[D75]
STUDY IV
BABYLON ARRAIGNED BEFORE THE
GREAT COURT
The Civil, Social and Ecclesiastical Powers of Babylon, Christendom,
Now Being Weighed in the Balances--The Arraignment of the Civil
Powers--The Arraignment of the Present Social System--The Arraignment
of the Ecclesiastical Powers--Even Now, in the Midst of
Her Festivities the Handwriting of Her Doom is Traced and May Be
Distinctly Read, Though the Trial is Not Yet Completed.
"THE mighty God, even the Lord, hath spoken, and called the
earth from the rising of the sun unto the going down thereof. He
shall call to the heavens from above [the high or ruling powers],
and to the earth [the masses of the people], that he may judge his
[professed] people [Christendom].
"Hear, O my people, and I will speak; O Israel [nominal spiritual
Israel--Babylon, Christendom], and I will testify against thee.
...Unto the wicked God saith, What hast thou to do to declare
my statutes, or that thou shouldest take my covenant in thy
mouth, seeing thou hatest instruction and castest my words behind
thee? When thou sawest a thief, then thou consentedst with
him, and hast been partaker with adulterers. Thou givest thy
mouth to evil and thy tongue frameth deceit. Thou sittest and
speakest against thy brother [the true saints, the wheat class];
thou slanderest thine own mother's son. These things hast thou
done, and I kept silence; thou thoughtest that I was altogether
such an one as thyself; but I will reprove thee, and set them in order before
thine eyes.
"Now consider this, ye that forget God, lest I tear you in pieces,
and there be none to deliver." Psa. 50:1,4,7,16-22
As the logical consequence of the great increase of knowledge
on every subject providentially granted in this "day of
preparation" for Christ's Millennial reign, the civil and ecclesiastical
[D76]
powers of Christendom, Babylon, are now being
weighed in the balances of Justice, in full view of the whole
world. The hour of judgment having come, the Judge is
now on the bench; the witnesses--the general public--are
present; and at this stage of the trial the "Powers that be"
are permitted to hear the charges and then to speak for
themselves. Their cases are being tried in open court, and
all the world looks on with intense and feverish interest.
The object of this trial is not to convince the great Judge
of the actual standing of these powers; for already we are
forewarned of their doom by his "sure word of prophecy";
and already men can read upon the walls of their banqueting
halls the writing of the mysterious, but fateful, hand--
"MENE, MENE, TEKEL, UPHARSIN!" The present
trial, involving the discussion of rights and wrongs, of doctrines,
authorities, etc., is to manifest to all men the real
character of Babylon, so that, though men have long been
deceived by her vain pretensions, they may eventually,
through this process of judgment, fully realize the justice of
God in her final overthrow. In this trial, her claims of superior
sanctity and of divine authority and appointment to
rule the world, as well as her many monstrous and contradictory
doctrinal claims, are all being called in question.
With evident shame and confusion of face before such a
throng of witnesses, the civil and ecclesiastical powers,
through their representatives, the rulers and the clergy, endeavor
to render up their accounts. Never, in all the annals
of history, has there been such a condition of things. Never
before were ecclesiastics, statesmen and civil rulers examined,
cross-questioned and criticized as now at the bar of
public judgment, through which the heart-searching Spirit
of the Lord is operating upon them to their great confusion.
Notwithstanding their determination and effort to avoid
[D77]
the examination and cross-questioning of the spirit of these
times, they are obliged to endure it, and the trial proceeds.
Babylon Weighed in the Balances
While the masses of men are today boldly challenging
both the civil and ecclesiastical powers of Christendom to
prove their claims of divine authority to rule, neither they
nor the rulers see that God has granted, or rather permitted,
a lease of power* to such rulers as mankind in general
might choose or tolerate, whether good or bad, until "the
Times of the Gentiles" expire; that during this time, God
has permitted the world largely to manage its own affairs
and take its own course in self-government, to the end that,
in so doing, all men might learn that, in their fallen condition,
they are incapable of self-government, and that it does
not pay to try to be independent either of God or of each
other. Rom. 13:1
*Vol. II, p. 80.
The rulers and the ruling classes of the world, not seeing
this, but realizing their opportunity, and taking advantage
of the less fortunate masses of men, by whose permission
and tolerance, whether ignorant or intelligent, they have
long been sustained in power, have endeavored to foist
upon the illiterate masses the absurd doctrine of the divine
appointment and "divine right of kings"--civil and ecclesiastical.
And to the end of perpetuating this doctrine, so
convenient to their policy, ignorance and superstition have
for many centuries been fostered and encouraged among
the masses.
Only in very recent times have knowledge and education
become general. And this has come about by force of providential
circumstances, and not by efforts of kings and ecclesiastics.
[D78]
The printing press and steam transportation have
been the chief agencies in promoting it. Prior to these divine
interpositions, the masses of men, being to a large extent
isolated from one another, were unable to learn much
beyond their own experiences. But these agencies have been
instrumental in bringing about a wonderful increase of
travel and of social and business intercourse, so that all
men, of whatsoever rank or station, may profit by the experiences
of others throughout the whole world.
Now the great public is the reading public, the traveling
public, the thinking public; and it is fast becoming the discontented
and clamorous public, with little reverence left
for kings and potentates that have held together the old order
of things under which they now so restlessly chafe. It is
only about three hundred and fifty years since a statute of
the English Parliament made provision for the illiterates
among its members, in these words--"any Lord and Lords
of the Parliament, and Peer and Peers of the Realm having
place or voice in Parliament, upon his request or prayer,
claiming the benefit of this act, though he cannot read." Of the
twenty-six Barons who signed the Magna Charta, it is said
that three only wrote their names, while twenty-three made
their marks.
Seeing that the tendency of the general enlightenment of
the masses of the people is toward a judgment of the ruling
powers and not conducive to their stability, the Russian
Minister of the Interior proposed, as a check to the growth
of Nihilism, to put an end to the higher education of any
members of the poorer classes. In 1887 he issued an order
from which the following is an extract: "The gymnasia,
high schools and universities will henceforth refuse to receive
as pupils or students the children of domestic servants,
peasants, tradesmen, petty shopkeepers, farmers, and others
[D79]
of like condition, whose progeny should not be raised
from the circle to which they belong, and be thereby led, as
long experience has shown...to become discontented with
their lot, and irritated against the inevitable inequalities of
the existing social positions."
But it is too late in the day for such a policy as this to
succeed, even in Russia. It is the policy which the Papacy
pursued in the days of its power, but which that crafty institution
now realizes would be a failure, and sure to react
upon the power attempting it. Light has dawned upon the
minds of the masses, and they cannot be relegated to their
former darkness. With the gradual increase of knowledge
republican forms of government have been demanded, and
the monarchial have been of necessity greatly modified by
force of their example and the demands of the people.
In the dawning light of the new day men begin to see that
under the protection of false claims, supported by the
people in their former ignorance, the ruling classes have
been selfishly making merchandise of the natural rights
and privileges of the rest of mankind. And, looking on and
weighing the claims of those in authority, they are rapidly
reaching their own conclusions, notwithstanding the poor
apologies offered. But being themselves actuated by no
higher principles of righteousness and truth than the ruling
classes, the judgment of the masses is as far from right on
the other side of the question, their growing disposition
being hastily to ignore all law and order rather than to consider
coolly and dispassionately the claims of justice on all
sides in the light of God's Word.
While Babylon, Christendom--the present organization
and order of society, as represented by her statesmen and
her clergy--is being weighed in the balances of public opinion,
her many monstrous claims are seen to be foundationless
[D80]
and absurd, and the heavy charges against her--of
selfishness and of nonconformity to the golden rule of
Christ, whose name and authority she claims--have already
overbalanced, and lifted the beam so high that, even now,
the world has little patience to hear the further proofs of her
really antichristian character.
Her representatives call upon the world to note the glory
of their kingdoms, the triumphs of their arms, the splendor
of their cities and palaces, the value and strength of their
institutions, political and religious. They strive to reawaken
the old-time spirit of clannish partriotism and superstition,
which formerly bowed in submissive and worshipful reverence
to those in authority and power; which lustily shouted,
"Long live the king!" and reverently regarded the persons
of those who claimed to be the representatives of God.
