bannerbanner
The Water of Life, and Other Sermons
The Water of Life, and Other Sermonsполная версия

Полная версия

Настройки чтения
Размер шрифта
Высота строк
Поля
На страницу:
11 из 13

It would have been wiser, surely, in those Gadarenes, and better for them, had they cried—‘Lord, what wilt Thou have us to do?  We see that Thou art a Being of infinite power, for mercy, and for punishment likewise.  And Thou art the very Being whom we want, to teach us our duty, and to make us do it.  Tell us what we ought to do, and help us, and, if need be, compel us to do it, and so to prosper indeed.’  And so should we pray in the case of this cholera.  We may ask God to take it away: but we are bound to ask God also, why He has sent it.  Till then we have no reason to suppose that He will take it away; we have no reason to suppose that it will be merciful in Him to take it away, till He has taught us why it was sent.  This question of cholera has come now to a crisis, in which we must either learn why cholera comes, or incur, I hold, lasting disgrace and guilt.  And—if I may dare to hint at the counsels of God—it seems as if the Almighty Lord had no mind to relieve us of that disgrace and guilt.

For months past we have been praying that this cholera should not enter England, and our prayers have not been heard.  In spite of them the cholera has come; and has slain thousands, and seems likely to slay thousands more.  What plainer proof can there be to those who believe in the providence of God, and the rule of Jesus Christ our Lord, than that we are meant to learn some wholesome lesson from it, which we have not learnt yet?  It cannot be that God means us to learn the physical cause of cholera, for that we have known these twenty years.  Foul lodging, foul food, and, above all, natural and physical, foul water; there is no doubt of the cause.  But why cannot we save English people from the curse and destruction which all this foulness brings?  That is the question.  That is our national scandal, shame, and sin at this moment.  Perhaps the Lord wills that we should learn that; learn what is the moral and spiritual cause of our own miserable weakness, negligence, hardness of heart, which, sinning against light and knowledge, has caused the death of thousands of innocent souls.  God grant that we may learn that lesson.  God grant that He may put into the hearts and minds of some man or men, the wisdom and courage to deliver us from such scandals for the future.

But I have little hope that that will happen, till we get rid of our secret atheism; till we give up the notion that God only visits now and then, to disorder and destroy His own handiwork, and take back the old scriptural notion, that God is visiting all day long for ever, to give order and life to His own work, to set it right whenever it goes wrong, and re-create it whenever it decays.  Till then we can expect only explanations of cholera and of God’s other visitations of affliction, which are so superstitious, so irrational, so little connected with the matter in hand, that they would be ridiculous, were they not somewhat blasphemous.  But when men arise in this land who believe truly in an ever-present God of order, revealed in His Son Jesus Christ; when men shall arise in this land, who will believe that faith with their whole hearts, and will live and die for it and by it; acting as if they really believed that in God we live, and move, and have our being; as if they really believed that they were in the kingdom and rule of Christ,—a rule of awful severity, and yet of perfect love,—a rule, meanwhile, which men can understand, and are meant to understand, that they may not only obey the laws of God, but know the mind of God, and copy the dealings of God, and do the will of God; and when men arise in this land, who have that holy faith in their hearts, and courage to act upon it, then cholera will vanish away, and the physical and moral causes of a hundred other evils which torment poor human beings through no anger of God, but simply through their own folly, and greediness, and ignorance.

All these shall vanish away, in the day when the knowledge of the Lord shall cover the land, and men shall say, in spirit and in truth, as Christ their Lord has said before,—‘Sacrifice and burnt-offering thou wouldest not.  Then said I, Lo, I come.  In the volume of the book it is written of Me, that I should do the will of God.’  And in those days shall be fulfilled once more, the text which says,—‘That the people glorified God, saying, A great Prophet, even Christ the Lord Himself, hath risen up among us, and God hath visited His people.’

SERMON XVIII

THE WICKED SERVANT

St. Matthew xviii. 23

The kingdom of heaven is likened to a certain king, which would take account of his servants.

