethics. It is a way of living; but a way of living that
j justifies itself by a way of believing about God and duty and
j immortality. The point is, that in the natural order of growth
i life has a certain priority to belief, action to full understanding.
And that certainly is the order of growth involved in the present
situation.
I As the churches share in the expanding and deepening common
life and bring their beliefs to bear upon it, in interpretation of
its ultimate motives and hopes, there will be growth on both sides.
118 RELIGION AND THE WAR
Men elementally Christian in action will come to know what they
believe; and on the other hand the churches themselves will dis-
cern more clearly which of their customs and beliefs are relevant
to the real issues of life and function in essential ways. Our creeds
will become simpler, but more vital. And that will make possible
a closer unity of the churches. One may well question both the
possibility and the desirability of a complete obliteration of
denominational lines. We may always have and need denomi- •
national loyalty just as we shall always have and need patriotism.
But denominational loyalties can be incorporated into a higher
loyalty to the inclusive fellowship of Christ's Church as a whole,
just as- national loyalties, we now see, can and must be incor-
porated into a higher loyalty to humanity which will be given
expression and body in a world-wide League of Nations.
We may expect religious education after the war, again, to he
more fully Christian in its conception of God as well as in its view
of life.
Jesus, so far as we know, never used the word "democracy."
Yet just such a democratic world-community as we are now begin-
ning in a practical way to understand and strive for, he taught
and lived and died for. Christianity's ultimate ideal is no longer
a mere ideal. It has become an actual political and social program I
and possibility.
"The brotherhood of mankind must no longer be a fair but
empty phrase," wrote President Wilson to Russia ; "it must be
given a structure of force and reality. The nations must realize
their common life and effect a workable partnership to secure that
life against the aggressions of autocratic and self-pleasing
power." The world's choice is between "Utopia or hell," is Mr.
Wells' striking phrase, which he expounds in a remarkable article
in The New Republic on "The League of Nations." "Existing
states," he says, "have become impossible as absolutely independ-
ent sovereignties. The new conditions bring them so close together
and give them such extravagant powers of mutual injury that
EFFECT UPON RELIGIOUS EDUCATION 119
they must either sink national pride and dynastic ambitions in
subordination to the common welfare of mankind or else utterly
shatter one another. It becomes more and more plainly a choice
between the League of free nations and famished men looting in
search of non-existent food amidst the burning ruins of our world.
In the end I believe the common sense of mankind will prefer a
revision of its ideas of nationality and imperialism to the latter
alternative."
Mr. Wells is right. The proposal to establish a league of nations
presents itself in our day as a matter of plain common sense. Yet
if there is one lesson written with perfect clearness on the pages
of history, it is that common sense alone cannot save the world
from the tragedies of error, self-will and sin, and that common
sense motived by self-interest will in the end defeat itself. In his
Lyman Beecher Lectures on Preaching, Dr. Henry Sloane Coffin
has called our attention to the remarkable prophecy of the present
world war made by Frederick W. Robertson in a sermon preached
at Brighton on January 11, 1852, addressed to a generation that
glorified commerce as the guarantor of world unity and soiight
to establish morality upon a basis of enlightened self-interest.
The passage cannot be quoted too often, nor too firmly impressed
upon the minds of the present generation, for there were those
among us who, even up until the invasion of Belgium, kept pro-
testing that there could be no war in a world so bound together
by economic and commercial ties, and there are those now who
find in such interests the only durable basis for world reconstruc-
tion. "Brethren," said Robertson, "that which is built on selfish-
ness cannot stand. The system of personal interest must be
shriveled to atoms. Therefore, we who have observed the ways of
God in the past are waiting in quiet but awful expectation until
He shall confound this system as He has confounded those which
have gone before, and it may be effected by convulsions more ter-
rible and bloody than the world has yet seen. While men are
talking of peace and of the great progress of civilization, there
120 RELIGION AND THE WAR
is heard in the distance the noise of arms, gathering rank on rank,
east and west, north and south, and there come rolHng toward
us the crushing thunders of universal war. . . . There is but one
other system to be tried, and that is the cross of Christ — the
system that is not to be built upon selfishness nor upon blood, not
upon personal interest, but upon love,"
If Wells has stated the world's alternative, Robertson has
shown the way of final and permanent right decision. To common
sense must be added love. The brotherhood of man must be estab-
lished upon a common acknowledgment of the Fatherhood of God.
The world community can ultimately be motived by nothing less
than the life within the hearts of men of the God whom they come
to know through Jesus Christ.
This means both that the world must become more religious,
and that religion must become more fully Christian. We can no
longer believe in any God less great or less good than the God
whom Jesus Christ reveals. However much it may be tempted
to the lower view from time to time, we may reasonably expect
that henceforth the world is done with belief in a mere tribal or
national God. The supreme and inmost bond of the world com-
munity can be nothing other and nothing less than the Father of
our Lord Jesus Christ, who regards all men as his children and
who steadfastly seeks, with them and through them, the good
of all.
Religious education after the war will be more democratic,
more immediately concerned with life, more fully Christian. In
so interpreting the present situation, we have had in mind espe-
cially the more or less formal religious education in the church
and the church school. The same tendencies will influence the more
informal and indirect religious education of children in the family.
We have reason, indeed, to hope for a strengthening of family ties
and a renewal of family religion. The sacrifices of these days are
rendering relationships very precious that in a more careless, un-
thinking time we had accepted as a matter of course. And it is
EFFECT UPON RELIGIOUS EDUCATION 121
entirely possible that victory may wait until in America, as in
England and France, there are few families that do not live in
closer fellowship with the unseen world because their sons are
there. The gradual disintegration of family life which the past half
century has witnessed was but incidental to a rapid change in
social, economic and industrial conditions. There is reason to
expect that the family will so adjust its life to these conditions as
to maintain its character as a social group, wherein genuine
democracy and true religion may be propagated from generation
to generation by that sharing of interests, occupations and affec-
tions which is the most potent and vital of all educational methods.
That it should so adjust itself and so fulfill its primary educa-
tional function, should be a matter of the utmost concern to both
Church and State, for it is hard to conceive how either the Chris-
tian religion or a democratic society could maintain itself without
the aid of the family.
VII
FOREIGN MISSIONS AND THE WAR, TODAY
AND TOMORROW
HARLAN P. BEACH
It might seem to the uninformed reader that foreign missions and
war have nothing in common; for "what communion hath light
with darkness? And what concord hath Christ with Belial?"
Fuller knowledge of the varied work of missions and of its many
helpful contributions to African, Asiatic and Oceanic peoples
would remove this misapprehension. Professor Coolidge, of Har-
vard, suggests some important points of contact between missions
and the less developed races, particularly of the enterprise as
carried on today in contrast with its earlier objectives/ How
the races of mission fields that have been thus affected are con-
tributing to the war at home and in the trenches. Dr. Arthur J.
Brown has described most vividly in a paragraph upon the
cosmopolitan composition of the allied forces at the front. ^
Missionary periodical files abound in references to the war's in-
roads upon missionary enterprises, and to the important medi-
ating work of missions. A great volume of testimony would show
that while missionaries still regard the upbuilding of the mind
and the saving of souls as fundamentally desirable, the enterprise
affects every phase of the personal and community life of the
peoples to which it ministers.
Statistics of the missionary situation at the beginning of the
war reveal the extent and scope of present-day foreign missions.
1 A. C. Coolidge, "The United States as a World Power," p. 329.
2 F. Lynch, "President Wilson and the Moral Aims of the War," New York,
1918, pp. 50-51.
FOREIGN MISSIONS AND THE WAR 123
In the latest full collection of such statistics,^ one finds a series
of tables devoted to "General and Evangelistic" data, to "Educa-
tional" activities of missions, and to "Medical and Philanthropic"
enterprises conducted by missionaries. It is impracticable to
present the totals of the seventy-two columns, suggestive of the
many subordinate activities of missions ; a few items will indicate
the more important contacts established between the Protestant
churches of Christendom and the fifty fields which their missions
have touched in many helpful ways. In these mission countries 351
Protestant societies had as their foreign staff 24,039 missionaries,
including 13,719 women workers and wives. Stationed at 4,094
towns and villages, they directed the activities of a native staff
of 109,099 and of 26,210 churches, the communicant membership
of which was 2,408,900, with 1,423,314 others under religious
instruction. In their elementary schools were 1,699,775 pupils,
while in secondary schools were 218,207, and in the colleges and
universities 15,636 students were enrolled. In theological and
Bible training institutions 10,588 were preparing for the Chris-
tian leadership of the churches. Their industrial schools had an
enrolment of 10,125, and their normal students numbered 7,504.
Mission hospitals and dispensaries were presided over by 1,589
physicians and trained nurses, aided by a native staff of 2,336.
In the year reported, 3,107,755 individuals were treated, in single
visits or during prolonged residence in hospitals. Orphanages
numbered 245, with 9,736 inmates, and 39 leper homes sheltered
1,880 unfortunate outcasts. Such an exhibit, incomplete as it is,
will indicate the manifold tendrils which have bound Christian
missionaries to the hearts of the nations ; and if Roman Catholic
statistics for this date were available,* the importance of missions
as a steadying and reconstructive force at present and in post-
bellum readjustments would be even more manifest.
3 Beach and St. John, "World Statistics of Christian Missions," 1916, pp.
59-61.
4 For the year 1913, see P. K. Streit, "Atlas Hierarchicus," summarized in
"World Statistics of Christian Missions," pp. 103-104.
124 RELIGION AND THE WAR
In discussing the war as affecting missions, only a few out-
standing facts can be mentioned. Practically all of the mission
world has taken sides in the tremendous conflict, most of these
nations declaring for the Allies. Many of them have generously
contributed the means and man force to hasten the day of peace.
In 1917 nearly half a million from India were enlisted, of whom
285,200 were combatants and the rest were employed behind the
lines in multifarious tasks. As a result of the recent conference
at Delhi, it is hoped that another half million may be secured this
year,^ thus giving that Empire the numerical precedence among
Britain's dominions. From North China alone some 135,000
laborers are serving the British forces in varied ways. "They
come, also, from Morocco, Algeria, Tunis and the jungles of
Senegal ; from Madagascar and Tahiti, and several hundred thou-
sand from French Indo-China and China proper. Black, yellow
and white, East and West, educated and ignorant, progressive
and backward, are laboring side by side."^ So important is it that
these polyglot assistants and warriors should be cared for in a
Christian way that many missionaries have been called away from
their distant fields to a manifold ministry to their adopted
countrymen behind the trenches. Many of these recruits are
Christian volunteers, especially so in the Indian contingent.
The effects of this European Armageddon upon the mission
fields themselves has been less harmful than had been expected
and more advantageous than was anticipated. German missions
have been affected most among the Protestants, and among Roman
Catholics France has been the chief sufferer. In the latter country
there is no exemption for either Protestant or Catholic ministers
of military age. Missions-Direktor Axenfeld of Berlin, in a recent
publication,^ states that German Protestant work in Africa has
, 5 London Times, May 16, 1918.
6 Personal letter from an investigator in France, May 29, 1918.
7 "Das Kriegserlebnis der deutschen Mission in I^ichte der Heiligen Schrift"
as quoted in The Missionary Review of the World for June, 1918, pp. 433-424.
FOREIGN MISSIONS AND THE WAR 125
been practically disrupted, in India crippled by enforced with-
drawals, in smaller British colonies similarly weakened by the
expulsions, and permitted to go on with restrictions in other parts
of Asia and North America. According to later information, about
400 German Protestant missionaries and missionary candidates
are in military service, 68 are in hospitals, 120 are prisoners of
war in various countries, and about 1,000 missionaries are still
working in various fields. Referring to the Zeitschrift filr Mis-
sionswissenschaft, in the files for 1915 and 1916, one learns that
3,000 Catholic missionaries are estimated to have been called to
the colors, and that in 1916 there were 2,336 serving in the army.
French Protestant missions, with a much smaller force abroad,
have suffered in similar proportion ; so that in French and German
mission fields the personnel has been greatly reduced, limited, or
has been obliterated entirely. British missions have likewise sent
to the colors many of their best men from the field and the candi-
date list, while a number have been transferred from field service
to work among their constituency in Mesopotamian and French
camps. Relatively few native Christian leaders have enlisted.