But those days are past: the remains of the former ignorance
and superstition are fast disappearing, and with them
the sentiments of clannish patriotism and blind religious
reverence; and in their place are found independence, suspicion
and defiance, which bid fair ere long to lead to
world-wide strife--anarchy. The peoples of the various
ships of state talk angrily and threateningly to the captains
and pilots, and at times grow almost mutinous. They claim
that the present policy of those in power is to lure them to
the slave markets of the future and to make merchandise of
all their natural rights and reduce them to the serfdom of
their fathers. And many insist with increasing vehemence
upon displacing the present captains and pilots and letting
the ships drift while they contend among themselves for the
mastery. But against this wild and dangerous clamor the
captains and pilots, the kings and statesmen, contend and
hold their places of power, shouting all the while to the
people, "Hands off! you will drive the vessel onto the
rocks!" Then the religious teachers come forward and
[D81]
counsel submission on the part of the people; and, seeking
to emphasize their own authority as from God, they connive
with the civil powers to hold the people under restraint.
But they, too, begin to realize that their power is
gone, and they are casting about for some means to re-enforce
it. So they talk of union and cooperation among
themselves, and we hear them arguing with the state for
more assistance from that source, promising in return to
uphold civil institutions with their (waning) power. But all
the while a storm is rising, and while the masses of the
people, unable to comprehend the danger, continue to
clamor, the hearts of those at the helms of the ships fail
them for fear of that which they now see must surely come.
The ecclesiastical powers, particularly, feel it incumbent
upon them to render up their accounts in order to make the
best possible showing; thus, if possible, to restrain the revolutionary
current of public sentiment against them. But as
they attempt to apologize for the meager good results of the
past centuries of their power, they only add to their own
confusion and perplexity, and arouse the attention of others
to the true condition of affairs. These apologies are constantly
appearing in the columns of the secular and
religious press. And in marked contrast with these are the
fearless criticisms from the world at large of both the civil
and ecclesiastical powers of Christendom. Of these the following
extracts from floating press reports are samples.
The World's Arraignment of the Civil Powers
"Among all the strange beliefs of the race, there is none
stranger than that which made Almighty God select with
care some of the most ordinary members of the species, often
sickly, stupid and vicious, to reign over great communities
under his special protection, as his representatives of
earth." New York Evening Post.
[D82]
Another journal some years ago had the following, under
the caption--"A Poor Lot of Kings:"
"It is stated with some appearance of truth that King Milan
of Servia is insane. The king of Wurttemberg is a partial
lunatic. The last king of Bavaria committed suicide while
mad, and the present ruler of that country is an idiot. The
Czar of Russia fills that office because his brother, the natural
heir, was adjudged mentally incapable; and the present
Czar is afflicted with melancholia since the time of his coronation,
and has called to his aid the mental specialists of
Germany and France. The king of Spain is a victim of scrofula
and will probably not reach manhood. The Emperor of
Germany has an incurable abcess in his ear which will
eventually affect his brain. The king of Denmark has bequeathed
poisoned blood to half a dozen dynasties. The
Sultan of Turkey is afflicted with melancholia. There is not
a throne in Europe where the sins of the fathers have not
visibly descended upon the children, and in a generation or
two more there will be neither Bourbon, Hapsburg, Romanoff
nor Guelph to vex and rule the world. Blue blood of
this kind will not be at a premium in the 1900's. It is taking
itself out of the problem of the future."
Another writer for the daily press figured up the cost of
royalty as follows:
"The bargain made with Queen Victoria on her accession
gives her #385,000 a year, with the power of granting
new pensions to the amount of #1,200 a year, estimated to
be equal to an annuity of #19,871. This makes a grand total
of #404,871 a year for the Queen alone, of which
#60,000 is for her privy purse; that is, simply pocket
money. The duchy of Lancaster, which still remains under
crown management, also pays #50,000 a year into the
privy purse. Thus the Queen has #110,000 a year spending
money; for the other expenses of her household are provided
for by other items of the Civil List. When a gift of
#50 or #100 to charity by the Queen is announced, it
must not be supposed to come out of the privy purse, for
there is a separate item of #13,200 a year for royal bounty,
alms and charity. Among the appointments in the royal
[D83]
household are 20 classed as political, with total salaries of
#21,582 a year, the rule being that one man draws the salary
and another does the work. The medical department
includes 25 persons, from physicians extraordinary to
chemists and druggists, all to keep the royal body in good
health, while 36 chaplains in ordinary and 9 priests in ordinary
minister to the royal soul. The Lord Chamberlain's
department includes a wearisome list of offices, among
which, all jumbled up with the examiner of plays, the poet
laureate and the surveyor of pictures, are the bargemaster,
the keeper of the swans, and the keeper of the jewels in the
Tower. The most curious office under the head of the Royal
Hunt is that of hereditary grand falconer, held by the duke
of St. Albans at a salary of #1,200 a year. Probably the
Duke does not know the difference between a falcon and a
penquin, and never intends to find out. Since her accession
Queen Victoria has abolished many useless offices, thereby
making a considerable saving, all of which goes into her capacious
privy purse.
"Having thus generously provided for the queen, the
British nation had to give her husband something. Prince
Albert received #30,000 a year by special vote, besides
#6,000 a year as field marshal, #2,933 a year as Colonel of
two regiments, #1,120 a year as Governor of Windsor
Castle, and #1,500 as Ranger of Windsor and the Home
Parks. Altogether the Queen's husband cost the nation
#790,000 during his 21 years of married life, and begat a
large family to be quartered on the nation. Next comes the
Empress Augusta of Germany, who draws #8,000 a year,
besides having a dowry of #40,000 and #5,000 for wedding
preparations. But this liberal allowance is not enough
to pay her fare to England to see her mother, for on every
such occasion #40 is paid for her passage. When the Prince
of Wales attained his majority he received a little matter of
#601,721 as a birthday gift, this being the amount of the
accumulated revenues of the Duchy of Cornwall up to that
period. Since that time he has received an average of
#61,232 a year from the Duchy. The nation has also spent
#44,651 on repairs to Marlborough House, the Prince's
town residence, since 1871; pays him #1,350 a year as
[D84]
Colonel of the Tenth Hussars; gave him #23,450 to pay his
marriage expenses; allows his wife #10,000 a year, and
gave him #60,000 for spending money on his visit to India
in 1875. Altogether he has drawn #2,452,200 (over
$12,000,000) from John Bull's pocketbook up to ten years
ago and has been drawing regularly ever since.
"Now for the younger sons and daughters. Princess Alice
received #30,000 on her marriage in 1862, and an annuity
of #6,000 until her death in 1878. The Duke of Edinburgh
was granted #15,000 a year on coming of age in 1866, and
an additional #10,000 a year on his marriage in 1874, besides
#6,883 for wedding expenses and repairs to his house.
This is what he gets for doing nothing but being a Prince.
By work as a captain, and lately as an admiral in the navy,
he has earned #15,000. Princess Helena, on her marriage
to Prince Christian, of Schleswig-Holstein, in 1866, received
a dowry of #30,000 and a grant of #7,000 a year
for life, while her husband receives #500 a year as Ranger
of Windsor Home Park. The Princess Louisa received the
same favors as her sister Helena. The Duke of Connaught
began life in 1871 with #15,000 a year from the nation and
this was increased to #25,000 on his marriage, in 1879. He
now holds the command of the Bombay army, with #6,600
a year and valuable perquisites. The Duke of Albany was
granted #15,000 a year in 1874, the amount being increased
to #25,000 on his marriage in 1882, and his widow
receives #6,000 a year. The ill-fated Duke was the genius
of the family; and, if he had been an ordinary citizen with
average opportunities, could have earned a comfortable
living as a barrister, for he was an orator. The Princess
Beatrice on her marriage received the usual dowry of
#30,000 and an annuity of #6,000. Thus the nation, from
the Queen's accession up to the end of 1886, had paid
#4,766,083 for the luxury of a Prince Consort, five Princesses,
and four Princes, leaving out of account special
pocket fares, rent-free residences and exemption from taxes.