This parable, which you heard in the Gospel for this day, you all know.  And I doubt not that all you who know it, understand it well enough.  It is so human and so humane; it is told with such simplicity, and yet with such force and brilliancy that—if one dare praise our Lord’s words as we praise the words of men—all must see its meaning at once, though it speaks of a state of society different from anything which we have ever seen, or, thank God, ever shall see.

The Eastern despotic king who has no law but his own will; who puts his servant—literally his slave—into a post of such trust and honour, that the slave can misappropriate and make away with the enormous sum of ten thousand talents; who commands, not only him, but his wife and children to be sold to pay the debt; who then forgives him all out of a sudden burst of pity, and again, when the wretched man has shown himself base and cruel, unworthy of that pity, revokes his pardon, and delivers him to the tormentors till he shall pay all—all this is a state of things impossible in a free country, though it is possible enough still in many countries of the East, which are governed in this very despotic fashion; and justice, and very often injustice likewise, is done in this rough, uncertain way, by the will of the king alone.

But, however different the circumstances, yet there is a lesson in this story which is universal and eternal, true for all men, and true for ever.  The same human nature, for good and for evil, is in us, as was in that Eastern king and his slave.  The same kingdom of heaven is over us as was over them, its laws punishing sinners by their own sins; the same Spirit of God which strove with their hearts is striving with ours.  If it was not so, the parable would mean nothing to us.  It would be a story of men who belonged to another moral world, and were under another moral law, not to be judged by our rules of right and wrong; and therefore a story of men whom we need not copy.

But it is not so.  If the parable be—as I take for granted it is—a true story; then it was Christ, the Light who lights every man who cometh into the world, who put into that king’s heart the divine feeling of mercy, and inspired him to forgive, freely and utterly, the wretched slave who worshipped him, kneeling with his forehead to the ground, and promising, in his terror, what he probably knew he could not perform—‘Lord, have patience with me, and I will pay thee all.’

And it was Christ, the Light of men, who inspired that king with the feeling, not of mere revenge, but of just retribution; who taught him that, when the slave was unworthy of his mercy, he had a right, in a noble and divine indignation, to withdraw his mercy; and not to waste his favours on a bad man, who would only turn them to fresh bad account, but to keep them for those who had justice and honour enough in their hearts to forgive others, when their Lord had forgiven them.

We must bear in mind, that the king must have been right, and acting (whether he knew it or not) by the Spirit of God; else his conduct would never have been likened to the kingdom of heaven: that is, to the laws by which God governs both this world and the world to come.

The kingdom of heaven.  The kingdom of God—Would that men would believe in them a little more!  It seems, at times, as if all belief in them was dying out; as if men, throughout all civilized and Christian countries, had made up their minds to say—There is no kingdom of God or of heaven.  There will be one hereafter, in the next world.  This world is the kingdom of men, and of what they can do for themselves without God’s help, and without God’s laws.

My friends, the Jewish rulers of old said so, and cried, ‘We have no king but Cæsar.’  And they remain an example to all time, of what happens to those who deny the kingdom of God.  Christ came to tell them that the kingdom of heaven was at hand, and the kingdom of God was among them.  But they would have none of it.  And what said our Lord of them and their notion?  ‘The prince of this world,’ said He, ‘cometh, and hath nothing in me.  This is your hour and the power of darkness.’  Yes; the hour in which men had determined to manage the world in their way, and not in Christ’s, was also the hour of the power of darkness.  That was what they had gained by having their own way; by saying—The kingdom is ours, and not God’s.  They had fallen under the power of darkness, not of light.  The very light within them was darkness.  They utterly mistook their road on earth.  At the very moment that they were trying to make peace with the Roman governor, by denying that Christ was their King, and demanding that He should be crucified,—at that very moment the things which belonged to their peace were hid from their eyes.  Never men made so fatal a mistake, when they thought themselves most politic and prudent.  They said among themselves—‘Unless we put down this man, the Romans will come and take away our place,’ i.e. our privileges, and power, and our nation.  And what followed?  That the Romans did come and take away their place and nation, with horrible massacre and ruin: and so they lost both the kingdom of this world, and the kingdom of God likewise.  Never, I say, did men make a more fatal mistake in the things of this world than those Jews to whom the kingdom of God came, and they rejected it.