The Christian communities in mission lands have suffered in
various ways through the war. The removal of supervising mis-
sionaries in part — almost wholly in the case of German socie-
ties — has left many flocks without their chief shepherds. Great
as has been this loss, it has wrought a greater benefit in churches
whose native leaders thus have been brought to the front and
have proved to their congregations that the church was so far
indigenous as to survive the withdrawal of missionaries. To help
their pastors, the people have undertaken responsibilities which
without this necessity would not have been borne, thus developing
unsuspected gifts and engendering hope for the future. During
the war, evangelistic campaigns, largely participated in by the
native church, have been carried on in a number of countries and
with marked success.
Participation in the great conflict by the Christians and non-
126 RELIGION AND THE WAR
Christians of mission lands has had mixed results. On the one
hand, any delusion as to the civilization and attitudes of so-called
Christian countries has been dissipated by the undreamed of
savagery and international hatred which they have seen. This has
led to opposition to missionaries on the fields, especially in Persia
and in Morocco, where a Moslem said to Dr. Kerr: "Why don't
you turn your attention to Christians.? With all our faults, we
have some religion left, but the Christians have none." On the
other hand, it has revealed to the peoples so aiding their Euro-
pean rulers their real values to them. This has given to Indians
especially a renewed determination to secure from England quid
pro quo in the form of greater political liberty and social privi-
leges. While this has been especially emphasized by Moslems and
Indians, it has affected the Christians with so great a spirit of
nationalism that the recent All-India Christian Council sent a
deputation to the Viceroy requesting the Government to recognize
the 3,876,203 Christians of the 1911 census as a community de-
serving political representation in the Imperial Legislative
Council. The increasing demand of all Indians for greater freedom
led Parliament to send out a Commission to investigate the situa-
tion; and while their report at time of writing has not been pub-
lished in full, the people of that Empire are assured of many
alleviations of existing disabilities. The independent Powers of
the Far East also will be benefited in many ways through their
cooperation in the war. A greatly feared backset to the cause of
missions in China, through the exposure to fierce temptations and
from the harsh treatment unavoidable in war of its labor contin-
gent in France, has been met in part by sending to those camps
many successful missionaries from North China, as well as a dele-
gation of Christian Chinese studying in American institutions.
In Mesopotamia, also, similar work undertaken by Indian mis-
sionaries will do much to lessen the ill effects of the war.
Another resultant of the unprecedented conflict comes from
the ethical and religious reactions occasioned by seas of Christian
FOREIGN MISSIONS AND THE WAR 127
blood. An old convert in India pathetically asked his pastor if
the great fire in the West were still burning, and a South Sea
islander stood bewildered and shaken when he learned that the
war was primarily between Christian nations. Keen Japanese were
at first ready to declare Christianity a failure because of this
stupendous crime of Christendom ; but their maturer thought and
the increasing barbarity in German initiative has convinced them
that instead of its proving the bankruptcy of Christianity, to
quote Secretary Oldham, "the War has shown the bankruptcy of
a society which has refused to accept and apply the principles
of Christianity in social, national and international affairs. As
has been well said, 'Christianity has not been tried and found
wanting ; it has been found difficult and never tried.' "® So con-
trary is it to Christian teachings that for a time the churches
in one district in China set apart a day each week for special
prayer that this demoniacal evil might be divinely conquered.
But it is more than a problem of Christianity. The Moslem
world has been fighting against itself. The Jihad, declared by
the Sheikh-ul-Islam and the Sultan of Turkey most solemnly in
November, 1915, failed to call to arms a body of fifty millions
of fanatical Mohammedans, as had been fervently hoped would
be the case. "There was no shock, since there was no sympathetic
response. Protests were made by the Moslems of Turkey, while
the eighty millions under British control proclaimed their un-
shaken loyalty; and from Persia, Morocco, Egypt, India, Russia,
Algeria and other Moslem countries, Turkey was taken severely
to task for forming an alliance with two Christian Powers in a
conflict with other Christian nations. . . . Mohammedans are in
despair especially since, as a last fatal blow, the Arabs have
arisen in open rebellion against Turkey, seizing the sacred places
of Islam, and repudiating the right to the office of caliph or of
the sultan of Turkey."^ Similarly an Arabic periodical published
8 J. H. Oldham, "The World and the Gospel," p. 300.
9 J. L. Barton in Missionary Ammunition, Number One, 1916, p. 19.
128 RELIGION AND THE WAR
in Zanzibar says : "The pillars of the East are tottering, its
thrones are being destroyed, its power is being shattered and its
supremacy is being obliterated. The Moslem world is divided
against itself.'"°
But what have been the effects of this war upon the home base
of missions? The financial drafts made by the governments and
voluntary organizations of warring nations upon their peoples
and the increased cost of everything have affected the treasuries
of some of the smaller societies unfavorably. For the most part,
however, the mission boards have not only met their expenses but
in many cases receipts have been larger than ever before. The
contributions thus given have called attention to missions as
being both worthy and indispensable elements in the world situa-
tion, and hence necessitating their support. Perhaps this is felt
most generally among friends of British missions.
Man power causes the societies greater difficulty. Practically
the entire German force has been sent from India, or else interned,
and to fill their places has made new demands upon other nation-
alities. The depleted ranks of French societies have not been filled.
Great Britain needs all her men for the trenches and has been
sorely pressed in trying to supply the foreign fields with the
workers absolutely required. Even the United States, since her
entry into the war, is experiencing difficulty in keeping missionary
candidates from going to the front in Europe instead of re-
enforcing the thin Asiatic and African battle lines. Hope for
improvement in this recruiting is slight, since the call to arms has
laid strongest hold upon college and university men. Thus in 1915,
out of 52,000 students in German universities, 41,000 were under
arms ; in France all students except those physically unfit were
called out ; in Great Britain and Ireland about 50 per cent of the
male students were in the army or navy, in Canada 40 per cent,
and in Australia 30 per cent.^^ In the United States volunteering
10 Missionary Review of the World, January, 1917, p. 4.
11 International Review of Missions, April, 1916, p. 183.
FOREIGN MISSIONS AND THE WAR 129
and the draft have emptied the colleges and universities of prac-
tically all the choicest men of twenty-one and upward. If this
continues long, an interim must ensue before another college
generation furnishes a sufficient number of missionary candidates.
Yet it may be expected that the present devotion to a cause that
ends so commonly in death or lifelong crippling will end forever
the old excuse urged against missionary enlistment, that the ser-
vice is a hard one and often fatal, in certain unheathful countries.
Men will join the colors of the Prince of Peace and of Life even
more willingly than they now march under the banners of destruc-
tion and death in the hope of establishing once more justice,
righteousness and lasting freedom in the earth.
A happy eifect of the present stress is found in the growing
rapprochement between the missions of a given national group,
and to a less extent between those of different nations. This is
due to the necessity for cooperation in order to make a reduced
force serve for the needs of an increasing work. In a few cases
already a desire to economize resources has led to readjustment
of fields ; in others to a temporary filling of vacant places by
missionaries of a different denomination or nationality. The home
constituencies are thus being taught the beautiful lesson of the
trenches as related to true brotherhood and essential Christianity.
Perhaps one of the best discussions of this war as affecting the
international and interconfessional relationships of missions is
that of Dr. J. Schmidlin, a Roman Catholic professor of theology
in the University of Miinster, found in The Constructive Quarterly
for December, 1915, from which we quote two sentences: "Thus
that which has served to separate missionaries who were comrades
in belief and confession — national solidarity and love of country-
has also united and reconciled children of the same country who
were separated in their belief. Surmounting all barriers of dogma
and church polity, men have learned to love and cherish one
another, yes, even to recognize that in spite of all that separates
us there is much also that binds us together."
130 RELIGION AND THE WAR
Turning now from the effect of the war upon missions, a few
paragraphs may be devoted to considering post-b,ellum recon-
struction in mission lands. The Germans, even more than the
Allies, are diligently studying the many problems and possibilities
of changes necessitated by the readjustments that must surely
come. The economic waste of the past four years is almost incon-
ceivably great ; and to restore this waste puts upon every nation
an amount of production vastly greater than any known in the
past. Raw material, freedom of the seas that the manufacturing
countries may buy from every land and carry back for sale and
distribution the manufactured products, a new enlistment of labor
in countries where climate and primitive living make work irk-
some and unnecessary, an uplift in desires and ideals that new
markets may be created, increasing intelligence and friendliness
so that cooperation may be willing and profitable — these are some
of the essentials of progress after the war.
In earlier cognate discussions, men like Captain Mahan have
emphasized the importance of eastward and westward movements
in the temperate zone, while others of Benjamin Kidd's school
have insisted no less strongly upon the importance of the Tropics
and the consequent north and south line of industrial life. A score
of years ago nearly. Professor Reinsch, in his "World Politics,"
startled many American readers by his insistence upon the
importance of the undeveloped and unoccupied tropical regions
of the globe, mainly in South America and Africa. Even more t
insistently Kidd's "Control of the Tropics" had, two years before,
magnified the same zone, but more particularly the densely peopled ,
tracts with their varied possibilities of production and exploita-f
tion. In a recent article by J. A, R. Marriott, M.P., entitled
"Welt-Politik," General Smuts of Africa is thus quoted: "For-
merly we did not fully appreciate the Tropics as in the economy
of civilization. It is only quite recently that people have come to
realize that without an abundance of raw material which the
Tropics alone can supply, the highly developed industries of
FOREIGN MISSIONS AND THE WAR 131
today would be impossible. Vegetable and mineral oils, cotton,
sisal, rubber, jute and similar products in vast quantities are
essential for the industrial world. "^^
Another aspect of tropical Africa is brought out in an article
by Herr Emil Zimmerman, writing in the Europdische Staats und
Wirtschaft Zeitung of June 23, 1917: "tf the Great War makes
Central Africa German, fifty years hence 500,000 and more
Germans can be living there by the side of 50,000,000 blacks.
Then there may be an army of 1,000,000 men in German Africa,
and the colony will have its own war navy, like Brazil. An England
that is strong in Africa dominates the situation in Southern
Europe and does not heed us. But from Central Africa we shall
dominate the English connections with South Africa, India and
Australia, and we shall force English policy to reckon with us."^^
And again Dr. Solf, the German Secretary for Colonies, has
lately proposed a simple solution of Africa's industrial future.
"In redividing Africa those nations which have proved most
humane toward the natives must be favored. Germany has always
considered that to colonize meant doing mission work. That is
why in the present War the natives of our colonies stick to us.
England's colonial history, on the other hand, is nothing but a
list of dark crimes."^* The principle enunciated in the first sen-
tence of this statement is as important and true as the later ones
are incorrect, if the present writer's inquiries and observations
in British and German East Africa in 1912 are indicative of the
facts in the case.
The political problems of the countries here considered are
quite as important and perplexing as is their economic status.
Three theories of control have been tried: (1) That of plantations
or possessions, worked for the possessor's profit with little regard
for the governed; (2) the policy of vigorous expansion by the
12 Nineteenth Century and After, April, 1918, pp. 675-676.
13 Reported in the London Times, November 9, 1917.
14 Nineteenth Century and After, April, 1918, p. 681.
132 RELIGION AND THE WAR
whites themselves, despite the perils of tropical environments ;
and (3) permitting the natives to work out their own develop-
ment independently, with or without white oversight. Of these
the third is the only one favored by the ethics and political
sagacity of enlightened, nations today. But this demands the
consent and good will 0£ the governed, and how may these essen-
tials be secured.''