"But this is not all. The nation has not only to support
the Queen's descendants but her cousins and uncles and
aunts. I will only record the amounts these royal pensioners
have received since 1837. Leopold I., King of the Belgians,
[D85]
simply because he married the Queen's aunt, received
#50,000 a year until his death, in 1865, a total of
#1,400,000 during the present reign. However, he had
some sense of decency, for when he became the King of the
Belgians in 1834, he had his pension paid over to trustees,
stipulating only for annuities to his servants and the keeping
up of Claremont House, and when he died the whole
amount was repaid into the Exchequer. Not so the King of
Hanover, an uncle of the Queen. He took all he could get,
which, from 1837 to 1851 amounted at #21,000 a year to
#294,000. Queen Adelaide, widow of William IV., drew
#100,000 a year for 12 years, or #1,200,000 in all. The
Queen's mother the Duchess of Kent, received #30,000 a
year from her daughter's accession to her death, a total of
#720,000. The Duke of Sussex, another uncle, received
#18,000 a year for six years, a total of #108,000. The
Duke of Cambridge, uncle No. 7, absorbed #24,000 a year,
or #312,000 in all, while his widow, who still lives, has received
#6,000 a year since his death, or #222,000 in all.
The Princess Augusta, another aunt, had about #18,000 in
all. The landgravine of Hesse, aunt No. 3, secured about
#35,000. The Duchess of Gloucester, aunt No. 4, got away
with #14,000 a year, for 20 years, or #280,000 in all. The
Princess Sophia, still another aunt, received #167,000, and
the last aunt, Princess Sophia of Gloucester, niece of George
III., received #7,000 a year for 7 years, or #49,000. Then
the Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, the Queen's cousin, was
paid #1,788 a year for 23 years of her reign, or #42,124.
"The Duke of Cambridge, as Commander-in-chief of the
British army, with pensions, salary as Commander-in-chief,
colonelcies of several regiments and rangership of several
parks, large parts of which he has transformed into private
game preserves, has received #625,000 of public money.
His sister the Duchess of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, has received
#132,000, and his second sister, "Fat Mary," Duchess of
Teck, has taken #153,000. This makes a grand total of
#4,357,124 which the nation has paid for the support of
the Queen's uncles, aunts and cousins during her reign.
"Besides the amounts given in the Queen's Civil List, the
original cost and the cost of maintenance of the four royal
[D86]
yachts is included in the navy estimates, although legitimately
part of the expense of royalty. The original cost was
#275,528, and the total cost of maintenance and pay, of
allowances and victualling of the crew for ten years was
#346,560, a total of #622,088 for this single item.
"To sum up, the Queen's numerous uncles, aunts and
cousins have cost #4,357,124; her husband, her sons and
her daughters, #4,766,083; herself and her household,
#19,838,679; and her yachts #622,088. This makes a total
of #29,583,974 [nearly one hundred and fifty million dollars]
which the British nation has spent on monarchy during
the present reign. [To the year 1888.] Is the game worth
the candle? This is a pretty steep price to pay for stability,
for it means that the people are taxed to the limit of their
powers to keep in idleness a number of persons who would
do more good to the country if they were earning an honest
living."
The spectacular coronation of the Czar of Russia was a
marked illustration of royal extravagance, designed, as are
all the flaunting plumes of royalty, to impress the masses of
the people with the idea that their rulers are so far above
them in glory and dignity as to be worthy of their worship
as superior beings, and their most abject and servile obedience.
It is said that the great display of royalty on this
occasion cost $25,000,000.
Upon this extravagance, so in contrast with the wretched
conditions of its peasant millions, with whose miseries the
whole world became so well acquainted during the famine
of 1893, we extract from the comments of an English journal,
The Spectator, as follows:
"It is difficult to study the accounts of the preparations
for the Russian coronation, which read as if they ought to
be printed in gold upon purple silk, without a sensation of
disgust, more especially if we read at the same time the descriptions
of the massacres of Armenians whom the Russians
have refused to protect, although they had the power.
We can, with an effort, call up the marvelous scene presented
in Moscow, with its Asiatic architecture and gleaming
[D87]
cupolas, its streets full of gorgeous European uniforms
and more gorgeous Asiatic dresses, white Princes in red,
yellow Princes in blue, brown Princes in cloth of gold, the
rulers of tribes from the far East, the Dictator of China, and
the brown Japanese General before whom that Dictator
has fallen prone, side by side with members of all reigning
Houses in Europe, and representatives of all known
Churches except the Mormon, of all the peoples who obey
the Czar--there are, we believe, eighty of them--and of every
army in the West, all moving amidst regiments endless
in number and varieties of uniform, and through millions
of humble folk--half Asiatic, half European--filled with excitement
and with devotion to their earthly lord. We can
anticipate the roar of the endless crowds, the choruses of the
multitudinous monks, the salvoes of artillery, which are repeated
from station to station till throughout the whole
north of the world, from Riga to Vladivostock, all men hear
at the same moment of time that the Czar has placed the
crown upon his head. The Englishman studies it all as he
would study a poem by Moore, and finds it at once gorgeous
and sickly. Is not this too grandiose for grandeur? Is it
not rather of the opera than of life? Is there not something
like guilt, in an Empire like Russia, with its millions upon
millions of suffering people, in the gigantic expenditure
which produces these purple effects? Five millions sterling
for a ceremonial! Is there a principle upon which an expenditure
like that can even be plausibly justified? Is it not
the waste of a Belshazzar, the display of an almost insane
pride, a pouring out of treasure as Oriental kings sometimes
pour it out, solely to excite an emotion of glory in one oversated
mind? Nothing could induce an Englishman to vote
such a sum for such an object, and England could spare the
money at least ten times as readily as Russia.
"Yet it may be feared that those who rule Russia are wise
in their generation, and that this reckless outlay of energy
and treasure secures a result which, from their point of
view, is an adequate return. The object is to deepen the
Russian impression that the position of the Czar is in some
way supra-natural, that his resources are as limitless as his
power, that he stands in some special relation to the Divine,
[D88]
that his coronation is a consecration so solemn and with
such meaning for mankind that no external display to
make it visible can be excessive, that mankind may be summoned
to gaze without derogation, that the momentary
hush of peace which has been so carefully spread throughout
the Northern world is caused not by order but by expectation
of an adequate event. And the ruling Russians
believe that the result is attained, and that the impression
of the coronation equals throughout the Empire the impression
of a victory which would cost as much in money
and much more in tears. They repeat the ceremonial on every
devolution of the throne, with an ever-increasing splendor
and vastness of design, corresponding to the increase of
Russian position, marked just now, as they think, by the
sullen retrogression of Japan, by the submissiveness of
China and by the crawling servility of the ruler of Constantinople.
They even believe that the coronation increases
their master's prestige in Europe, that the grandeur
of his Empire, the multitude of his soldiers, his possession of
all the resources of civilization as well as of all the resources
of a barbaric Power, is borne more closely home to the collective
mind of the West, and increases the dislike which is
there to face the great Northern Power. In Berlin, there is,
they think, a deeper shiver at the thought of invasion, in
Paris more exultation as men remember the Alliance, in
London a longer pause as her statesmen meditate, as they
are always meditating, how next the march of the glacier
may be stayed or turned aside. Can any one assert with
confidence that they are wholly wrong, or that for a year
the diplomacy of Russia will not be bolder in consequence
of the national festival, the resistance of those who resist
more timid because they have seen, at least with their
mental eyes, a scene which might perhaps, if brevity
were sought, be best described as the review of an Empire
held within the walls of its capital, or the march past of
Northern Europe and Asia in honor of its Commander-in-Chief?
"It may be misleading, but of this we feel assured, that
scenes like that presented at this coronation form one of the
risks of the world. They must tend to demoralize its most
[D89]
powerful man. Of the present Czar no one knows anything,
except, says one who was thrown into close contact with
him, that he is 'a man of deep emotional feeling;' but he
must be more than the ordinary mass, if he, a descendant of
Alexander I who signed the Treaty of Tilsit, can feel himself
for days the center of that coronation scene, can, in fact, be
worshiped as if he reigned in Nineveh, without dreaming
dreams; and king's dreams are usually of dominion. There
is an intoxication of rank, we take it, as well as an intoxication
of power, and the man on whom every eye is
fixed, and before whom all princes seem small, must be of
temperate mind indeed if he does not at moments swell
with the conviction that he is first among mankind. The
rulers of Russia may yet find that, though in raising their
Czars so high they have strengthened loyalty and deepened
obedience, they have dissolved the power of self-restraint
which is the necessary defense of the mind."