And so shall we, my friends, if we forget that, whether we like it or not, the kingdom of God is within us, and we within it likewise.

1.  The kingdom of God is within us.  Every gracious motive, every noble, just, and merciful instinct within us, is a sign to us that the kingdom of God is come to us; that we are not as the brutes which perish; not as the heathen who are too often past feeling, being alienated from the life of God by reason of the ignorance which is in them: but, that we are God’s children, inheritors of the kingdom of heaven; and that God’s Spirit is teaching us the laws of that kingdom; so that in every child who is baptized, educated, and civilized, is fulfilled the promise, ‘I will write my laws upon their hearts, and I will be to them a Father.’

God’s Spirit is teaching our hearts as He taught the heart of that old Eastern king.  It may be, it ought to be, that He is teaching us far deeper lessons than He ever taught that king.

2.  We are in the kingdom of God.  It is worth our while to remember that steadfastly just now.  Many people are ready to agree that the kingdom of God is within them.  They will readily confess that religion is a spiritual matter, and a matter of the heart: but their fancy is that therefore religion, and all just and noble and beautiful instincts and aspirations, are very good things for those who have them: but that, if any one has them not, it does not much matter.

They do not see that there are not only such things as feelings about God; but that there are also such things as laws of God; and that God can enforce those laws, and does enforce them, sometimes in a very terrible manner.  They do not believe enough in a living God, an acting God, a God who will not merely write His laws in our hearts, if we will let Him, but may also destroy us off the face of the earth, if we would not let Him.  They fancy that God either cannot, or will not, enforce His own laws, but leaves a man free to accept them, or reject as he will.  There is no greater mistake.  Be not deceived; God is not mocked.  As a man sows, so shall he reap.  God says to us, to all men,—Copy Me.  Do as I do, and be My children, and be blest.  But if we will not; if, after all God’s care and love, the tree brings forth no fruit, then, soon or late, the sentence goes forth against it in God’s kingdom, ‘Cut it down; why cumbereth it the ground?’

There is a saying now-a-days, that nations and tribes who will not live reasonable lives, and behave as men should to their fellow-men, must be civilized off the face of the earth.  The words are false, if they mean that we, or any other men, have a right to exterminate their fellow-creatures.  But they are true, and more true than the people who use them fancy, if they are spoken not of man, but of God.  For if men will not obey the laws of God’s kingdom, God does actually civilize them off the face of the earth.  Great nations, learned churches, powerful aristocracies, ancient institutions, has God civilized off the face of the earth before now.  Because they would not acknowledge God for their King, and obey the laws of His kingdom, in which alone are life, and wealth, and health, God has taken His kingdom away from them, and given it to others who would bring forth the fruits thereof.  The Jews are the most awful and famous example of that terrible judgment of God, but they are not the only ones.  It has happened again and again.  It may happen to you or me, as well as to this whole nation of England, if we forget that we are in God’s kingdom, and that only by living according to God’s laws can we keep our place therein.

And this is what the parable teaches us.  The king tries to teach the servant one of the laws of his kingdom—that he rules according to boundless mercy and generosity.  God wishes to teach us the same.  The king does so, not by word, but by deed, by actually forgiving the man his debt.  So does God forgive us freely in Jesus Christ our Lord.

But more than this, he wishes the servant to understand that he is to copy his king; that if his king has behaved to him like a father to his child, he must behave as a brother to his fellow-servants.  So does God wish to teach us.

But he does not tell the man so, in so many words.  He does not say to him, I command thee to forgive thy debtors as I have forgiven thee.  He leaves the man to his own sense of honour and good feeling.  It is a question not of the law, but of the heart.  So does God with us.  He educates us, not as children or slaves, but as free men, as moral agents.  He leaves us to our own reason and conscience, to reap the fruit which we ourselves have sown.  Therefore, about a thousand matters in life He lays on us no special command.  He leaves us to act according to our good feeling, to our own sense of honour.  It is a matter, I say, of the heart.  If God’s law be written in our hearts, our hearts will lead us to do the right thing.  If God’s law be not in our hearts, then mere outward commands will not make us do right, for what we do will not be really right and good, because it will not be done heartily and of our own will.