India is the most important, politically considered, of all
tropical lands. And that Empire's relation to England the eminent
Indian ruler. Sir Herbert Edwardes, declared in an address de-
livered at Liverpool in 1860, should be that of a stewardship in
Christian hands, a designation echoed in Kidd's general phrase,
"a trust of civilization," and John H. Harris's "trusteeship vs.
possession." How shall this trust be fulfilled .^ Certainly one must
consider the question of India's poet laureate. Sir Rabindranath
Tagore, "Is the instinct of the West right where she builds her
national welfare behind the barricade of a universal distrust of
humanity .?"^^ Such distrust is not removed by the Indian educa-
tional scheme alone, or with the addition of civilization. "If we
pursue the ignis fatuus of secular education in a pagan land,
destitute of other light," quoting Sir Herbert again, "then we
English will lose India without those Indians gaining any
future."^® In a similar vein Sir Alfred Lyall testified: "The
wildest, as well as the shallowest notion of all, seems to me that
universally prevalent belief that education, civilization and in-
creased material prosperity will reconcile the people of India
eventually to our rule."^^
A partial solution of India's political problems is found in the
deputation to that Empire in accordance with Mr. Montagu's
speech in the House of Commons of August 30, 1917, in the course
of which he said: "The policy of His Majesty's Government, with
15 R. Tagore, "Nationalism," p. 101.
16 Quoted in W. Archer's "India and Its Future," pp. 307-308.
17 M. Durand, "Life of Sir Alfred Comyn Lyall," p. 89.
FOREIGN MISSIONS AND THE WAR 133
which the Government of India is in complete accord, is that of
the increasing association of Indians in every branch of the
administration, and the gradual development of self-governing
institutions, with a view to the progressive realization of respon-
sible government in India as an integral part of the Indian
Empire."^^ The favorable outcome of the deputation's visit has
been mentioned already.
Religious problems and readjustments will also be part of the
aftermath of the war. At least six millions of Jews, who rightly
or wrongly are the objects of the Christian missionary propa-
ganda, have been released from disabilities in Europe, and new
careers and educational opportunities will lie before that remark-
able race. "Jewish influence in the life of the world, already great
in proportion to the size of the community, will gain a fresh
accession of strength. Religiously the emancipation may be
expected to result, as it has done in other countries, in a decay
of Jewish orthodoxy, of which the Jews of the Ghetto have been
the main support. While the weakening of the forces of conserva-
tism will open new doors of opportunity to the Christian Church,
there is on the other hand the grave danger that many Jews may
drift into irreligion and cast the weight of their natural ability
and energy on the side of materialism."^^ Mr. Balfour's letter to
Lord Rothschild of November 2, 1917, stated that the British
Government viewed with favor the establishment in Palestine of
a national home for the Jewish people. In the case of missions to
Moslem lands, if the Allies are victorious, the work in Turkey will
be greatly simplified. Whether this will be the case in Africa
depends upon whether the dominant Powers permit missionary
organizations to act with greater freedom than they have been
granted in the past in North Africa and in certain British pos-
sessions. In any case Islam will present strong claims and serious
problems for consideration by missionary organizations.
18 International Review of Missions, January, 1918, p. 23.
19 Ibid., p. 53.
134 RELIGION AND THE WAR
Is the foreign missionary enterprise willing and competent to
aid in the reconstruction soon to come in mission lands? Here are
a few typical and representative replies to this important question.
Representing in a semi-official way the missionary societies of
the United States and Canada, Dr. Robert E. Speer writes thus :
"Foreign Missions are the direct antithesis of the world condi-
tions which men most deplore and the purest expression o^f the
principles which underlie the world order for which men are long-
ing. Foreign Missions represent international friendship and good
will. The missionary goes out to help and serve. He bridges the
gulf between his own nation and the nation to which he goes.
He is not seeking to exploit, or to take advantage, or to make
gain. He is seeking only to befriend and aid. And his aim and
spirit are internationally unifying. The missionaries succeed in
surmounting all the hindrances of nationality and language in
binding different peoples together in good will. Furthermore, they
are demonstrating the possibility of the existence of a strong
nationalistic spirit side by side with human brotherhood and
international unity. They are seeking to develop in each nation
a national church embodying and inspiring and consecrating to
God the genius and destiny of each nation. But they are doing
this because these are the elements of a yet larger unity, the
unity of mankind. The first is not contradictory to the second;
it is essential to it, as the perfection of the State requires the
perfection of the family unit, and the family demands and does
not exclude the richest individualism. It is out of her perfect
ministry to the life of each nation that the Church is to be pre-
pared to minister to the life of all humanity and to achieve its
unity."'°
As editor of The International Review of Missions and secre-
tary of the Edinburgh Continuation Committee, Mr. J. H. Old-
ham states his views of the wo rid- functions of missions : "Missions
are the antithesis of war. They have created between different
20 Missionary Ammunition, Num,ber One, 1916, pp. 12-13.
FOREIGN MISSIONS AND THE WAR 135
peoples relations, not of competition, but of cooperation. With
all their shortcomings they are an embodiment of the idea that
the stronger and more advanced nations exist to uplift the weaker
and more backward. They are a vital expression of the principle
on which the new society must rest. . . . The gospel of love must
embody itself in act no less manifestly than selfishness and
brutality have expressed themselves in the terrible scenes that
the world has witnessed. The non-Christian races fear, not without
cause, that the object of western peoples is to exploit them. Mis-
sions must convince them that the Church exists to help and serve
them, and the desire to serve them must be made evident in ways
that they can understand. The task of Missions thus grows
broader and larger than we at first conceived. "^^
And such statements are not the claims of interested propa-
gandists merely, — officials employed by missionary organizations,
and hence liable to overrate the character and importance of
missions to the nations. Few men have traversed the world as
extensively and observantly as Sir Harry Johnston, and probably
no one equals him in his varied administrative and anthropological
services to Africa. In his Introduction to the Cambridge Univer-
sity Maitland Prize Essay for 1915, he says: "Although the
writer ... is so heterodox a professor of Christianity, practical
experience in Africa, Asia and America has brought home to him
ever and again during the last thirty-four years the splendid
work which has been and is being accomplished by all types of
Christian missionary amongst the Black, Brown and Yellow
peoples of non-Caucasian race, and amid those Mediterranean or
Asiatic Caucasians whose skins may be a little duskier than ours,
but whose far-back ancestry was the same, whose minds and
bodies are of our type, but whose mentality has been dwarfed and
diverted from the amazing development of the European by false
faiths, — false in their interpretation of Cosmos, false to the best
human ideals in daily life."
21 International Review of Missions, October, 1914, pp. 632-633.
136 RELIGION AND THE WAR
On a later page he upholds with the author "the work of
Christian missionaries in general and lays down the rule that our
relations with the backward peoples of the world should be carried
on consonantly with the principles of Christian ethics — pity,
patience, fair-mindedness, protection and instruction; with a view
not to making them the carefully guarded serfs of the White
race, but to enable them some day to be entirely self-dependent,
and yet interdependent with us on universal human cooperation
in world management."
And once more this British administrator asserts: "The value
of the Christian missionary is that he serves no government. He
is not the agent of any selfish State, or self-seeking community.
He does not even follow very closely the narrow-minded limitations
of the Church or the sect that has sent him on his mission. He is
the servant of an Ideal, which he identifies with God; and this
ideal is in its essence not distinguishable from essential Chris-
tianity ; which is at one and the same time essential common sense,
real liberty, a real seeking after progress and bettermerit. He
preaches chastity and temperance, the obeying of such laws as
are made by the community ; but consonantly with all constitu-
tional and peaceful efforts, he urges the bringing of man-made
laws more and more into conformity with Christian principles."'^
As representing nations of ancient culture coming under the
helpful influences of Christian missions, perhaps no one will
command a more attentive hearing than Marquis Okuma, ex-
premier of Japan and one of the world's foremost statesmen.
From a summary of his address, delivered at the semi-centennial
of Protestant missions in that Empire, we excerpt the following:
"The coming of missionaries to Japan was the means of linking
this country to the Anglo-Saxon spirit to which the heart of
Japan has always responded. The success of Christian work in
Japan can be measured by the extent to which it has been able
22 A. J. Macdonald, "Trade, Politics and Christianity in Africa and the
East," xii, xv, xviii.
FOREIGN MISSIONS AND THE WAR 137
to infuse the Anglo-Saxon and the Christian spirit into the
nation. It has been a means of putting into these fifty years an
advance equivalent to that of a hundred years. Japan has a his-
tory of 2,500 years, and 1,500 years ago had advanced in
civilization and domestic arts, but never took wide views, nor
entered upon wide work. Only by the coming of the West in its
missionary representatives, and by the spread of the Gospel, did
the nation enter upon world-wide thoughts and world-wide work.
This is a great result of the Christian spirit. To be sure Japan
had her religions, and Buddhism prospered greatly; but this
prosperity was largely through political means. Now this creed
[Buddhism] has been practically rejected by the better classes
who, being spiritually thirsty, have nothing to drink. "^^
These representative testimonies suggest both the fitness and
the willingness of Christian missions to participate in the coming
international readjustments necessitated by the war. Such an
enterprise supplies what the war-weary world so greatly needs —
the elan vital et creatur, to borrow Bergson's fine phrase. And the
missionary leaders are alert and at their task. On April 4, 1918,
Drs. John R. Mott and Charles R. Watson, representing the
missionary boards of the United States and Canada, met with
the Standing Committee of Missionary Societies in Great Britain
and Ireland, when it was resolved to form an international
"Emergency Committee of Cooperating Missions." Already the
British committee had been consulted by the Government concern-
ing certain important matters affecting the mission fields and
their problems arising from the war. Such questions are becoming
increasingly numerous, and their solution demands an intimate
knowledge of missions and of the spirit and aspirations of African
and Asiatic races. America is likewise needing such a body of
experts to supplement government investigations. This country
has a slight preponderance in representation on the Emergency
Committee ; and in the chairman. Dr. John R. Mott, the foremost
23 Japan Daily Mail, October 9, 1909.
138 RELIGION AND THE WAR
Protestant leader of the world, and a man of such diplomatic gifts
that President Wilson twice vainly called him to the position of
minister to China, — though he accepted appointment upon com-
missions to deal with Mexico and Russia later, — the committee
has a missionary statesman who is equal to the important trusts
that will be committed to its consideration. To serve as the eyes,
ears and hands of this important post-bellum council, the two
largest fields, India and China, have each an energetic Continua-
tion Committee of the Edinburgh Conference of 1910, established
as the result of Dr. Mott's visits and conferences in 1912-1913.
The Foreign Missions Conference of North America, and espe-
cially its Board of Reference and Counsel, are in annual and ad
interim consultation as questions arise from time to time.
President King quotes these words from Lloyd George's ad-
dress to a labor delegation : "Don't always be thinking of getting
back where we were before the War. Get a really new world. I
firmly believe that what is known as the after-the-War settlement
will direct the destinies of all classes for generations to come. I
believe the settlement after the War will succeed in proportion
to its audacity. The readier we are to cut away from the past,
the better we are likely to succeed. Think out new ways, new
methods, of dealing with old problems."^*
Another horizon of the same idealistic character opens before
the eyes of our own President, the seer to the nations in this
epoch-making time. In an address delivered on October 5, 1916,
President Wilson proclaims the new day to the United States :
"America up to the present time has been, as if by deliberate
choice, confined and provincial, and it will be impossible for her
to remain confined and provincial. Henceforth she belongs to
the world and must act as part of the world, and all the attitudes .|
of America will henceforth be altered." And again three weeks
later he adds : "America was established in order to indicate, at
any rate in one government, the fundamental rights of man.