But the fact that these rulers of so-called Christian Kingdoms
are as a whole devoid of true Christian sentiments
are as a whole devoid of true Christian sentiments
and lacking in even human sympathy is abundantly
proved by the fact that, while wealth is squandered like water
in the support of royalty and its vain pomp and show,
and while millions of soldiers and sailors, and a most marvelous
military armament are at their command, they
heard unmoved the cries of the poor Armenian Christians,
whom the Turks were torturing and killing by the tens of
thousands. The wonderful armies evidently are not organized
for humanity's sake, but for the merely selfish purposes
of the political and financial rulers of the world; viz., to
grasp territory, to protect interests of bondholders, and to
fly at each other's throats, inflamed with murderous spite,
whenever a good opportunity is seen to enlarge their empires
or to increase their wealth.
In marked contrast with this royal extravagance which
prevails, to some extent in every country where a royal family
is maintained, is The Enormous Indebtedness of European
Countries.
[D90]
"The Economiste Francais published an elaborate article,
by M. Rene Stourm, on the Public Debt of France. The
most usual estimate of the capital of the debt is said to be
$6,400,000,000. The most moderate estimates place it a few
millions lower. M. Paul Leroy-Beaulieu figures it at
$6,343,573,630. The result of M. Stourm's computation is a
total of $5,900,800,000 with the qualification, however,
that he has omitted $432,000,000 of life annuities, which
other economists have treated as part of the capital of the
debt. The annual charge for interest and sinking fund, on
the entire debt, including the life annuities, is $258,167,083.
Of the funded debt $2,900,000,000 are perpetual 3 per
cents, $1,357,600,000 perpetual four and a half per cents,
and $967,906,200 redeemable bonds of various descriptions.
Annuities to divers companies and corporations of
$477,400,000, and $200,000,000 of floating debt, make up
the balance of M. Stourm's total. This is by far the heaviest
burden borne by any nation on the globe. The nearest approach
to it is the debt of Russia, which is stated at
$3,605,600,000. England is next, with $3,565,800,000, and
Italy next, with $2,226,200,000. The debt of Austria is
$1,857,600,000, and of Hungary $635,600,000. Spain owes
$1,208,400,000, and Prussia $962,800,000. These are the
figures of M. Stourm. None of these nations, excepting England
and Prussia, raise sufficient revenue to guarantee a
permanent equilibrium of the budget, but France is the
most heavily burdened of them all, and the increase of her
debt has been the most rapid in the recent past and is the
most threatening of the future.
"In conclusion M. Stourm says: 'We refrain from dwelling
upon the afflicting reflections which the result of our labor
awakens. Under whatever aspect we regard these 29 1/2
milliards, whether in comparison with the debts of other
countries or with our own debt of ten or twenty years ago,
they appear like a summit of unknown height, surpassing
the limit which any people of the world, at any epoch, have
supposed attainable. The Eiffel Tower will be their veritable
counterpart; we dominate our neighbors' and our history
with the height of our debt,...in the presence of
which it is time that our country felt patriotic fright.'"
[D91]
The London Telegraph once published the following resume
of the national financial outlook:
"Impecuniosity hangs like a dark and almost universal
cloud over the nations of Europe. Times are very bad for
the Powers all round, but worst of all for the small ones.
There is hardly a nation on the Continent whose balance-sheet
for the departed year does not present a gloomy outlook;
while many of them are mere confessions of bankruptcy.
Careful reports upon the financial conditions of the
various States exhibit a struggle in the several exchequers to
make two ends meet which has never been so general. The
state of things is indeed almost world-wide; for, if we look
outside our own Continent, the United States on one hand,
and India and Japan, with their neighbors, on the other,
have felt the prevalent pinch...
"The Great Republic is too vast and resourceful to die of
her financial maladies; though even she is very sick. Great
Britain, too, has a deficit to face in the coming Budget, and
has sustained costly, perhaps irreparable, losses by the mad
business of the coal strike. France, like ourselves and America,
is one of the countries which cannot well be imagined
insolvent, so rich is her soil and so industrious are her
people. Her revenue, however, manifests frequent deficits;
her national debt has assumed stupendous proportions,
and the burden of her Army and Navy well-nigh crushes
the industry of the land. Germany must also be written in
the category of Powers too solid and too strong to suffer
more than temporary eclipse. Yet during the past year it is
computed that she has lost #25,000,000 sterling, which
represents about half the national savings. Much of this loss
has been due to German investments in the stocks of Portugal,
Greece, South America, Mexico, Italy and Servia;
while Germany has also sharply felt the confusion in the silver
market. The burden of her armed peace weighs upon
her people with a crushing load. Among the Powers which
we are grouping together as naturally solvent, it is striking
to find that Austria-Hungary has the best and happiest
account to give...
"When we turn aside from this great group and cast our
eyes on Italy, there is an example of a 'Great Power' well-nigh
[D92]
beggared by her greatness. Year by year her revenue
drops and her expenditures increase. Six years ago the
value of Italy's external commerce was 2,600,000,000
francs; now it has fallen to 2,100,000,000. She must pay
#30,000,000 sterling as interest on her public debt, besides
a premium for the gold necessary. Her securities are a drug
in the market; her prodigious issue of bank notes has put
silver and gold at fancy prices. Her population is plunged
in a state of poverty and helplessness almost unimaginable
here, and when her new Ministers invent fresh taxes sanguinary
riots break out.
"As for Russia, her financial statements are shrouded in
such mystery that none can speak of them with confidence;
but there is little reason to doubt that only the bigness of
the Czar's empire keeps it from becoming bankrupt. The
population has been squeezed until almost the last drop of
the life-blood of industry is extracted. The most reckless
and remorseless Financial Minister scarcely dares to give
the screw of taxation another half-turn.
"A moderate and accurate native authority writes about
the situation in Russia in the following words:
"'Every copeck which the peasant contrives to earn is
spent, not in putting his affairs in order, but in paying up
arrears in taxes...The money paid by the peasant population
in the guise of taxes amounts to from two-thirds to
three-fourths of the gross income of the land, including
their own extra work as farm laborers.' The apparent good
credit of the government is sustained by artificial means.
Close observers look for a crash alike in the social and financial
arches of the empire. Here, too, the stupendous incubus
of the armed peace of Europe helps largely to
paralyze commerce and agriculture. The example of Portugal
lies outside our purview; for, though the once famous
kingdom if a defaulter, her unfortunate position is certainly
not due to military ambition or to feverish expenditures.
Greece, however, although insignificant among the Powers
with her population of two millions, affords a glaring instance
of the ruin to which financial extravagance and inflated
designs will bring a nation. The 'great idea' has been
the curse of little Greece, and we have recently seen her
driven to shirk the load of her public debt by an act of absolute
[D93]
dishonesty, only partially suspended in face of the protests
of Europe. The money wasted on her 'Army and Navy'
might as well have been thrown into the sea. Politics have
become with her a disease, infecting her best and most capable
public men. With a common people too educated to
work; university students more plentiful than bricklayers;
public debts and private debts which nobody ever means to
pay; a sham Army and Navy, eating up funds; dishonesty
made a principle in politics; and secret plans which must
either mean more loans or a corrupt and perilous bargain
with Russia--these things characterize contemporary
Greece.
"Looking the Continent all round, therefore, it cannot be
denied that the state of things as regards the welfare of the
people and the national balance-sheets is sorely unsatisfactory.
Of course one chief and obvious reason for this is that
armed peace which weighs upon Europe like a nightmare,
and has turned the whole Continent into a standing camp.
Look at Germany alone! That serious and sober Empire!
The Army Budget rose there from #17,500,000 sterling in
1880 to #28,500,000 in 1893. The increase under the new
Army Defense Act adds #3,000,000 sterling a year to the
colossal mass of Germany's defensive armor.
"France has strained her strength to the same point of
proximate collapse to match her mighty rival. It is needless
to point out the terrible part which these war insurances
bear in the present popular distress of Europe. Not merely
do they abstract from profits and earnings the vast sums
which buy powder and shot and build barracks, but they
take from the ranks of industry at the commencement of
their manly force millions of young workmen, who are also
lost for the same periods to the family and the reinforcement
of populations. The world has not yet invented a better
clearing-house for the international cheques than the
ghastly and costly Temple of war."