But the servant does not follow his lord’s example.

Fresh from his lord’s presence, he takes his fellow-servant by the throat, saying—Pay me that thou owest.  His heart has not been touched.  His lord’s example has not softened him.  He does not see how beautiful, how noble, how divine, generosity and mercy are.  He is a hard-hearted, worldly man.  The heavenly kingdom, which is justice and love, is not within him.  Then, if the kingdom of heaven is not in him, he shall find out that he is in it; and that in a very terrible way:—‘Thou wicked servant, unworthy of my pity, because there is no goodness in thine own heart.  Thou wilt not take into thy heart my law, which tells thee, Be merciful as I am merciful.  Then thou shalt feel another and an equally universal law of mine.  As thou doest so shalt thou be done by.  If thou art merciful, thou shalt find mercy.  If thou wilt have nothing but retribution, then nothing but retribution thou shalt have.  If thou must needs do justice thyself, I will do justice likewise.  Because I am merciful, dost thou think me careless?  Because I sit still, that I am patient?  Dost thou think me such a one as thyself?’  And his lord delivered him to the tormentors till he should pay all that was due unto him.

My dear friends, this is an awful story.  Let us lay it to heart.  And to do that, let us pray God to lay it to our hearts; to write His laws in our hearts, that we may not only fear them, but love them; not only see their profitableness, but their fitness; that we may obey them, not grudgingly or of necessity, but obey them because they look to us just, and true, and beautiful, and as they are—Godlike.  Let us pray, I say, that God would make us love what He commands, lest we should neglect and despise what He commands, and find it some day unexpectedly alive and terrible after all.  Let us pray to God to keep alive His kingdom of grace within us, lest His kingdom of retribution outside us should fall upon us, and grind us to powder.

SERMON XIX

CIVILIZED BARBARISM

(Preached for the Bishop of London’s Fund, at St. John’s Church, Notting Hill, June 1866.)St. Matthew ix. 12

They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick.

I have been honoured by an invitation to preach on behalf of the Bishop of London’s Fund for providing for the spiritual wants of this metropolis.  By the bishop, and a large number of landowners, employers of labour, and others who were aware of the increasing heathendom of the richest and happiest city of the world, it was agreed that, if possible, a million sterling should be raised during the next ten years, to do what money could do in wiping out this national disgrace.  It is a noble plan; and it has been as yet—and I doubt not will be to the end—nobly responded to by the rich laity of this metropolis.

More than 100,000l. was contributed during the first six months; nearly 60,000l. in the ensuing year; beside subscriptions which are promised for the whole, or part of the ten years.  The money, therefore, does not flow in as rapidly as was desired: but there is as yet no falling off.  And I believe that there will be, on the contrary, a gradual increase in the subscriptions as the objects of this fund are better understood, and as its benefits are practically felt.

Now, it is unnecessary—it would be almost an impertinence—to enlarge on a spiritual destitution of which you are already well aware.  There are, we shall all agree, many thousands in London who are palpably sick of spiritual disease, and need the physician.  But I have special reasons for not pressing this point.  If I attempted to draw subscriptions from you by painting tragical and revolting pictures of the vice, heathendom, and misery of this metropolis, I might make you fancy that it was an altogether vicious, heathen, and miserable spot: than which there can be no greater mistake.  These evils are not the rule, but the exceptions.  Were they not the exceptions, then not merely the society of London, and the industry of London, and the wealth of London, but the very buildings of London, the brick and the mortar, would crumble to the ground by natural and inevitable decay.  The unprecedentedly rapid increase of London is, I firmly believe, a sure sign that things in it are done on the whole not ill, but well; that God’s blessing is on the place; that, because it is on the whole obeying the eternal laws of God, therefore it is increasing, and multiplying, and replenishing the earth, and subduing it.  And I do not hesitate to say, that I have read of no spot of like size upon this earth, on which there have ever been congregated so many human beings, who are getting their bread so peaceably, happily, loyally, and virtuously; and doing their duty—ill enough, no doubt, as we all do it—but still doing it more or less, by man and God.