24 F. Lynch, "President Wilson and the Moral Aims of the War," p. 73.
FOREIGN MISSIONS AND THE WAR 139
America must hereafter be ready as a member of the family of
nations to exert her whole force, moral and physical, to the
assertion of those rights throughout the round world." Here is
a sentence from his greetings to France on Bastille Day, 1918:
"The War is being fought to save ourselves from intolerable
things ; but it is also being fought to save mankind." And as a
final word from President Wilson, taken from his discussion of
the new international morality: "My urgent advice to you would
be, not always to think first of America, but always, also, to think
first of humanity. You do not love humanity, if you seek to divide
humanity into jealous camps. Humanity can be welded together
only by love, by sympathy, by justice, not by jealousy and
hatred." While none of these utterances refer specifically to mis-
sions, yet surely Dr. W. I. Hull is correct in interpreting
President Wilson's relation to races of the mission fields in these
words : "Instead of exploiting backward peoples, he would apply
the maxim of noblesse oblige, and would summon all nations to
mutual aid in their ascent of 'the world's great altar stairs' up
to the law and order, peace and justice, which constitute the true
sunshine of God."^^
The "really new world" of Britain's Premier will not be domi-
nated by Machiavelli, the motto of whose sixteenth and seven-
teenth century monarchs was "L'etat c'est moi!" even though
Treitschke ranked him second only to Aristotle as a political
philosopher.^*' The present cataclysm of woes does not prove
Professor Cramb's contention that "Corsica has conquered Gal-
ilee" ; nor has Nietzsche thrust the "pale Galilean" from his
throne. That semi-insane philosopher's Uebermenschen must fall
before Sir John Macdonnell's "Super-Nationalism" as set forth
in the March, 1918, issue of the Contemporary/ Review. And the
President's world-echoed phrase, "world-democracy," is uttered
only with the corrective in mind that was sounded forth a score
25 F. Lynch, "President Wilson and the Moral Aitas of the War," p. 64.
26 H. von Treitschke, "Politik," p. 3.
140 RELIGION AND THE WAR
of years ago by England's Colonial Secretary, Joseph Chamber-
lain, "Think imperially." It is only by the establishment of an
Imperium in imperio through obedience to what the Duke of
Wellington called the Christian's Marching Orders, the Great
Commission, that the new rei^ of the Prince of Peace can become
possible. If the blood-soaked "savagery of civilization on the
march to save the world from the civilization of savagery" is
the dolorous duty of the present hour, there is solace in the
thought that Golgotha was but the prelude to the Resurrection
and Ascension. The Ascent of Mankind in all its nations and
peoples and kindreds and tongues is at hand. To hasten this uni-
versal uplift and aid the World Powers as they seek to inaugurate
the New Order, no agency is likely to aid more than foreign mis-
sions among the peoples reached by that enterprise. And the new
Imperial Thinking and Acts are simply those of the seven-fold
Commission of the Saviour of the -World, "Behold, pray, go, heal,
preach, teach, baptize, all nations," the conquering Labarum of
an onward-moving Church. ,
VIII
THE WAR AND SOCIAL WORK
WILLIAM BACON BAILEY
Although the duration of this world-war, and the part which
we may be called upon to play in it, makes the destruction in
wealth and human life in this country uncertain, and although
we cannot tell so far in advance what will be the probable extent
of social reconstruction to follow, still the war has progressed
far enough, and its effects upon this country are sufficiently
apparent, to enable us to forecast more or less indefinitely certain
changes which are likely to follow its close.
With regard to the future of social service, three facts are
apparent :
First, the people of our country are contributing money as
never before to social work. We have for a long time realized
that there was a reservoir in this country upon which we had
drawn but little, but few realized the extent of this surplus. At
times of great distress both here and abroad, our sympathy had
been expressed by generous contributions. We had annually con-
tributed large sums for the support of various philanthropies in
this country, but as a nation we never realized how much we could
give until the test came. One drive is hardly completed before
another comes. We are surprised as a nation and as individuals
at the amounts we can repeatedly give and still continue to meet
our ordinary expenditures. This giving is getting to be almost a
habit with us and when the war is over, although we may be help-
ing to carry a huge national debt, I believe that our deserving
charities will be supported more adequately than before the war.
142 RELIGION AND THE WAR
Second, we are getting more trained volunteer workers. One of
the principal problems of charitable organizations engaged in case
work has been to secure a sufficient number of capable volunteers
who would keep their interest in the work and be regular in their
attendance. The past few months have seen an increase in this'
volunteer service which a year ago we should never have deemed
possible. The Home Service Section of the American Red Cross
has enlisted the service as visitors of thousands of our men and
women who are anxious to do what they can to preserve the homes
from which some member has been called to the colors. In a large
number of cities this service has been placed under the supervision
of paid workers who had been connected with charity organization
societies and who brought with them the experience of years in
directing and training volunteer friendly visitors. They recog-
nized the advantage of classroom instruction for these visitors,
even if necessity compelled that it be extremely limited. Accord-
ingly training schools for these volunteers have been started in
many places in this country and the attendance has been surpris-
ingly large and regular. These volunteers are no longer timidly
inquiring whether there is some opportunity for friendl}'" visiting
in the homes ; they are demanding that some opportunity be given
them. After the war this vast army of workers with limited train-
ing will demand work of a similar nature and the problem of
finding satisfactory volunteers should be solved for many years
to come.
Third, the war is raising the standard of care in charitable
work. Most of these volunteers are visiting in soldiers' families.
The allowance from the Government, the State and the Red Cross
makes possible a good standard of living. While our soldiers are
at the front they do not need to fear that the standard to which
the family had been accustomed will be allowed to fall. At the
close of hostilities these volunteers, accustomed to this standard,
will demand that the same standard apply to the out-door relief
given by charitable societies. The result will be a considerable
THE WAR AND SOCIAL WORK 143
rise in the standard of care. Professional social workers are not
talking so much as they did about "cases." They are talking more
about "families." This is the express desire of those who are
directing the Home Service Section of the Red Cross. It is felt
that in this way a more personal note may be brought into family
rehabilitation in the future. It would appear, therefore, that the
future should find our charities more adequately financed, better
supplied with trained volunteers, and inspired to a higher standard
of work.
The habit of saving is likely to become much more firmly estab-
lished among our people. We may never be so thrifty as the
French nation, but we are progressing in that direction. Sub-
scriptions to the Third Liberty Loan were received from seventeen
millions of our people. In many of our public schools the purchase
of thrift stamps by the scholars has been almost universal. It is
probable that a very large proportion of those who are now pur-
chasing liberty bonds never owned a bond of any description
before. The habit formed in this way will continue in many cases.
A banker a short time ago prophesied that upon the conclusion
of this war the savings banks would receive far larger deposits
than had ever been the case before. This habit of saving and the
ownership of bonds will not fail to have its influence upon the
rank and file of our people. At the close of the war we shall have
our troubles with those who will advance repudiation or some
scheme by which the burden of our national debt may be shifted
and the necessity for saving miraculously avoided in some way.
But the common sense of our people will assert itself and we shall
realize that the only way by which we can replace this capital
is by spending less than we earn. The plain word "thrift" seems
likely to come into its own again.
Up to the present time social work has appeared to many per-
sons to be a fad. Some have felt that people with too little to do
have spent their time in interfering with the affairs of people who
had too much to do. The charge has been made that social service
144 RELIGION AND THE WAR
was only a temporary phenomenon which would soon disappear.
But the war has taught us a lesson. The military authorities were
among the first to recognize the need of proper recreation for the
troops, and the demand for workers in the cantonments and at
the front has been too great to be met. We see now that the need
for recreation is a real need. It seems likely that commercialized
recreation and amusement is likely to play a smaller part here-
after, and that the community is going to demand a share in this
enterprise in the future. Assembly halls, playgrounds, and similar
provisions for the public will be required.
We have never had a caste system in this country and aris-
tocracy based upon birth has been unknown. It is probable that
nowhere in the world during the past two centuries has it been
easier for a man to improve his financial and social standing by
his own efforts than in this country. Land ownership has been
widely distributed, we have had a large middle class and men have
been constantly changing from the group of employees to that of
employers. But notwithstanding these factors, there has been a
growth of class feeling in this country. Employers have been mis-
trusted by employees. The growth of large fortunes has given
rise to envy and bitterness in many quarters. Many have felt that
ignorance was the principal cause for this growing antipathy.
Employer and employee no longer met upon a common footing.
Many attempts have been made to bridge this chasm. Settlement
houses have been erected in order that individuals who would not
be likely to meet in the usual course of business or social inter-
course might here become acquainted and learn one another's
viewpoint. The industrial service movement has been an attempt
to link the interests of employer and emplo3fee together. But these
movements have only scratched the surface. The distinctions based
oh difference have persisted. It has remained for the war to bring
the members of these opposing groups together. Camp and trench
life know no class distinction. Rich and poor, educated and illit-
erate, rub elbows and share common life. It is no uncommon sight
THE WAR AND SOCIAL WORK 145
to find four men with tliree different mother tongues sharing a
tent together. The effect of this close companionship, this sharing
of dangers in common, cannot help but breed a companionship
which will do much to bring together men of different birth, breed-
ing and social station.
Another effect of this war has been to lessen sectarian and
religious differences. Protestant, Roman Catholic and Jewish
organizations are working side by side in our military camps. The
contributions to the work of the Knights of Columbus and of the
Y. M. C. A. have come from the community as a whole. Men of
different faiths have served as members of the same teams in these
drives. The lessons learned in this way are not likely to be foi--
gotten and the great charities to survive this war will probably
draw their support from a wider public regardless of sectarian
affiliation.
We often heard at the beginning of this conflict that it was a
rich man's war ; that this country had been drawn into it through
the machinations of wealthy men who wished to make more wealth
through army contracts. This charge has been pretty thoroughly
disproven, and now little is heard of it. The rich have proved
their patriotism as conclusively as any class in this country. They
have contributed generously to our war charities, have submitted
to unprecedented taxation with very little grumbling, have bought
Liberty Bonds generously, and have seen their sons volunteer for
military service with commendable pride. Many of our most
efficient executives have contributed their time to the service of
the Government. In fact, one of the most interesting and inspiring
features of this war has been the service rendered by our men and
women of wealth and social position.
The war is also likely to change the extent and direction of the
social movements in this country. In the early days most of the
charitable work in this country was directed to the amelioration
of the condition of some particular group of unfortunates. A
group of their compatriots in this country would form a society
146 RELIGION AND THE WAR
for the assistance of Scotch widows. No study was made of the
causes of this unfortunate situation. The widows were there and I
their helpless condition called for aid. There was no attempt to
reduce the number of widows by safeguarding the lives of their
husbands. In this assistance there was much duplication as the
number of these societies increased. Then came the attempt to
eliminate this waste by the formation of societies to coordinate
these charitable activities in our cities. Although the idea of
constructive work entered the minds of these pioneers, the con-
tributors were interested chiefly in the relief of want.
It soon became evident that this want was the result of certain
well-defined causes. Sickness, unemployment, intemperance and
child labor were recognized as the causes of misery and the extent
of these causes was studied by societies which worked for their
removal. These activities soon brought the realization that many
of these causes were social rather than individual. Sickness is
sometimes caused by individual excesses, but it is also caused by
unhealthful occupations and life in miserable tenements. We had
held property rights as sacred, but when greed brought a train
of social evils we directed our attention to regulation. It may be
meritorious to help a widow whose husband has been killed at a
machine, but it is equally meritorious to safeguard the machine
that it may cease to be the cause of widowhood in the future. It
is good philanthropy to assist those afflicted with tuberculosis,
but it is better to remove the disease-breeding "lung blocks" from
our communities.
This brought the realization that these are community prob-
lems which must be met by community action. The state legis-'
latures were appealed to with ever increasing success, but Federal
action was difficult to obtain. The war has made us impatient
with half-measures. The exigency demanded immediate and drastic
action. Things have been done to obtain efficiency which we would
have considered impossible five years ago. The rights of private
property have had to give way before community need. We have
THE WAR AND SOCIAL WORK 147
begun to deal on a larger scale with ultimate causes and less with
the relief of apparent effects. This movement may receive a tem-
porary setback at the close of the war, but as a community we
have learned what is possible and this lesson will not be lost.
Certain social reforms are being hastened by the war. We have
long felt that certain practices were harmful or wasteful, but
in our easy-going manner had kept putting the matter off in the
hope that the evil would cure itself. The necessity of waging
successful war has compelled the immediate elimination of this
waste. Take one or two instances only.
For a long time we have been more or less familiar with the
financial, physical and spiritual waste resulting from the con-
sumption of intoxicants in this country. We have been interested
in this problem for a half century and various attempts have been
made to eliminate the most serious evils connected with excessive
drinking without interfering with a moderate use of alcohol. Our
half-hearted attempts were not very successful and finally, after
we had experienced a coal shortage, and had accepted wheatless
and meatless days, the country at last made up its mind that
intoxicants must go and the liquor traffic in this country appears
to be doomed. It might have come sooner or later in any case,
but the war has hastened the day.
For a long time penologists have realized that it was poor
economy to shut prisoners into dark and dismal cells, giving them
but scant exercise with little or no employment and then to expect
them, at the expiration of their terms, to be returned ready to
take their proper places in society. We have realized that out-
door labor on farms was one of the best things for this class
because in this way the prisoners could be built up in health and
be made more or less self-supporting while serving their terms.
But we had the jails on hand and it was perhaps the easiest plan
to lock the prisoners in their cells with the assurance that they
could be found when wanted. The demand for farm labor has
finally forced our jails and penitentiaries to give up the labor so
148 RELIGION AND THE WAR
sorely needed on the farms. It is probable that during the coming
summer a million acres of land in this country will be tilled by
those undergoing sentence.