But notwithstanding the heavy indebtedness and financial
embarrassment of the nations, it is estimated by able
statisticians that the actual cost to Europe of the various
army and navy budgets, the maintenance of garrisons and
the loss of industrial labor by the withdrawal of men from
[D94]
productive industry, may be reasonably taken as
$1,500,000,000 per annum, to say nothing of the immense
loss of life, which in twenty-five years of the past century
(from 1855 to 1880) is stated at 2,188,000, and that amidst
horrors which beggar description. Mr. Charles Dickens has
very truthfully observed that:
"We talk exultantly, and with a certain fire, of 'a magnificent
charge!' of 'a splendid charge!' yet very few will
think of the hideous particulars these two airy words stand
for. The 'a splendid charge' is a headlong rush of men on
strong horses, urged to their fullest speed, riding down and
overwhelming an opposing mass of men on foot. The
reader's mind goes no further; being content with the information
that the enemy's line was 'broken' and 'gave way.'
It does not fill in the picture. When the 'splendid charge'
has done its work and passed by, there will be found a sight
very much like the scene of a frightful railway accident.
There will be the full complement of backs broken in two,
of arms twisted wholly off, of men impaled upon their own
bayonets, of legs smashed up like bits of firewood, of heads
sliced open like apples, of other heads crunched into soft
jelly by iron hoofs of horses, of faces trampled out of all
likeness to anything human. That is what skulks behind a
'splendid charge.' This is what follows, as a matter of
course, when 'our fellows rode at them in style,' and 'cut
them up famously.'"
"Picture to yourselves," says another writer, "the toiling
millions over the whole face of Europe, swarming forth day
by day to their labor, working ceaselessly from early morn
to dewy eve, in the cultivation of the soil, in the production
of fabrics, in the exchange of commodities, in mines, factories,
forges, docks, workshops, warehouses; on railways, rivers,
lakes, oceans; penetrating the bowels of the earth,
subduing the stubbornness of brute matter, mastering the
elements of nature, and making them subservient to human
convenience and weal, and creating by all this a mass
of wealth which might carry abundance and comfort to every
one of their homes. And then imagine the hand of
power coming in and every year sweeping some six hundred
[D95]
millions of the money so laboriously earned into the
abyss of military expenditure."
The following from the Harrisburg Telegram is also to the
point:
"It costs the 'Christian' nations of Europe something to
illustrate their notion of 'peace on earth and good will to
men.' That is, it costs them something to keep themselves
all ready to blow one another into small fragments. Statistics
published in Berlin show the amount of military expenditures
of the great powers during the three years 1888,
1889, 1890. The following expenditures in round figures are
given: France, $1,270,000,000; Russia, $813,000,000;
Great Britain, $613,000,000; Germany, $607,000,000;
Austria-Hungary, $338,000,000; Italy, $313,500,000.
These six powers have expended altogether $3,954,500,000
for military purposes in three years, or at the rate of more
than $1,318,100,000 a year. The total for the three years
considerably exceeds the national debt of Great Britain,
and is nearly large enough to pay the interest-bearing debt
of the United States three times over. The corresponding
expenditure in the United States has been about
$145,000,000, exclusive of pensions. If we should add these
our total expenditure would be swelled to about
$390,000,000."
"According to the estimates of French and German statisticians,
there have perished in the wars of the last thirty
years 2,500,000 men, while there has been expended to
carry on those wars no less than $13,000,000,000. Dr.
Engel, a German statistician, gives the following as the approximate
cost of the principal wars of the last thirty years:
Crimean war, $2,000,000,000; Italian war of 1859,
$300,000,000; Prusso-Danish war of 1864, $35,000,000;
War of the Rebellion (North), $5,100,000,000; South,
$2,300,000,000; Prusso-Austrian war of 1866,
$330,600,000; Franco-German war of 1870,
$2,600,000,000; Russo-Turkish war, $125,000,000; South
African wars, $8,770,000; African war, $13,250,000; Servo-Bulgarian
war, $176,000,000.
"All these wars were murderous in the extreme. The Crimean
war, in which few battles were fought, cost 750,000
[D96]
lives, only 50,000 less than were killed or died of their
wounds North and South during the war of the Rebellion.
The Mexican and Chinese expeditions cost $200,000,000,
and 85,000 lives. There were 250,000 killed and mortally
wounded during the Russo-Turkish war, and 45,000 each
in the Italian war of 1859, and the war between Prussia and
Austria."
In a letter to Deputy Passy of Paris, the late Hon. John
Bright, member of the English Parliament, said:
"At present all European resources are swallowed up in military
exigencies. The people's interests are sacrificed to the most
miserable and culpable fantasies of foreign politics. The
real interests of the masses are trodden under foot in deference
to false notions of glory and national honor. I cannot
help thinking that Europe is marching toward some great
catastrophe of crushing weight. The military system cannot
indefinitely be supported with patience, and the populations,
driven to despair, may possibly before long sweep
away the royalties and pretended statesmen who govern in
their names."
Thus the judgment of the civil powers is going against
them. Not only is the press thus outspoken, but the people
everywhere are loudly talking and clamoring against the
powers that be. The unrest is universal, and is becoming
more and more dangerous every year.
The World's Arraignment of the Present Social System
Christendom's social system is also under inspection--its
monetary regulations, its financial schemes and institutions,
and, growing out of these, its selfish business policy,
and its class-distinctions based mainly on wealth, with
all that this implies of injustice and suffering to the masses
of men--these are as severely handled in the judgment of
this hour as the civil institutions. Witness the endless discussions
on the silver question, and the gold standard, and
the interminable disputing between labor and capital. Like
surging waves of the sea under a rising wind, sound the concerted
[D97]
mutterings of innumerable voices against the present
social system, particularly in so far as it is seen to be inconsistent
with the moral code contained in the Bible, which
Christendom, in a general way, claims to recognize and
follow.
It is indeed a notable fact that in the judgment of Christendom,
even by the world at large, the standard of judgment
is the Word of God. The heathen hold up the Bible, and
boldly declare, "You are not as good as your book." They
point to its blessed Christ, and say, "You do not follow your
pattern." And both the heathen and the masses of Christendom
take up the golden rule and the law of love, wherewith
to measure the doctrines, institutions, policy and general
course of Christendom; and all alike testify to the truth of
the strange handwriting on her festive walls--"Thou art
weighed in the balances, and found wanting."
The world's testimony against the present social system is
heard everywhere in every land. All men declare it to be a
failure; the opposition is increasingly active, and is spreading
alarm all over the world, "terribly shaking" all confidence
in existing institutions, and ever and anon
paralyzing industry with panics, strikes, etc. There is not a
nation in Christendom where the opposition to the present
social arrangements is not pronounced, obstinate and
increasingly threatening.
Says Mr. Carlyle, "British industrial existence seems fast
becoming one huge prison-swamp of reeking pestilence,
physical and moral, a hideous living Golgotha of souls and
bodies buried alive. Thirty thousand needle-women working
themselves swiftly to death. Three million paupers
rotting in forced idleness, helping said needle-women to
die. These are but items in the sad ledger of despair."
From another paper called The Young Man, we clip the following
article, headed, "Is the World Growing Better?" It
says:
[D98]
"Strong men, eager for honest toil, are enduring the
agonies of hunger and exposure, and in many cases the additional
sorrow of beholding the sufferings of their families.
On the other hand, overwhelming wealth is often allied
with avarice and immorality; and while the poor starve by
inches, the rich, to a large extent, ignore the needs of their
brethren, and are only solicitous that Lazarus should not
become inconveniently prominent. Thousands of young
men are forced to slave in stuffy shops and cheerless warehouses
for seventy and eighty hours a week, with never an
interval for physical or mental recreation. At the East End
women sew shirts or make matchboxes all day for a wage
which is insufficient for the rent of a bed--not to speak of a
separate room--and are often compelled to choose between
starvation and vice. At the West End whole thoroughfares
are in the possession of the rouged and painted sirens of sensuality
and sin--every one a standing rebuke to the weakness
and wickedness of man. As for the young men,
thousands are gambling themselves into jail or drinking
themselves into early graves; and yet every respectable
newspaper is occupied with long reports of horse races, and
Christian (?) Government permits a public house to be
planted at the corner of every street. Sin is made easy, vice is
made cheap, trickery prevails in trade, bitterness in politics
and apathy in religion."