I am well aware that many will differ from me; that many men and many women—holy, devoted, spending their lives in noble and unselfish labours—persons whose shoes’ latchet I am not worthy to unloose—take a far darker view of the state of this metropolis.  But the fact is, that they are naturally brought in contact chiefly with its darker side.  Their first duty is to seek out cases of misery: and even if they do not, the miserable will, of their own accord, come to them.  It is their first duty too—if they be clergymen—to rebuke, and if possible, to cure, open vice, open heathendom, as well as to relieve present want and wretchedness: and may God’s blessing be on all who do that work.  But in doing it they are dealing daily—and ought to deal, and must deal—with the exceptional, and not with the normal; with cases of palpable and shocking disease, and not with cases of at least seeming health.  They see that, into London, as into a vast sewer, gravitates yearly all manner of vice, ignorance, weakness, poverty: but they are apt to forget, at times—and God knows I do not blame them for it in the least—that there gravitates into London, not as into a sewer, but as into a wholesome and fruitful garden, a far greater amount of health, strength, intellect, honesty, industry, virtue, which makes London; which composes, I verily believe, four-fifths of the population of London.  For if it did not, as I have said already, London would decay and die, and not grow and live.

Am I denying the spiritual destitution of this metropolis?  Am I arguing against the necessity of the Bishop of London’s Fund?  Am I trying to cool your generosity towards it?  Am I raising against it the text—‘They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick?’  Am I trying to prove that the sick are fewer than was fancied, the healthy more numerous; and, therefore, the physician less needed?  Would to heaven that I dare so do.  Would to heaven that I could prove this fund unnecessary and superfluous.  But instead thereof, I fear that I must say—that the average of that health, strength, intellect, honesty, industry, virtue, which makes London—that the average of all that, I verily believe, is to be counted (though it knows it not) among the sick, and not among the sound.  It is sick, over and above those personal sins which are common to all classes; it is sick of a great social disease; of a disease which is very dangerous for the nation to which we belong; which will increase more and more, and become more and more dangerous, unless it is stopped wholesale, by some such wholesale measure as this.  That disease is (paradoxical as it may seem) Want of Civilization; Barbarism, which is the child of ungodliness.  And that can, I verily believe again, be cured only (as far as we in the nineteenth century have discovered) by an extension of the parochial system.

And yet—let us beware of that expression—Parochial System.  It seems to imply that the parish is a mere system; an artificial arrangement of man’s invention.  Now that is just what the parish is not.  It is founded on local ties; and they are not a system, but a fact.  You do not assemble men into parishes: you find them already assembled by fact, which is the will of God.  You take your stand upon the merest physical ground of their living next door to each other; their being likely to witness each other’s sayings and doings; to help each other and like each other, or to debauch each other and hate each other; upon the fact that their children play in the same street, and teach each other harm or good, thereby influencing generations yet unborn; upon the fact that if one takes cholera or fever, the man who lives next door is liable to take it too—in short, on the broad fact that they are members of each other, for good or evil.  You take your stand on this physical ground of mere neighbourhood; and say—This bond of neighbourhood is, after all, one of the most human—yea, of the most Divine—of all bonds.  Every man you meet is your brother, and must be, for good or evil: you cannot live without him; you must help, or you must injure, each other.  And, therefore, you must choose whether you will be a horde of isolated barbarians—your living in brick and mortar, instead of huts and tents, being a mere accident—barbarians, I say, at continual war with each other: or whether you will go on to become civilized men; that is, fellow-citizens, members of the same body, confessing and exercising duties to each other which are not self-chosen, not self-invented, but real; which encompass you whether you know them or not; laid on you by Almighty God, by the mere fact of your being men and women living in contact with each other.

На страницу:
11 из 13