We had recognized for years the ravages of venereal disease
upon our manhood and womanhood, and a national society and
a large number of state societies had been organized to combat
the evil. But when the figures began to be published showing the
incidence of these diseases among our troops the public awoke to
the seriousness of the situation. The Federal Government has taken
steps to remove diseased women from the neighborhood of the
army cantonments and naval bases. The Government is footing
the bills for the treatment of these women in state institutions,
where such exist, and is providing suitable facilities for their care
in the states where no such opportunity for treatment existed.
After the war the lesson we have learned in this way is not likely
to be forgotten. Another lesson we have learned from the war has
been that a considerable proportion of our young men are physi-
cally below par. Poor care of the teeth and body, improper or
insufficient food, lack of proper exercise, unhygienic methods of
living, and various forms of excesses have produced a generation
of young men many of whom are physically unfit for active mili-
tary service. The importance of this fact has now been driven
home, and although much had been said and written upon this
subject in recent years, it will have added emphasis in the future.
We have always had a democratic form of government, and
have in a way considered this country an asylum for the op-
pressed of all nations. For several years previous to the outbreak
of the war in Europe, we had been receiving into this country
immigrants at the rate of about a million a year. We had grad-
ually increased the number of restrictions until most of the
undesirable types were excluded. We had made the process of
naturalization comparatively easy and had left it to the indi-
vidual immigrant to decide whether or not he would become a
citizen. We had recognized the desirability of Americanizing these
THE WAR AND SOCIAL WORK 149
immigrants as soon as possible, but had proceeded about the
proposition in a more or less half-hearted way. The Y. M. C. A.,
through its industrial department, and through the industrial
service work in connection with the colleges, had done consider-
able to teach English and civics to the non-English-speaking
foreigners. Several other organizations, some of them national in
scope, had interested themselves in this problem, but our country
seemed slow to appreciate the necessity of making true Americans
from these various racial groups at the earliest possible moment.
The war has brought home to us the fact that we have alien
enemies in our midst and from this time we may expect to make
a much more thoroughgoing attempt to Americanize these
groups. The National Council of Defense is investigating this
question at present and we may with confidence look to a well-
considered plan of campaign from this body.
The very fact that we were receiving from the Old World
annually a gift of a million foreign-born, most of whom were in
the active ages, has led us to think that the supply of labor for
this country was assured. We were receiving from Europe all of
the natural increase from a population half as large as our own.
The ships that brought these hopeful workers to this country
took back many who had been maimed in our industries. We had
paid too little attention to this problem since the source of this
supply of cheap labor seemed inexhaustible. Upon the declaration
of hostilities in Europe, the stream of labor to this country sud-
denly ceased and it is a serious question whether it will ever again
reach its former proportion. Most of the European countries are
going to be so drained of their young men that a large emigration
from them is not to be expected for a long time to come. The
demands for raw material and finished products from certain
of the European countries has increased tremendously and a
shortage of labor in this country has been the result. Concerns
have bid against one another to secure sufficient labor and for
the first time in years we have a condition in which the demand
150 RELIGION AND THE WAR
for labor of all kinds exceeds the supply. With the impossibility
of securing this needed labor from abroad, we have realized the
necessity of conserving the supply in this country. Every effort
must be made to reduce the toll from accident and injury and to
decrease the amount of sickness in the country. We may expect
an increase in compensation insurance and in health insurance
among the states. This summer we are having a campaign to
save the lives of a hundred thousand children. This movement for
the conservation of life would undoubtedly have come in time but
has been hastened by the war. Thousands of our young men will
be returned to us from overseas more or less crippled and steps
are already being taken to give them expert training to fit them
for some useful occupation. It is only a step to provide the same
sort of training for those who are maimed in our industries.
No matter what may be the waste in life and property resulting
from such a conflict, if the people of this country can preserve in
their purity the ideals with which they have entered upon this
crusade, social workers may face the future with confidence.
IX
THE WAR AND CHURCH UNITY
WILLISTON WALKER
The great war has been conspicuously one of alliances. For its
successful accomplishment cooperation and individual subordi-
nation have been manifested in military, political and economic
fields in heretofore unexampled fulness. Liberties, the result of
long struggles, and deeply cherished, have been laid aside, for
the time, that larger efficienc}?^ may be accomplished. Individual
opinions strongly held have been subordinated to a common pur-
pose. The time has witnessed a reappreciation of values in many
realms. Much that in days of peace has seemed of importance,
has appeared in the fierce light of war of relatively minor signifi-
cance. A change of perspective has been the consequence. Has this
result, so apparent in most realms of activity and of ordinary life,
been manifest in the realm of religion.'' Are the same forces at
work there also? An answer to these questions cannot as yet be
fully formulated; but it is at least possible to indicate certain
influences which are at work.
The entry of the United States into the world-war has been
in a degree unexampled in the history of this country a response
to the appeal of righteousness. No action in which the nation has
ever engaged has been so unselfish. We have taken our part in
the struggle without hate, and with full consciousness of the
prospective cost in life and treasure, that certain principles of
justice may prevail, and that despotism, brutality and falsehood
may not dominate the civilized world. We look for no indemnities,
no annexations, and no pecuniary rewards. The American people
152 RELIGION AND THE WAR
has never more fully exhibited that idealism which, in spite of
frequent misapprehension by those unacquainted with the real
national spirit, is its fundamental characteristic. The consonance
of this attitude with some primary teachings of religion is
apparent. Self-sacrifice that the weak may be helped, that wrong
may be resisted, and that a truer and juster order may be estab-
lished among the nations, are aims that are closely akin to those
of the Christian faith in its aspect of love to one's neighbor. Nor
is it without evidential value to the essentially religious quality of
American life that no enterprise has ever so united the people,
and that Americans, whether so by long inheritance or immi-
grants who have more recently caught the national spirit, have
never before been so at one in a common endeavor. Nothing less
noble, less idealistic, less in a true sense religious could so have
fused them into one.
The war, furthermore, has been a revelation of the fundamental
purposefulness of the rising generation. The years immediately
antecedent to the struggle saw not a little shaking of older heads
over what were called the irresponsibility and pleasure-seeking of
our young people. The call to arms has shown them as patriotic,
as whole-hearted in devotion, as sacrificial as ever their elders
were. They need bow in reverence to none who have gone before
them. The cheerfulness with which a selective draft has been
accepted, and in thousands of cases anticipated, has shown the
readiness of youthful response to high appeal. This demonstration
of the soundness, the earnestness and the unselfishness of those
who are soon to be the leaders of the national life is full of religious
encouragement.
Equally heartening has been the cheerful and effective answer
of the responsible population of America to limitations in food
and drink that the needs of the Allies should be met and the
national resources conserved. Doubtless other nations in the
world-struggle have made larger sacrifices and endured far
severer privations ; but the impressive quality of what America
THE WAR AND CHURCH UNITY 153
has done is that it has been so largely self-imposed, a voluntary
sacrifice, in which suggestion rather than compulsion has been
the task of its leaders. Strikingly impressive, also, has been the
outpouring of wealth and effort to relieve human suffering
through the Red Cross and kindred agencies, not only for the
alleviation of the miseries of our own sons, but of the martyred
population of Belgium, of France, of Poland and of Syria. No
village has been too small, no community too remote or too rural,
to have a share in this altruistic endeavor. Its spirit is in a true
sense that of religion. More openly and professedly religious has
been the marvelous work of the Young Men's Christian Association
and of the Knights of Columbus. No previous war has seen any-
thing comparable in extent of effort or scope of plan. The aim,
and to a great extent the accomplishment, has been to cast
Christian sympathy and brotherly helpfulness around the soldier
and sailor in every camp at home and abroad, in the trenches,
the hospitals, the battleships, the transports, and in the cities
where his furlough is spent and his ideals so easily forgotten.
These agencies have not labored for our own sons alone, but for
those of France and Italy also. Even more impressive than the
vast sums of money contributed from all over the United States
for this cause have been the numbers and the quality of the men
and women who have given themselves freely and in Christian
consecration to this service. The Young Men's Christian Asso-
ciation and the Knights of Columbus have been in truth the right
arm of American Christianity stretched out to shelter, to hearten
and to aid. They have been the agents .of the churches in their
ministry. Without them the contribution of organized American
Christianity would have been relatively ineffective. Through them
that Christianity has exhibited itself in practical and achieving
power as never before.
The outstanding feature of these conspicuous manifestations
of American religiovis life is that they have been absolutely un-
dogmatic. Their type of Christianity has been broadly inclusive
154 RELIGION AND THE WAR
of what may be called universally accepted doctrine. Chaplains
from most various denominational antecedents have labored
together in a spirit of Christian comradeship, bearing only the
sign of the cross. The workers, ministerial and lay, recruited by
the Young Men's Christian Association have been drawn from all
shades of American Evangelicalism and have wrought not only
harmoniously one with another, but with the Knights of Columbus
and with the representatives of Jewish faith. In common efforts
to reach common needs, differences which loomed large at home
have been laid aside. The requirements and experiences of our
soldiers and sailors have been elemental, and these agencies have
sought to meet them with a simple, earnest, uncontroversial
Gospel, — the common denominator, if it may so be called, of our
American Christianity. They have presented God, sin, salvation,
faith in Christ, purity of life, brotherly helpfulness ; and to this
presentation the young manhood of our armies and navies has
been quick to respond. These young men have cared little as to
the particular denominational label which these messengers may
have worn at home. Spoken with manliness-; sincerity and
sympathy, the message has won their hearts.
These experiences have inevitably raised the question more
insistently, which had already before the war been sounded in-
creasingly loudly in our home churches, whether the divided state
of American Christianity is to continue. It has long been deplored.
Can it not be in a measure abated .^ A disposition to believe that
it can is increasingly evident. The enlarging support given to
the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ since the beginning
of the war is significant of a growing conviction that at least a
larger federal cooperation is not merely desirable but feasible.
The much-divided Lutheran body has taken steps which promise
its union in one fold. The last General Assembly of the Presby-
terian Church of the United States has empowered a committee
to issue a call for a Council to meet before the close of the present
year by which practical action may be initiated looking towards
THE WAR AND CHURCH UNITY 155
the organic union of all American Evangelical Christianity. The
Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States still urges
its ambitious and remote plan of a World Conference on Faith
and Order, aiming at a general reunion of Christendom ; though
in this case the war seems to have delayed rather than furthered
the project. In the local field, the scarcity of fuel during the
recent winter led to hundreds of instances of temporary combi-
nations of congregations representative of different denominations
throughout the northern portion of the United States. Not only
has no evil been the consequence, but better acquaintance and
larger Christian sympathy have resulted. In some places, as in
New Brunswick, N. J., these temporary unions have led to efforts
to make these combinations permanent. It is evident that the
possibility of a larger unity is being discussed as never before,
and in a spirit which more than at any previous time tends to
emphasize the great truths in which Christians are agreed and to
minimize their differences.
Will anything permanently effective come out of this widely
diffused desire.'' Shall we be satisfied with the remarkable exhibi-
tions of Christian cooperation in our army and navy, shall we
entertain a pious wish that something similar may be achieved at
home, and will the end of the war find us, nevertheless, in our
present divided state .f* The answer will depend on the sacrificial
willingness of our American Christianity. Is it ready to pay the
cost.P That is a far-reaching question any answer to which is at
present impossible, for the difficulties in the path of a larger
union are enormous. Such a greater unity can be achieved only
as several barriers of great strength are overthrown.
One such barrier is the inertia of local organizations. Few
American communities are not confessedly overchurched, as far
as the Protestant population is concerned. The spectacle of eight
or ten relatively feeble churches ministering to needs which two
or three larger bodies could much more effectively meet is one
exhibited in hundreds of communities. Yet effective consolidation
156 RELIGION AND THE WAR
is opposed by serious obstacles. Long custom, ancient disputes,
denominational loyalties, keep these relatively feeble bodies
asunder. These prejudices are hard to overcome. "Our fathers
worshipped in this mountain," is a feeling not peculiar to
Samaria. Much of this local loyalty is not without its commend-
able qualities. It is bound up with traditions of parental piety,
of devotion to a particular house of worship and to a congregation
of believers in which one has grown up in the Christian life. These
feelings are very real. Yet it is only as the advantages of a larger
local unity become evident that our churches can rise to a greater
consolidation and more effectively meet the local situation. Only
the larger good can drive out the lesser goods.