The Philadelphia Press some time ago published the
following:
"Danger Ahead! There is no doubt about it that New
York is divided into two great classes, the very rich and the
very poor. The middling classes of reputable, industrious,
fair-to-do people are gradually disappearing, going up in
the scale of worldly wealth or down into poverty and embarrassment.
It seems unquestioned that between these
classes exists, and is rapidly growing, under intentional fostering
of evil men, a distinct, pronounced, malignant hatred.
There are men here who are worth $10,000,000 and
$20,000,000, of whom you know nothing. I know one lady,
living in a magnificent house, whose life is as quiet as that of
a minister should be, who has given away not less than
$3,000,000 in five years, whose benefactions prior to her
[D99]
death will reach not less than $7,000,000, who has in her
home paintings, statuary, diamonds, precious stones, exquisite
specimens of gold and silver, with costly works of every
imaginable art, an inside estimate of which is
$1,500,000, and she is not as rich as many of her neighbors
by several million dollars. There are men here who twenty
years ago sold clothes on Chatham street, who today live
at an annual expense of $100,000, who wear jewels costing
in reasonable stores $25,000.
"Come with me in a Madison avenue car any day, rain
or shine, between the hours of ten o'clock in the morning
and 5 or 6 in the afternoon, and I will find you car after car
closely packed with ladies in whose ears are diamonds
worth from $500 to $5,000 each, on whose ungloved hands,
red and fluffy, sparkle fortunes. Walk with me from Stewart's
old store, at the corner of Ninth street and Broadway
to Thirtieth street and Broadway any day. I do not mean
Sundays, holidays, or special occasions, but all times, and I
will show you on block after block women in sealskin circulars
down to their heels, worth from $500 to $1,000 each,
with diamond earrings and with diamond finger rings, and
other precious stones as well, carrying in their hands dainty
pocket books stuffed with money. They represent the new
rich with which New York is filling up.
"On that same street, at that same time, I can show you
men to whom a dollar would be a fortune, whose trousers,
torn and disgraceful in their tatters, are held about their
pinched waists by ropes or twine or pins, whose stockingless
feet shuffle along the pavement in shoes so ragged that they
dare not lift them from the pavement, whose faces are
freckled, whose beards are long and straggling, as is their
hair, while their reddening hands taper at the nails like
claws. How long before those claws will fasten on the newly
rich? Make no mistake about it, the feeling is born, the feeling
is growing, and the feeling, sooner or later, will break
forth.
"Only last night I walked through Fourteenth street, on
which there are but few residences left, and in front of one,
leading from the door to the curbstone, was a canopy, under
which charmingly attired ladies, accompanied by their
escorts, went from their carriages to the open door, through
[D100]
which floods of light and sounds of music came. I stood
with the crowd, a big crowd, a moment, and there was born
this idea of an inevitable outbreak unless something was
done, and speedily done, to do away with the prejudice
which not only exists, but is intentionally fostered, against
the very rich by the very poor. It would make you shudder
to hear the way the women spoke. Envy, jealousy, malignant
ferocity, every element needed, was there. All that is wanted
is a leader."
The world is contrasting with the horrid conditions of the
Sweater System of human slavery and with the miseries of
the vast army of people out of work, and another vast army
of underpaid workers, the luxury and extravagance of immense
wealth, as did a London journal some time ago--
thus:
"A Millionaire's Modest Home. We learn from New York
that Mr. Cornelius Vanderbilt, the New York millionaire
and railway king, has just opened his new palace with a
grand ball. This modest home, which is to shelter about ten
people during six months of the year, and to remain closed
during the other six, stands at the corner of Fifty-seventh
street and Fifth Avenue, and has cost its owner #1,000,000.
It is of Spanish design outside, built of grey stone, with red
facings, turrets and battlements. It is three stories high with
a lofty attic. The ball room is the largest private ball room
in New York, being 75 ft. long by 50 ft. wide, decorated in
white and gold, Louis xiv. style. The ceiling cost a fortune,
and is made in the form of a double cone, covered with
painted nymphs and cupids. Round the cornice are delicately
modeled flowers, each with an electric light in its
heart, while an immense crystal chandelier hangs from the
centre. The walls on the night of the opening ball were covered
from floor to ceiling with natural flowers, at a cost of
#1,000; and the entertainment is said to have cost the host
#5,000. Adjoining the mansion is the most expensive garden
for its size in the world, for although it is only the size of
an ordinary city lot, the sum of #70,000 was paid for it, and
a house which had cost #25,000 to build was torn down to
make room for the few flower beds."
[D101]
A San Francisco, Calif., journal, Industry, published the
following comment on the extravagance of two wealthy
men of this country:
"The Wanamaker dinner in Paris, and the Vanderbilt
dinner at Newport, costing together at least $40,000, perhaps
a good deal more, are among the signs of the times.
Such things presage a change in this country. This, which is
only typical of a hundred more cases of like ostentatious
money show, may well be likened to a feast in Rome before
the end came, and the luxury in France that a century ago
was the precursor of a revolution. The money spent annually
by Americans abroad, mostly for luxury and worse,
is estimated at a third as much as our National revenue."
The following very interesting bit of information, quoted
in the National View, is from Ward McAllister, once a great
New York Society leader:
"The average annual living expenses of a family of average
respectability, consisting of husband and wife and
three children, amounts to $146,945, itemized as follows:
Rent of city house, $29,000; of country house, $14,000; expenses
of country house, $6,000; indoor servants' wages,
$8,016; household expenses, inclusive of servants' wages,
$18,954; his wife's dressing, $10,000; his own wardrobe,
$2,000; children's clothing and pocket money, $4,500;
three children's schooling, $3,600; entertaining by giving
balls and dances, $7,000; entertaining at dinner, $6,600;
opera box, $4,500; theater and supper parties after theater,
$1,200; papers and magazines, $100; jeweler's running account,
$1,000; stationery, $300; books, $500; wedding presents
and holiday gifts, $1,400; pew in church, $300; club
dues, $425; physician's bill, $800; dentist's bill, $500; transportation
of household to country and return, $250; traveling
in Europe, $9,000; cost of stables, $17,000."
Chauncey M. Depew is quoted as having said:
"Fifty men in the United States have it in their power by
reason of the wealth they control, to come together within
twenty-four hours and arrive at an understanding by which
every wheel of travel and commerce may be stopped from
revolving, every avenue of trade be blocked and every electric
[D102]
key struck dumb. Those fifty can control the circulation
of the currency and create a panic whenever they will."
The World's Judgment of the Ecclesiastical Powers
The criticism of Ecclesiasticism is fully as severe as that of
Monarchy and Aristocracy; for they are recognized as one
in interest. Of these sentiments the following will serve as
illustrations.
The North American Review some years ago contained a
brief article by John Edgerton Raymond, on "The Decline
of Ecclesiasticism." Describing the forces which are opposed
to the church, and which will eventually accomplish
its overthrow, he said:
"The Christian Church is in the midst of a great conflict.
Never since the organization of Christianity have so many
forces been arrayed against her. What certain theologians
are pleased to call the 'world power' was never stronger
than it is today. No longer is the church opposed by barbaric
races, by superstitious philosophers, by priests of
mythical religions, but by the highest culture, the deepest
learning and the profoundest wisdom of enlightened nations.
All along the line of her progress she is resisted by the
'world power,' which represents the highest attainments
and the best ideals of the human mind.
"Nor are all her opponents found beyond the pale.
Within her solemn shades, robed in her vestments, voicing
her commands, representing her to the world, stand many
who are ready to cast off her authority and dispute her supremacy.
Multitudes who yet obey her decrees are beginning
to question; and doubt is the first step towards
disobedience and desertion. The world will never know
how many honest souls within the church groan in spirit
and are troubled, yet keep a seal upon their lips and a chain
upon their tongues 'for conscience sake,' lest they 'cause
their brother to offend.' They are silent, not for fear of rebuke,
for the time has gone by when to speak freely was to
suffer persecution, and when to suggest that the church
[D103]
might not be infallible was to be accused of infidelity."