A further barrier, and one of no inconsiderable magnitude,
which renders local union difficult is that our local churches are
parts of large organic wholes for the advancement of the Kingdom
of God at home and abroad. By their gifts, their sons and
daughters and their prayers, the missionary societies are sup-
ported, by which the outreaching work of the Kingdom of Christ
is carried forward. These societies are now denominational. If
two local churches are to become one, where will their joint con-
tributions go? One has aided one group of missionary societies
hitherto, the other another. Shall the new union divide its gifts ? If
it does, will they be as extensive or the interest as great as for-
merly.'^ These are practical questions for the missionary societies.
The only final solution of such a situation would seem to be an
extensive consolidation of the missionary societies themselves, so
that they might become more representative of American Chris-
tianity, at least of American Evangelical Christianity, as a whole,
rather than simply the organs of particular denominations.
A third barrier of difficulty barring the pathway of local con-
solidation is that of ministerial and ecclesiastical responsibility.
Each of the various denominations now has its definite method
of entrance on its ministry, and of responsibility for the character
and standing of those in its pastorates. Each holds itself bound
THE WAR AND CHURCH UNITY 157
to aid its feebler churches in their pecuniary necessities. If a new
congregation results from the union of two or more existing
bodies representative of diiferent denominations, where is the test
of ministerial fitness, and the guarantee of continued ministerial
standing to be found, and who is to aid such a church if finan-
cially feeble? These are the problems which are often raised by
the so-called "community church." Of course these difficulties are
often met by the united organization attaching itself to the
denomination originally represented by one of its component
parts ; but this solution, though effective, makes so large demands
on Christian self-denial as often to be impracticable in the
present still comparatively feebly developed desire for unity.
A still further barrier to unity, both on the local field and on
the larger national scale, is the fact, often overlooked, that the
separations of American Christianity are really due quite as
much to differences of taste as to divergencies of doctrines or of
polity. There is an Episcopal, a Presbyterian or a Methodist way
of doing things that really differentiates these great families of
believers quite as fully as their more generally acknowledged
divergencies. They view the Christian life, they look upon worship,
they express their deeper feelings, in unlike ways. The variet}'^ is
not so much a diversity of belief as a contrast of temperaments.
Being so, it is not susceptible to argument, or to adjustment by
conventions or creedal agreements. It is to be met, if met at all,
by the increasing spirit of democracy, which the war has done so
much to foster. In proportion as the fundamental Christian
democracy of America becomes a real consciousness these tempera-
mental unlikenesses will tend to be subordinated to a larger unity
of spirit. They will continue. Men are not all made in the same
mould. But, it may be believed that they may be overcome bV a
growing recognition of unity in variety.
Moreover, in spite of an increasing longing that the multitu-
dinous subdivisions of American Christianity be merged in a larger
whole, much tenacious holding of peculiar denominational tenets
158 RELIGION AND THE WAR
will have to be overcome. The simplicity of the great truths which
Christians hold in common will need to be more fully realized.
Most American Evangelical denominations are now willing freely
to admit that the essential verities of Christianity are held by
their associated communions, and that a true Christian life is
possible in each of them. The evident working of the spirit of
God makes a denial impossible. But while each denomination is
thus willing to recognize a real, if grudgingl}'^ admitted, sister-
hood as the share of the others, each regards its peculiarities, of
belief or practice as of extreme importance, if not to the being,
at least to the well-being of the church, so that effective inter-
communion seems impossible. An interesting illustration of this
spirit has recently been shown in a discussion involving a com-
munion which professes, one cannot doubt with sincerity, a desire
for a reunion of Christendom. A proposition was made to it by
a number of representatives of other communions, urging that
the unity of American Christianity be illustrated by joint ordi-
nations of chaplains for service with the army and navy. That
proposal, which involved no question of ministerial status in the
home churches, was declined by its highest authorities. It is not
conceivable that those who thus refused it believed that chaplains
went forth to their arduous task in the name of Christ from other
communions without the blessing of God; but such differences of
apprehension as may still coexist with obedience to the one
Master are evidently yet deemed too great to permit mutual
Christian authorization for service. Doubtless many similar in-
stances could be found, but as long as they characterize American
Christianity at all they reveal the persistence of a spirit which
exalts denominational peculiarities above the full recognition of
common Christian discipleship.
These barriers have been thus frankly stated because they are
very real, and while the impulse toward Christian unity now flows
in increasing strength from the experiences of the great war, the
movement in that direction must acquire far greater momentum
THE WAR AND CHURCH UNITY 159
before its work can be accomplished. Christian unity was never
so fully before the thought of the American churches as now.
Never were so many sincerely desirous of it. Never was its need
so obvious as in these days when the church faces the tremendous
problem of the reconstruction on a Christian basis of a shattered
social order. It is a task which demands all the forces of an un-
divided Christianity. Yet desirable as the goal of unity is, it will
never be reached save through the strenuous cooperant effort of
all who long for it. That effort must be greater than any hereto-
fore made. It must be patient and persistent and in full faith that
the Master's prayer for his disciples demands their utmost
endeavor.
Three steps are certainly needful for effective progress towards
a larger unity:
There must be a clearer recognition of the things in the Chris-
tian faith which are of vital significance. The really great truths
must be seen in their proper perspective. The simplicity of the
Gospel must be increasingly recognized. We have too often
elevated relatively subordinate convictions to an equality with
the fundamentals of the faith. In this clearer perception of pro-
portions the experiences of the religious work of the war is greatly
aiding. We are seeing that in the Christian life we need not so
many things as much.
No less necessary is it that a spirit ready to sacrifice the
important, but relatively subordinate, be developed. No denomi-
nation is called upon to sacrifice alone. If unity is to be achieved,
each must feel a willingness to subordinate that which though
precious by custom or antiquity or cherished possession is yet
divisive.
Even more imperative is it that American religious bodies know
each other better. Existing side by side, laboring in the same
communities, it is amazing how little real comprehension of each
other's spiritual life now exists. In mutual acquaintance by
common association, wherever such intercourse can be brought
160 RELIGION AND THE WAR
about, lies the corrective of much present misunderstanding that
separates us. All that aids a commqn acquaintance is an aid to
ultimate unity.
The consideration just mentioned makes it probable that the
most promising present step is in the direction of federal
cooperation. Religious bodies that are far from willing to sink
their present differences may yet work in harmony, and by work-
ing together increase that mutual understanding and thereby
confidence in each other's Christian spirit which is so essential
a preliminary to unity. That is what makes the Federal Council
of the Churches of Christ and similar movements eminently
worthy of support. They are not ends in themselves. They are
means of utmost significance to a larger end.
The war is showing a vision of our need and of the goal of our
effort. That the road to a larger and more effective unity of the
religious forces of America is full of difficulties is no reason why
a Christian man should hesitate to tread it. It is as true now as
when the Master said it, that "with God all things are possible."
X
THE RELIGIOUS BASIS OF WORLD
RE-ORGANIZATION^
E. HERSHEY SNEATH
When we reflect upon the situation of the race today, with the
leading nations in the throes of a war of unparalleled dimensions
and destructiveness, we are appalled at the impotency of those
forces that heretofore have tended toward world-organization.
Time was when international treaties and laws seemed to have at
least a semblance of inhibiting sanctity, but in recent years they
are regarded in certain quarters as mere "scraps of paper," and
the supposed "rights" of nations are treated with scorn and con-
tempt. The black flag of piracy, hitherto regarded as the sj^mbol
of international outlawry, floats on the high seas, and the assassi-
nation of neutrals and noncombatants is regarded by some as a
national virtue. For centuries humane considerations obtained
with reference to prisoners of war and to partially conquered
nations. Now, certain nations have substituted for such humani-
tarianism, outrage, brutality and enforced slavery. In short,
international pact and law seem to have broken down. Their
restraints have yielded to the unbridled force of national greed
and lust for power.
Again, in the past, the moral imperatives, independent of
political treaties and laws, have exercised a wholesome constrain-
ing and restraining influence on the relations of different peoples,
and have made for fraternal world-organization. Man is consti-
1 Address delivered at the Fifteenth Annual Meeting of the National
Religious Education Association, New Yorls, March 5, 1918. Republished
with modifications by courtesy of Religious Education.
162 RELIGION AND THE WAR
tutionally a moral being, and is, to a certain extent, governed by
sentiments of justice and benevolence. These moral elements of
our nature have led us to have regard for man as man, rather than
for men as members of particular nations and races. Hence, in
our interaction there has been a tendency to recognize and respect
what we have been wont to call human rights as growing out of
the essential constitution of personality. The same tendency has
characterized our attitude toward men organized under political
government. But alas ! these fundamental moral claims are now
flagrantly violated. The morally right has, with some nations,
degenerated into the right of might.
Again, in the past, art has made for the unification of the race.
The aesthetic consciousness is on the side of harmony. It hates
chaos and loves order. It functions in the social and political
spheres and tends toward unity rather than anarchy — toward
peace rather than war. "Art binds together and unites the mem-
bers of the nation; nay, all the members of a sphere of civilization;
all those who have the same faith and the same ideals. Opinions
and interests differ and produce discord ; art presents in sensuous
symbols the ideals which are cherished by all, and so arouses the
feeling that all are, in the last analysis, of the same mind, that all
recognize and adore the same ultimate and highest things."" When
we deal with the ideal we are dealing with the universal. Thus art
transcends both individualism and nationalism. It contributes
toward international good will. But how ineffective it has proven
along these lines during the last few tragic years. One of the first
great outrages of the war was the wanton bombardment of the
beautiful Rheims cathedral. The world protested against this
iconoclasm, but it continued. Vandalism and robbing nations of
their art treasures are features of Kultur; so the breach between
nations widens despite the supposed unifying power of art. The
nation of Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, Mendelssohn and Wagner
grips with mailed fist the throat of the nation of Michelangelo,
2 Paulsen, "A System of Ethics," trans., p. 559.
BASIS OF WORLD RE-ORGANIZATION 163
Titian, Da Vinci, Correggio and Raphael, and tries to strangle the
nation of David, Delacroix and Millet. The. nation of Lessing,
Goethe and Schiller schools its children in a gospel of hate toward
the nation of Shakespeare and Milton and a long line of glorious
poets from Chaucer to Browning. The refining and organizing
influences of art have given way to the brutal instincts of malevo-
lence and greed, and a lofty idealism that bound the nations
together in a golden chain of beauty finds the precious chain
rudely broken. Art, like the other binding forces, has apparently
failed in its work of unification.
Another force that has been operative in world-organization is
religion, and especially the Christian religion. With its proclama-
tion of the universal fatherhood of God and brotherhood of man;
with the law of love as its law of social interaction ; with its "Go
ye into all the world and preach my gospel" — a gospel of univer-
sal membership in a kingdom of supreme values — in which every
member is on a moral equality with his neighbor — the Christian
religion has been promotive of a spirit of good will among men,
and of harmony among the nations. But what is the case today .^^
A nominally Christian nation joins bloody hands with a tradi-
tionally murderous nation of Mohammedan faith in wholesale
assassination of one of the most ancient Christian peoples, and
attempts to incite the Moslem world to warfare against nations
of Christian faith, merely to enhance her own selfish interests.
Furthermore, in the present crisis we find Christian nation
arrayed against Christian nation ; Protestant against Protestant ;
Catholic against Catholic ; Protestant and Catholic united against
Protestant and Catholic. Peoples in whose ears for centuries have
rung the glad tidings of "peace on earth, good will toward men"
are today gripping one another in mortal combat. The star of
the East that, according to the story, guided the Wise Men to
the maiiger of the Prince of Peace seems to have lost its radiance
and directing power. Never since the star is said to have shone
were men apparently farther from beating their swords into plow-
164 RELIGION AND THE WAR
shares and their spears into pruning hooks. The unifying power
of him whose life illustrated even better than his parable of the
Good Samaritan the highest law of human relationship is not in
evidence today. Where is the power of that cross, the vision of
which carried with it still another vision of a world attracted to,
and unified by, the power of self-sacrificing love — "And I, if I be
lifted up, will draw all men unto me".P Is the power of sacrificial
love drawing the hearts of men and of nations together in the
fellowship of Jesus Christ .^ Are not the dominant forces operating
today centrifugal rather than centripetal? It is not the skeptic,
or cynic, or pessimist, who asks these questions. They are the
questions of thousands of earnest men and women who face the
supreme crisis of human history. They bring home to us the fact
that religion, even in its highest form, like international law, like
morality, like art, however promotive of human brotherhood it
has been, has failed in this most crucial test to prevent the dread-
ful work of the destructive forces of mankind. This is a fact that
the sincere believer in religion must face whether he wants to
or not.
In view of the failure of all of these more or less harmonizing
and synthesizing forces to prevent such a gigantic war, what are
we to say about world-organization after the conflict.'^ Nations
must live and sustain relations to one another. They must establish
some modus vivendi, and it must be founded on justice. The
necessity of righteousness and good will in international relations
has been made more apparent than ever by this most tragic con-
flict. And the question arises : What organized forces are to
establish such righteousness and good will among the nations.^
We must depend upon the very same forces that have been opera-
tive in the past ; that is, upon international law, morality, art and
religion, but they must be made more effective. How this may be
done in the case of religion it is the aim of this paper to try to
explain.
In the first place, if religion is to become powerfully effective
BASIS OF WORLD RE-ORGANIZATION 165
in this direction, it must take a really ethical view of God. He
must be regarded as essentially moral in his constitution ; as ruling
in absolute righteousness, and a being whose ultimate aim with
reference to men and the world is the realization of a new heaven
and a new earth wherein righteousness is to dwell. Much as be-
lievers in religion have said on this subject, the conceptions of
many as expressed in belief and conduct have contradicted their
words. When the nation of Martin Luther, including not merely
the docile masses, but the spiritually enslaved clergy and servile
university professors,^ among whom may be nuinbered such reli-
gious leaders as Harnack, can accept and pray for the success
of the war-program of a ruler who regards himself to be the
vicegerent of the Almighty, cooperating with him in a scientifically
organized movement for the triumph of the most diabolical forces
the human race has ever witnessed — approving the vices of hell
as though they were the virtues of heaven — this nominally Chris-
tian nation is either guilty of awful blasphemy or it has lost its
vision of an ethical God. Such a conception of the Deity proves
divisive rather than unifying. It recognizes merely a partisan
tribal Deity who cooperates with a people to realize its own ends,
however unworthy and debasing those ends may be. Its influence
is promotive of national selfishness, and makes against a brother-
hood of nations. Professor Leuba speaks of the utilitarian ends
for which men believe in God — making him hardly more than a
meat purveyor;* but the German conception of God is much
crasser than this.^ "Gott mit uns" is a God that is asked and
believed to cooperate in the most damnable atrocities the human
mind ever conceived in order to further low national aims.
3 On the servility of German university professors consult David Jayne Hill,
Harper's Magazine, July, 1918, pp. 30-33.
i Monist, XI, p. 571.
5 See, for example, the views of Pastors W. I^ehmann ("About the German
God") ; H. Francke ("War Sermons") ; J. Rump ("War Devotions and
Memorial Services for the Fallen") ; K. Konig ("Six War Sermons") ; also
Tolzien and others in "Patriotic Evangelical War Lectures."
166 RELIGION AND THE WAR
Now, there is an important psychologj^ here that we must
reckon with. Professor Stratton, in his work on "The Psychology
of the Religious Life," calls attention to the fact that religion
breeds conflict, it gives birth to opposites or antitheses, and he
devotes nearly the entire volume to a consideration of these con-
flicts. In one of his most interesting chapters*' he points out the
fact that religion is productive of both breadth and narrowness
of sympathy, of both social and anti-social feelings, of both
egoism and altruism. He illustrates this in pointing out the exclu-
siveness of some religions, such as that of the Jews, and of the
catholicity of others, such as Buddhism and Christianity. He
points out, also, the jealousy and intolerance of the monotheistic
religions, such as Judaism, Christianity and Mohammedanism, as
compared with polytheistic religions, like Buddhism. The former,
like Elijah, are very jealous for their Lord, and such jealousy
breeds narrowness and intolerance. It breeds exclusiveness, strife
and often persecution. Now most of the conflict between narrow-
ness and breadth of sympathy to which religion gives rise is due
to wrong conceptions of the ethical nature of God. This manifests
itself in many ways. God is conceived as a God of one people,
rather than of others ; or of one people particularly and pecu-
liarly, and of other peoples merely generally; or a God choosing
and rewarding the elect and damning the non-elect ; or a God
favoring only one mode of salvation peculiar to a certain people
or sect, and hostile to all others ; or a God of one revelation rather
than of another. In short, God is a God of favoritism instead of
the impartial God and father of all mankind. Such a God is not
a God of justice, much less of love. Such a conception is produc-
tive of division, rather than of unity in the race. It begets strife,
rather than harmony. Witness the religious wars that history
records. Witness, for example, the history of the confl,ict between
Mohammedanism and Christianity; between Protestantism and
Catholicism. As a rule, religion is so involved in the life of a people
6 Pt. I, ch. II.
BASIS OF WORLD RE-ORGANIZATION 167
that it becomes an integral part of their nationalism. Historians
call attention to the fact that the monotheism of the Jews was
largely the outgrowth of reflection upon their own history as a
people. They saw in this history a Divinity that had shaped their
ends, however roughhewn they may have been. They regarded
themselves a "peculiar" people, specially chosen of God. For
more than a century a similar belief prevailed in America. Our
wonderful history led people to believe that we are a favored
nation. God's providential government reveals a partiality for
America when compared with other nations. With such concep-
tions of a partial God, it is but a short step to making use of
God for national ends, and, as illustrated in the case of the Ger-
man nation today, only another step to conceiving God's willing-
ness to cooperate in realizing ends which, in the judgment of the
world, as expressed in international law, as well as in its own
unwritten verdict, are regarded as unrighteous. Until the God
of the race supersedes in actual belief and practice the God of
nationalism ; until the God and father of all mankind displaces
in our belief the God of sect or of one religion rather than of
another; until the God of absolute and universal righteousness
takes the place in our minds and hearts of the God of partiality
and favoritism, which is the God of injustice; men and nations
will not be bound together in one great and glorious fraternity.
The root idea of religion is the idea of God, and as is our idea
of God, so will our religious life be. If it is the idea of an un-
righteous Deity, our individual, national and international life
will be unrighteous. A fundamental necessity in the determination
of the religious basis of world-organization is an ethical conception
of God.
In the second place, in our religious efforts at world-organiza-
tion we must entertain and put in practice a far more ethical
conception of man than we have in the past. The inalienable rights
of personality must be recognized and their sancity remain
inviolable. That valuation which Christianity places on man as
168 RELIGION AND THE WAR
man milst be seriously reckoned with in our reconstructive efforts
after the war. Or, as Kant states it, every man must be regarded
as an end in himself. He must not be used merely as a means to an
end. The significance of this is, that there is an essential moral
equality among men. On it all political relations, whether national
or international, must be based. This means, first, that within each
nation a true form of government, under whatsoever name it may
be known, must be democratic. "It must derive its authority and
power from the consent of the governed." Autocracy is opposed
to moral and political equality. It treats its subjects as tools or
instruments. It builds governments of force that ignore the moral
and political claims of their own people, reducing them to a
docility in which they are little more than "dumb driven cattle."
Thus subjugated, they are schooled from childhood in a creed
of jealousy and hatred of other nations. They can be hurled in
masses "into the jaws of Death" in an unrighteous war of con-
quest. Autocracy is upheld by militarism, and militarism means
strife. On the other hand, militarism is upheld by autocracy. It
first robs the people of its own nation of their rights and then
proceeds to plunder other nations. It is essentially anti-social in
character, and it is so because it is anti-moral. It overlooks the
moral equality of men. The religion of the future must set its
face like flint against this immoral view of man. It must emphasize
the autonomy of the human spirit — the essential value of a soul
that can determine its own conduct in the light of ideals of worth.
Once it does this, democracy will assert itself in government, and
autocracy, responsible for so many of the wars that have afflicted
the race, will be abolished.
In the next place, this essential moral equality of men, when
recognized, means that their mutual relations will become more
ethically articulate, and the law of social interaction will be at
least the law of justice, and in a measure the law of love, — "Thou
shalt love thy neighbor as thyself," — which being interpreted
means, that just as one is under obligations to labor for the
BASIS OF WORLD RE-ORGANIZATION 169
realization of the highest good in one's own person, so he is under
obligations to work for the realization of the highest good in the
person of others. And this highest law of human relationship must
be recognized, not merely as obligatory upon individuals in their
relations to other individuals, but also upon nations in their
mutual relations. Morality is transcendental in its character. It
overleaps the bounds of individualism. It knows not men merely,
nor nations merely, nor groups of nations merely; — it knows the
race. It knows man, rather than men. It is difficult for us to realize
this. Just as it was hard for primitive tribes to realize any obliga-
tions to other tribes, so today, notwithstanding centuries of so-
called civilization, somehow or other an international morality
fails to have the binding force either of personal, community, or
national morality. The righteousness that exalts a people seems
largely to be a righteousness within its own borders. Egoism in a
nation is just as blameworthy as egoism in an individual. In the
vast group of nations, no nation liveth unto itself alone, if it is
to live according to the moral law of benevolence, or according
to the Christian law of love. The religion of the future must, in
its practical belief, emphasize this fact far more than it has in
the past. Nations are simply larger human units, and the moral
law in its obligations applies just as truly to their interrelations
as it does to those of individuals. Its demands are no more
Utopian in the former case than in the latter. It can at least
serve as an ideal or guide to conduct. As in the case of individuals,
so in the case of nations, each has its rights, and in their mutual
relations the moral law or the law of love requires the recognition
of the rights or just claims of each. As President Wilson said in
his memorable message to Congress on April 2, 1917: "We are
at the beginning of an age in which it will be insisted that the
same standards of conduct and of responsibility for wrong done
shall be observed among nations and their governments that are
observed among individuals of civilized states." And again: "It
is clear that nations must in the future be governed by the same
170 RELIGION AND THE WAR
high code of honor that we demand of Individuals." Of course the
cynical political philosopher and "practical" stateman will regard
this as "unpractical idealism." But the ethics of the Nazarene will
prove far more effective in promoting a satisfactory modus vivendi
among the nations than the revived Machiavellianism of modern
Germany, or the ethics of a Nietzsche, a Treitschke, and a Bern-
hardt We see the inevitable outcome of the latter in the most
ghastly war of all history. There never will be peace on such a
brutally egoistic basis as that laid down in the political philosophy
of these writers so prized by many Germans. The doctrines of the
superman with their contempt for the weak, and of war as a
^'biological necessity," so dear to Junkerdom, are confessedly the
affirmation that "might makes right." If peace be attainable and
preservable on such a basis, and the lion and the lamb are to lie
down together, it will only be as the lamb lies inside of the lion.
Some lamb-like pacifists and "conscientious objectors" to war may
be content with such a place of residence; but physically and
morally red-blooded and self-respecting men and nations not only
prefer, but feel it a moral obligation to maintain the individual and
national self against an unscrupulous and barbarous aggressor and
destroyer. They feel so, too, in obedience to the Christian com-
mand, "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself" — a command that
not only includes self as the object of moral regard, but that makes
it the norm according to which we are to determine our duty to
others. Men and nations do feel morally responsible for their own
preservation and development, and will, as a rule, defend the
essential conditions of these against unjustifiable attack. Hence,
as long as nations exist, war will remain a possibility. The only
way to avert it is through mutual respect for fundamental rights.
Both the law of benevolence and the Christian law of love demand
this. Indeed, they demand more ! They call for a manifestation
or fuller expression of good will and fraternal regard both in
feeling and in conduct.
Now, in the work of establishing a real brotherhood among
BASIS OF WORLD RE-ORGANIZATION 171
individuals and among nations, religion has the advantage over
mere morality, for it can avail itself of the power of the religious
sanctions in trying to realize the kingdom of righteousness. But,
on the other hand, a subtle danger lurks in religion which it may
be well to point out here, and which must be guarded against in
our future efforts at community, national and world-organization,
for it tends to subordinate the ethical element in religion, and often
degenerates into an anti-social program. According to the sanest
views of the psychology of religion, the whole mind as intellect,
sensibility and will functions in the religious consciousness.