He says the demand is not for a new gospel, but for an old
gospel with a new meaning:
"Everywhere the demand is made for a more literal and
faithful proclamation of the precepts of the founder of
Christianity. 'The Sermon on the Mount' is to many the
epitome of divine philosophy. 'Preach it! preach it!' cry reformers
of every school everywhere; 'not only preach it, but
exemplify it!' 'Show us,' they say, 'that your practices conform
to these precepts, and we will believe you! Follow
Christ, and we will follow you!'
"But just here lies the controversy. The church professes
to teach the precepts of Christ, to preach his gospel. The
world listens, and replies: 'You have perverted the truth!'
And behold the spectacle of an unbelieving world teaching
a believing church the true principles of her religion! This is
one of the most striking and significant signs of the age.
And it is altogether new. The world has been familiar from
the beginning with the retort: 'Physician, heal thyself.' But
only in modern times have men ventured to say: 'Physician,
let us prescribe the medicine!'
"When the poor and needy, the oppressed and sorrowing,
who are taught to look to heaven for future recompense,
saw holy priests and favored princes robed in purple
and fine linen and faring sumptuously every day; saw them
laying up treasures on earth in defiance of moth and rust
and thieves; saw them, with easy consciences, serving God
and mammon, they began to doubt their sincerity.
"And presently they began to affirm that all truth does
not dwell under a church spire, that the church is powerless;
that she cannot prevent misfortune, cannot heal the
sick, cannot feed the hungry and clothe the naked, cannot
raise the dead, cannot save the soul. Then they began to say
that a church so weak, so worldly, could not be a divine institution.
And soon they began to desert her altars. They
said: 'To deny the infallibility of the church, the efficacy of
her ordinances, or the truth of her creeds, is not to deny the
efficacy of religion. We are not at war with Christianity, but
[D104]
with the church's exposition of Christianity. Reverence for
divine truth is compatible with the most profound contempt
for ecclesiasticism. For the sublime Person who trod
the earth, whose touch was life and whose smile was salvation,
we have only veneration and love, but no longer for
the institution that claims to represent him.
"The church denounces her accusers as unbelievers, and
goes on her way amassing treasure, building temples and
palaces, making compacts with kings and covenants with
mighty men, while the forces arrayed against her are increasing
in numbers and power. She has lost her supremacy,
her authority has passed away. She is but a sign, a
shadow. And it is impossible for her to regain her lost ascendancy,
or to return to her throne. Dreams of her universal
dominion are a delusion. Her scepter has been broken
forever. Already we are in a transition period. The revolutionary
movement of the age is universal and irresistible.
Thrones are beginning to totter. A volcano smoulders beneath
the palaces of kings, and when thrones topple over,
pulpits will fall.
"There have been revivals of religion in the past, more or
less local and temporary. There is yet to be a revival of religion
which is to be world-wide--a restoration of faith in
God and love for man--when the brightest dreams of universal
brotherhood shall be realized. But it will come in
spite of, rather than through, the church. It will come as a
reaction against ecclesiastical tyranny; as a protest against
mere forms and ceremonials."
In an article in The Forum of October, 1890, on "Social
Problems and the Church," by Bishop Huntington, we
have his comment on a very notable and significant fact, as
follows:
"'When a great mixed audience in one of the public halls
in New York cheered the name of Jesus Christ and hissed
the name of the church, it settled no question, solved no
problem, proved no proposition, expounded no Scripture,
but it was as significant as half the sermons that are
preached.' He then referred to the fact that the time was
[D105]
when the people heard the words, 'Christ and the church,'
with reverent silence if not with enthusiastic devotion, and
then remarked: 'Only in these latter days when workingmen
think, read, reason and reflect, does a promiscuous
crowd rudely, rather than irreverently, take the two apart,
honoring the one and scouting the other.'"
Other significant expressions through the press, of the
popular judgment, are as follows:
"The Catholic Review and some other papers insist that
there should be 'religious instruction in the prisons.' That's
right. We go further than that. There should be religious instruction
in other places besides the prisons--in the homes,
for instance, and in the Sunday schools. Yes, we will not be
outdone in liberality, we favor religious instruction in some
churches. You can't have too much of a good thing if you
take it in moderation."
"The Chaplain of a certain penitentiary said that twenty
years ago only about five percent of prisoners had previously
been Sunday school pupils, but that now seventy-five
percent of actual and suspected criminals have been
such. A certain pastor also gives an account of an inebriate
asylum where the percent is eighty, and another of fallen
women where all have been in Sunday schools. The press
comment on these facts was that the term formerly applied
to the school, 'the nursery of the church,' is getting to be a
ghastly satire. What shall be done?"
In the discussions with reference to the opening of the
World's Columbian Exposition at Chicago, on Sundays,
the following was elicited:
"Some Comfort Left. If the worst comes to the worst and
fairs, like theaters and saloons, are opened on Sundays in
Chicago, it is a very comforting reflection that not a single
American citizen is obliged to go. Nobody is worse off in
this respect than were the apostles and the early Christians.
They were not allowed the use of a policeman or of the Roman
legions for the purpose of propagating their opinions
and compelling their neighbors to be more godly than they
[D106]
wanted to be. And yet it was that primitive Christianity
with no aid from the State--nay, a Christianity persecuted
and suffering--which really conquered the world."
In the general commotion of these times, many in the
church as well as in the world are greatly perplexed and bewildered
by the great confusion. The sentiments of such
were clearly voiced some time ago in the New York Sun,
which said:
"The question, 'Where are we?' 'Where are we?' is becoming
a pregnant religious one. Professors sit in the chairs
of seminaries teaching doctrines far enough removed from
the originals to make the ancient benefactors turn in their
graves; clergymen sign pledges on ordination which they
probably know the administrator does not believe himself;
the standards are in many cases only the buoys which show
how far the ships of the churches have gotten away from the
mapped out channels. It is the age of 'go as you please,' of
'every man for himself,' and all that. Nobody knows where
it is all to end, and those who are interested most seem to
care the least."
Not only are the conduct and influence of the churches
thus severely criticised, but their most prominent doctrines
also. Note, for instance, how the blasphemous doctrine of
eternal torment for the great majority of our race, by which
men have long been held in control through fear, is similarly
slurred by the thinking public. On this subject the
clergy begin to see a very urgent necessity for emphasis, in
order to counteract the growing sentiments of liberalism.
The Rev. Dr. Henson of Chicago some time ago ventilated
his views of this subject; and as reporters interviewed
other clergymen with reference to it, their flippant, heartless,
jesting way of dealing with a subject about which they
evidently know nothing, but which they claim to believe involves
the eternal interests of millions of their fellowmen,
was indeed worthy of the persecuting spirit of Romanism.
[D107]
Rev. Dr. Henson said, "The hades of the New Version is
only hell in disguise; death is death though we call it sleep,
and hell is hell though we call it hades; hell is a reality, and
is infernally horrible. In hell we shall have bodies. The
resurrection of the body implies place and implies physical
torment. But physical is not the worst. Mental pain, remorse,
anticipation, that makes the soul writhe as the worm
writhes on glowing embers, is the worst; and this sinners
will have to suffer. Thirst with no water to quench; hunger
with no food to satisfy; a knife thrust into the heart, but to
be thrust there again--endless, awful. This is the hell we
have to meet. Death offers a release from life's treadmill,
but there is no relief in hell."
What impression did the "Doctor's" sermon make? Perhaps
one may judge from the following interviews of reporters
and ministers next morning:
"'What do you think of hell, and are we all going to be
baptized in a lake of molten brimstone and pig-iron if we
do not mend our ways?' said a reporter to Prof. Swing, one
of Chicago's famous preachers. Then it was that Prof. Swing
laughed a hearty side-splitting laugh, until his rugged
cheeks became as rosy as a school girl's. The eminent
preacher drums a tattoo on the edge of an inlaid table, and
the chimney on his little study lamp rattles and seems to
laugh too. 'In the first place,' said he, 'I suppose you realize
that this subject of hell and future punishment is something
about which we actually know very little. Now, my method
for making everything harmonize in the Bible is to spiritualize
it. My idea is that the punishment will be graded
according to the sins; but as the next world is to be spiritual,
so must the rewards and punishments be spiritualized.'