Because of this, there is a possibility of developing a wrong sense
of values in the religious life. There has been a notable tendency
in human history to stress the intellectual element in religion. This
has resulted in a large body of doctrine which frequently assumes
extraordinary significance. The main thing, then, is to give intel-
lectual assent to dogma and creed. Orthodoxy of belief rather than
orthodoxy of life becomes the primary thing. The ethical element
in religion is subordinated to intellectual belief. And how divisive
and anti-social, rather than unifying, dogma has been, and how
deadening to real moral endeavor ! This constitutes a long and
very tragic chapter in the history of Christianity, as well as of
other religions.
Again, there has been another marked tendency in the history
of religion and that is the substitution of the religion of feeling
for the religion of will. Pietism and sentimentalism have supplanted
in a large measure the ethical. Such religion is dominantly non-
social, if not, indeed, anti-social in its character. It does not make
for brotherhood. The pietistic monk shuts himself in a monastery
and tries to work out his soul's salvation with fear and trembling,
rather than to work it out by aiding his neighbor or society to
work out theirs. Buddhism and Christianity have been most un-
fortunate victims of this substitution of solitude for solidarity.
Dean Brown once said to the writer that there is a great deal of
pietism that is utterly wanting in ethical quality, and that is true.
172 RELIGION AND THE WAR
It is a kind of selfish subjectivism devoid of any real moral char-
acter. It is self-centered and non-social. It represents the minimum
of true religion. Where in such pietism do we find the universality
of obligation involved in the ethical law of benevolence or in the
Christian law of love.^ Such religion does not bear the marks of
a really socialized gospel. It has developed a wrong sense of values.
Again, there is in practically all religions a large element of
symbolism — the religious life expressing itself in worship — in rites
and ceremony. And this carries with it a dangerous tendency in
evaluation. It often substitutes ritual and ceremonial for what is
the real essence of religion — namely, righteousness. The great
Hebrew prophets contended strongly against this misinterpreta-
tion of religion. With them it represented an erroneous estimate
of the essentials of religion. Indeed, it threatened its very life —
the heart of which in their conception is righteousness in God and
man. Isaiah represents Jehovah as being weary of sacrifice, in-
cense and other forms of worship — regarding them as an abomi-
nation, and calling upon the people to live a life of righteousness :
"Wash you, make you clean; put away the evil of your doings
from before mine eyes ; cease to do evil ; learn to do well ; seek
justice, relieve the oppressed. '"^ Hosea exclaims : "I desired
mercy, and not* sacrifice."^ Micah, inveighing against burnt offer-
ings, says : "He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good, and what
doth Jehovah require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy,
and to walk humbly with thy God.?"^ And Jesus, all through the
Sermon on the Moiint and in the parables, in the most positive
manner represents righteous living as the very core of religion.
All of these elements — the intellectual, the pietistic, the aesthetic
or symbolical — have a rightful place in the religious life, but they
are all subordinate, and exceedingly subordinate, to the one great
dominating element, the moral. And it is because of a failure to
adequately recognize and practise this element that so many sup-
7 Isaiah 2:10.
8 Hosea 6:6.
9 Micah 6:8.
BASIS OF WORLD RE-ORGANIZATION 173
posedly Christian nations are today in deadly conflict. All of
them persist in their theological beliefs ; all of them persist in
pietistic communion; all of them persist in rite and ceremony;
but some of them at least fail even to approximate the exemplifica-
tion of the fundamental ethical requirements of their faith. Their
theology, their pietism, their worship, — their religion,^ — have not
been moralized; and unless we are willing to make, both in belief
and practice, the religious basis of world-organization truly
ethical, we will fail as lamentably in the future as we have in the
past.
Finally, how is such a religious program to be carried forward .^
The answer is, by systematic religious education. Such an educa-
tional procedure involves beginning at the beginning, and that is,
with the child. Here, again, we meet with a melancholy failure in
the development of a true sense of values. Despite the progress
that modern religious educational effort has made, there is still
a widespread lack of genuine appreciation of the importance of
childhood for moral and religious instruction. The premium is
still placed on the adult. We have but to examine the average
church program to be convinced of this. In a large number of
churches we have three Sunday services — two of which are devoted
to adults and one to children. In the average church the week-
day services are largely services for adults. Our sermons, our
hymns, our prayers, many of our week-day meetings cover chiefly
the interests of grown-ups ; and the lamentable condition of home
religious education painfully fails to make up this deficiency in
what Dr. Horace Bushnell called Christian nurture. Indeed, under
a false conception of conversion, and a false apprehension of the
spiritual birthright of children in most Protestant quarters, the
child, as the late Professor George P. Fisher once remarked to
the writer, is regarded as an alien to the Commonwealth of Israel.
Instead of being born into the church and treated as a member
of the household of faith, he must serve his probation as a heathen,
and await the dawn of adolescence when he will have developed
174 RELIGION AND THE WAR
sufficient maturity of mind to interpret and give intellectual
assent to a creed. The absurdity and tragedy of it all are manifest
when we take into consideration the ethical character of religion,
and the fact that childhood is preeminently the period for estab-
lishing the individual in habits of virtue. There may be some
exaggeration in Dr. G. Stanley Hall's affirmation, that the moral
and spiritual destiny of the average person is determined in the
first ten years of his life; but, to anyone who has studied the
psychology of moral and spiritual development, it is evident that
Hall is dealing with far more than a half-truth. The receptivity
and plasticity of the child make it possible for those to whom his.
most vital interests are committed to really save him or damn
him. And, as we establish children in right thinking and right
living, so we establish the community, the state, the nation, and
ultimately the nations in their reciprocal relations. In more ways
than one is Wordsworth's statement true, "The child is father to
the man." It is preeminently true in the moral and religious
sphere. The Kingdom of God and hi,s righteousness will never
make the progress on earth that they should make until the scales
really fall from our eyes, and we gain a true vision of our duty to
the child in establishing him in personal and community righteous-
ness, and thus pave the way for the application of the law of
righteousness in the state and among the nations of the earth.
In still another way, to one who is convinced of the supremacy
of moral and spiritual worths and of the ethical aim of all true
religion, is the lamentable failure to develop a true sense of values
manifest. Professor Pratt calls attention in his "Psychology of
Religious Belief" to what he regards to be a fact, that in the aver-
age American community, "we find our friends and neighbors, of
all degrees of education and intellectual ability, almost to a man
accepting God as one of the best recognized realities of their
world and as simply not to be questioned. "^° That statement is
in the main true. In other words, we are a religious people. And
10 Page 231. '
BASIS OF WORLD RE-ORGANIZATION 175
yet, notwithstanding this fact, so far as thoroughgoing, sys-
tematic religious education is concerned, when compared with the
time and efforts devoted to education along other lines, and its
quality, it suffers painfully. In nearly all of the states, five days a
week, of at least four or five hours each, are given to what we call
secular education, as against one day per week, of one hour each,
to religious instruction and worship. In secular education we have,
on the whole, a trained body of teachers. In religious education
we are dependent largely on amateurs. In most places religion is
not allowed a voice in our schools, so far as systematic training is
concerned, and in comparatively few communities has a systematic
course of moral training even been introduced. What does all
this mean.'' Does it not mean that we err tremendously in our sense
of values.'' If there is any doubt concerning this, reflect for a
moment on the possibility of organizing a community on a basis
of the vices instead of the virtues. Try to found a community on
sensuality, falsehood, dishonesty, injustice, hate and murder, and
see how far you will succeed. Society could not exist on such a
basis. Were the German people to put into practice among them-
selves the vices and crimes they have committed against other
peoples, their existence as a nation would be exceedingly short-
lived. The vices are anti-social in their character. The virtues are
social : they make for unity, for organization. And what is true
of communities is true of states and nations — not only in their
internal relations but in their relations to other nations. The
virtues make for national and international organization. Now,
religion deals with these sovereign values, and yet, comparatively
speaking, we — a religious people — relegate them to the back-
ground in our educational schemes. We will never succeed in world-
organization until we genuinely appreciate the unifying poAver
of the virtues, the harmonizing and binding force of righteousness,
and systematically train a generation from childhood in a knowl-
edge and an appreciation of their supreme worth, and try to
mould their wills in conformity to their requirements.
176 RELIGION AND THE WAR
But, as Herbert Spencer wisely remarks, we have not an ideal
environment in which to work out our ideals. And that is eminently
true in this case ; therefore, wisdom dictates that we try to do our
work with reference to the conditions of the actual environment in
which we are placed. If, for apparently good reasons, it be not
expedient under present conditions to introduce systematic reli-
gious education into the public schools, it is possible for us to make
provision in some other way for religion to have its rightful place
in the general training of our children. This would require a
religious school organization, with a curriculum that interprets
religion as ethical in its aim. It would require a scientifically
graded moral scheme with its corresponding religious sanctions ;
also the creation of a literature to meet these demands. It would
require, at least, three sessions a week. It should be separate from
the Sunday school, where, with present conditions, sectarianism
still enters into education, and yet it should be supplementary to
it. It would call for a specially trained teaching force; and for
skilled professional supervision. All this ought to be done; it can
be done; and it must be done. We must do it in the interests of
the individual, of the family, of the community, of the state, of
the nation, and of the brotherhood of nations. It is a thoroughly
practicable scheme. The literature exists already; colleges, schools
of religion, and theological seminaries can easily become training
schools for the preparation of religious teachers. The only diffi-
culty in the way, which is, indeed, a serious one, but by no means
insuperable, is the time-schedule of the children. In my own judg-
ment, if a real effort were made by the churches of any community,
a plan could be formulated in relation to the public schools
whereby the children would become available for such religious
instruction. If the community is a religious one, it has a right to,
and must insist upon, having the children a fair share of the time
for such purposes. If the moral and spiritual values are the su-
preme values of society, then it is in the interests of society itself
that these values should receive proper recognition in formal
BASIS OF WORLD RE-ORGANIZATION 177
education for citizenship. The real trouble is, that the churches
are not really in earnest concerning this important matter. It has
taken an awful social cataclysm to make us realize that nations,
like families and communities, can hang together on no other
basis than the cardinal virtues, and that something more than
a mere formal recognition of these virtues is required for
world-organization. Men and nations must be disciplined in them,
and the way to do this is to begin in childhood. If the schooling
of a nation in a gospel of national egoism and hate be largely
responsible for the present war, with the brutal indifference of
the German people to moral considerations in provoking it and
to humane methods of waging it, why is it not possible to school
the nations in those things that make for good will and world-
organization .^ To doubt it is to doubt the might of right.
In conclusion, my plea is, that, in our efforts at world re-
organization, so far as religion is concerned, we adequately
reckon with its ethical character. Let us take, first, an ethical
view of God — that he is a righteous being, that he deals justly
with all men and all nations, that he cannot be used by any
individual or nation for unrighteous ends, that he is the father
of us all, and that he cooperates with men in their efforts to
bring in the reign of righteousness upon earth. And, secondly,
let us take a more ethical view of man ; recognizing the worth
and inalienable rights of personality; that no man may be used
merely as a means, but must be regarded as an end in himself;
and thus, whatever may be the outward form of government, it
must in essence be democratic, rather than autocratic; that the
law of interaction among nations must be the same as the law
among individuals — the law of benevolence or the law of love. Let
us develop a true sense of values in religion that will place em-
phasis on the voluntaristic or ethical element rather than on either
the intellectual, pietistic and symbolical or aesthetic. Finally, let
us try to realize this program by thorough, systematic religious
education in which we shall emphasize the interests of the child
178 RELIGION AND THE WAR
rather than the interests of the adult ; by giving an ethical inter-
pretation to the curriculum; by organizing a trained body of
teachers ; and by insisting that a fair amount of the child's time
and effort shall be devoted to education in the supreme values of
society. If we act on this program, if we make this really the
religious basis of world re-organization, we will make long strides
toward the dawn of a better day, when nations shall seek war no
more; and the kingdoms of this world shall become the kingdoms
of our righteous God and his Christ, whose gospel and life teach
the universal fatherhood of God and the universal brotherhood
of man.
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