"The Rev. M. V. B. Van Ausdale laughed when he read a
report of Dr. Henson's sermon, and said: 'Why, he must be
right. I have known Dr. Henson for some time, and would
vote for him with my eyes closed. We admit, all of us, that
there is a hell or a place of retribution, and it combines all
the properties assigned to it by Dr. Henson.'
"Dr. Ray had seen the sermon in print and thought Dr.
[D108]
Henson expressed the same views he himself would take on
the subject.
"The Congregational ministers, assembled at the Grand
Pacific in regular session, with doors closed and securely
sentried, admitted an Evening News reporter who, after the
meeting ended, propounded the query: 'Have you read or
heard about Dr. P. S. Henson's sermon on hell, preached
last night?'
"An interested spectator during the meeting was Dr. H.
D. Porter, of Peking, China. He arose early this morning,
and read in the papers Dr. Henson's sermon in brief. He
said, "I do not know Dr. Henson, but I think the sentiments
attributed to him are about right. Over in China I shall not
preach the brimstone and real physical torture, nor shall I
say hell will be a place where all sufferings of a real nature
will give place to intense mental suffering and anguish of
mind alone, but I will take the medium view, which portrays
hell as a place of retribution, combining the physical
and mental suffering and embodying the principles generally
accepted by modern ministers.'
"Another stranger, the Rev. Spencer Bonnell, of Cleveland,
O., agreed with Dr. Henson in every detail. 'There is
coming a time,' he said, 'when some universal ideas of hell
should be advanced, so as to bring all minds into a state of equilibrium.'
The Rev. H. S. Wilson had little to say, but admitted
that he agreed with Dr. Henson. The Rev. W. A. Moore
expressed the same sentiments.
"The Rev. W. H. Holmes wrote: 'Dr. Henson is a
brilliant preacher who understands well his own positions
and is able to express them clearly and pointedly. This abstract
indicates that he gave the people, as usual, a very interesting
sermon. His positions therein were generally well
taken. About the body of flesh I do not know--'
"'You do not know?'
"'No. A man might die and find out for certain.'
"The Baptist ministers think that Dr. Henson's orthodox
sermon on hell was just about the right thing, and those
who discussed it at the morning meeting praised it warmly.
[D109]
An Evening News reporter showed the report of the sermon
to a dozen of the ministers, but while all of them said they
agreed with the sermon, but four were found who would
discuss it at all. The Rev. C. T. Everett, publisher of the Sunday-School
Herald, said that the views as expressed by Dr.
Henson were generally held by Baptist ministers. 'We teach
eternal and future punishment for the sins of this world,' he
said, but as for the real hell of fire and brimstone, that is
something that is not talked of to any great extent. We believe
in the punishment and know it is severe, but a great
many of us realize that it is impossible to know in what way
it is given. As Dr. Henson says, it is only brutish men who
think that hell implies physical punishment altogether;
mental pain is the worst, and this poor sinners will have to
suffer. Dr. Perrin said, with great emphasis, that it was almost
useless to deny that whatever Dr. Henson preaches
would be found in the Bible, and just about right.
"The Rev. Mr. Ambrose, an old-time minister, was
greatly pleased with the sermon. He believed every word of
what Dr. Henson had said about future torment for poor
sinners. 'Hell is what most Baptist preachers believe in,' he
said, 'and they preach it, too.'
"The Rev. Mr. Wolfenden said he had not seen the report
of the sermon, but if there was anything in it about a
hell of future punishment he agreed with the Doctor, and
he thought most Baptist ministers held the same views, although
there were a few who did not believe in hell in the
strict orthodox sense.
"From what the reporter gathered it is safe to say that,
should the question come to an issue, the Baptist ministers
would not be at all backward in supporting every argument
for Dr. Henson's real, old-fashioned, orthodox hell."
The clergy thus express their views, as if the eternal torture
of their fellowmen were a matter of only trivial consequence,
to be discussed with flippant jest and laughter,
and declared as truth without a particle of evidence or
Bible investigation. The world marks this presumptive arrogance,
and draws its own conclusions in the matter.
[D110]
The Globe Democrat says: "Good news comes from New
York that the American Tract Society proposes to call in
the pabulum it has offered for the last fifty years, and revise
its religion altogether. The fact is the world has outgrown
the redhot and peppery dishes that suited the last generation,
and it is quite beyond the power of a very few solemn
gentlemen to produce a reaction. The churches also are
ambling along pleasantly with the rest of the world,
preaching toleration, humanity, forgiveness, charity and
mercy. It may be all wrong, and that these prophecies of a
blue-black sort are just the proper thing for us to continue
to believe and read, but then the people don't, and won't."
Another journal states:
"Dr. Rossiter W. Raymond, in opposing sending contributions
to the American Board of Foreign Missions, said
pretty energetically: 'I am sick and tired of going to the
American Board in sufferance to aid in supporting missionaries
who believe out and out in the damnation of all
the heathen and that damnable heresy that God doesn't
love the heathen. I am tired of the whole miserable humbug,
and I won't give a cent to spread the news of damnation.
I won't let the doctrine be disseminated by my
money. That God is love is good news, but it is made stale
old stuff by these men who drag a Juggernaut car over the
heathen and want us to feed the beasts that haul it. It is my
Christian duty not to give to any concern that will teach the
heathen that their fathers went to hell."
We thus see the present order of things trembling in the
balances of public opinion. The appointed time for its overthrow
having come, the great Judge of all the earth lifts up
the scales of human reason, points to the weights of truth
and justice, and, turning up the light of increasing knowledge,
invites the world to test and prove the righteousness of
his decision in condemning to destruction the hollow mockery
of Christendom's false pretensions. Gradually, but rapidly,
the world is applying the test, and in the end all will
arrive at the same decision; and as a great millstone, Babylon,
[D111]
the great city of confusion, with all her boasted civil
and ecclesiastical power, and with all her assumed dignity,
her wealth, her titles, her influence, her honors, and all her
vain glory, will be cast into the sea (the restless sea of
ungovernable peoples) to rise no more. Rev. 18:21; Jer. 51:61-64
Her destruction will be fully accomplished by the end of
the appointed "Times of the Gentiles"--1915. Events are
rapidly progressing toward such a crisis and termination.
Though the trial is not yet completed, already many can
read the handwriting of her doom--"Thou art weighed in
the balances and found wanting!" and by and by the fearful
doom of Babylon, Christendom, will be realized. The
old superstitions that have long upheld her are fast being
removed: old religious creeds and civil codes hitherto reverenced
and unhesitatingly endorsed are now boldly questioned,
their inconsistencies pointed out, and their palpable
errors ridiculed. The trend of thought among the masses of
men, however, is not toward Bible truth and sound logic,
but rather toward infidelity. Infidelity is rampant, both
within and outside the church nominal. In the professed
Church of Christ the Word of God is no longer the standard
of faith and the guide of life. Human philosophies and theories
are taking its place, and even heathen vagaries are beginning
to flourish in places formerly beyond their pale.
Only a few in the great nominal church are sufficiently
awake and sober to realize her deplorable condition, except
as her numerical and financial strength is considered, the
masses in both pews and pulpits being too much intoxicated
and stupefied by the spirit of the world, so freely
imbibed, even to note her spiritual decline. But numerically
[D112]
and financially her waning condition is keenly felt;
for with the perpetuity of her institutions are linked all the
interests, prospects and pleasures of the present life; and to
secure these the necessity is felt of keeping up a fair showing
of fulfilling what is believed to be her divine comission--to
convert the world. Her measure of success in this effort we
will note in a succeeding chapter.
While we thus see Babylon arraigned to answer for herself
in the presence of an assembled world, with what force
does the Psalmist's prophecy of this event, quoted at the beginning
of this chapter, recur to the mind! Though God has
kept silence during all the centuries wherein evil triumphed
in his name and his true saints suffered persecution in multiplied
forms, he has not been oblivious to those things; and
now the time has come whereof he spoke by the prophet,
saying, "But I will reprove thee, and set them in order before thine
eyes." Let all who would be awake and on the right side in
these times of tremendous import mark well these things
and see how perfectly prophecy and fulfilment correspond.
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