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STUDY VI
BABYLON BEFORE THE GREAT COURT.
HER CONFUSION--ECCLESIASTICAL
The True Church, Known unto the Lord, has no Share in the Judgments
of Babylon--The Religious Situation of Christendom Presents no
Hopeful Contrast to the Political Situation--The Great Confusion--
The Responsibility of Conducting the Defense Devolves upon the
Clergy--The Spirit of the Great Reformation Dead--Priests and
People in the Same Situation--The Charges Preferred--The Defense--
A Confederacy Proposed--The End Sought--The Means Adopted--The
General Spirit of Compromise--The Judgment Going Against the Religious
Institutions of Christendom.
"And he saith unto him, Out of thine own mouth will I
judge thee, thou wicked servant." Luke 19:22
WHILE we here consider the present judgment of the great
nominal Christian church, let us not forget that there is also
a real Church of Christ, elect, precious; consecrated to God
and to his truth in the midst of a crooked and perverse generation.
They are not known to the world as a compact
body; but as individuals they are known unto the Lord who
judges not merely by the sight of the eye and the hearing of
the ear, but who discerns and judges the thoughts and intents
of the heart. And, however widely they may be scattered,
whether standing alone as "wheat," in the midst of
"tares," or in company with others, God's eye is always
upon them. They, dwelling in the secret place of the Most
High (sanctified, wholly set apart unto God), shall abide
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under the shadow of the Almighty, while the judgments of
the Lord are experienced by the great religious systems that
bear his name in unfaithfulness. (Psa. 91:1,14-16) These
have no share in the judgment of great Babylon, but are
previously enlightened and called out of her. (Rev. 18:4)
This class is described and blessedly comforted in Psalms 91 and 46.
In the midst of much merely formal and sham profession
of godliness, the Lord's watchful eye discerns the
true, and he leads them into the green pastures and beside
the still waters, and makes their hearts rejoice in his
truth and in his love. "The Lord knoweth them that are
his" (2 Tim. 2:19); they constitute the true Church in his
estimation, the Zion which the Lord hath chosen (Psa. 132:13-16),
and of whom it is written, "Zion heard and was
glad, and the daughters of Judah rejoiced, because of thy
judgments, O Lord." (Psa. 97:8) The Lord will safely lead
them as a shepherd leads his sheep. But while we bear in
mind that there is such a class--a true Church, every member
of which is known and dear to the Lord, whether known
or unknown to us, these must be ignored here in considering
what professes to be, and what the world recognizes as, the
church, and what the prophets refer to under many significant
names which designate the great nominal church
fallen from grace, and in noting the judgment of God upon
her in this harvest time of the Gospel age.
If the civil powers of Christendom are in perplexity, and
distress of nations is everywhere manifest, the religious situation
surely presents no hopeful contrast of peace and
security; for modern ecclesiasticism, like the nations, is ensnared
in the net of its own weaving. If the nations, having
sown to the wind the seeds of unrighteousness, are about to
reap an abundant harvest in a whirlwind of affliction, the
great nominal church, ecclesiastical Christendom, which
has shared in the sowing, shall also share in the reaping.
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The great nominal church has long taught for doctrines
the precepts of men; and, ignoring in great measure the
Word of God as the only rule of faith and godly living, it
has boldly announced many conflicting and God-dishonoring
doctrines, and has been unfaithful to the measure of
truth retained. It has failed to cultivate and manifest the
spirit of Christ, and has freely imbibed the spirit of the
world. It has let down the bars of the sheepfold and called
in the goats, and has even encouraged the wolves to enter
and do their wicked work. It has been pleased to let the
devil sow tares amongst the wheat, and now rejoices in the
fruit of his sowing--in the flourishing field of tares. Of the
comparatively few heads of "wheat" that still remain there
is little appreciation, and there is almost no effort to prevent
their being choked by the "tares." The "wheat" has lost its
value in the markets of Christendom, and the humble,
faithful child of God finds himself, like his Lord, despised
and rejected of men, and wounded in the house of his supposed
friends. Forms of godliness take the place of its
power, and showy rituals largely supplant heart-worship.
Long ago conflicting doctrines divided the church nominal
into numerous antagonistic sects, each claiming to be
the one true church which the Lord and the apostles
planted, and together they have succeeded in giving to the
world such a distorted misrepresentation of our Heavenly
Father's character and plan, that many intelligent men
turn away with disgust, and despise their Creator, and even
try to disbelieve his existence.
The Church of Rome, with assumed infallibility, claims
it to be the divine purpose to eternally torment in fire and
brimstone all "heretics" who reject her doctrines. And for
others she provides a limited torment called Purgatory,
from which a release may be secured by penances, fasts,
prayers, holy candles, incense and well-paid-for "sacrifices"
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of the mass. She thus sets aside the efficacy of the atoning
sacrifice of Christ, and places the eternal destiny of man in
the hands of scheming priests, who thus claim power to
open heaven or close it to whom they please. She substitutes
forms of godliness for its vital power, and erects images and
pictures for the adoration of her votaries, instead of exalting
in the heart the invisible God and his dear Son, our
Lord and Savior. She exalts a man-ordained priestly class
to rulership in the church, in opposition to our Lord's
teaching, "Be not ye called Rabbi; for one is your Master,
even Christ, and all ye are brethren. And call no man your
father upon the earth; for one is your Father which is in
heaven." (Matt. 23:8,9) In fact, the Papacy presents a most
complete counterfeit of the true Christianity, and boldly
claims to be the one true church.*
*Vol. II, Chapter 9 and Vol. III, Chapter 3.
The "Reformation" movement discarded some of the
false doctrines of Papacy and led many out of that iniquitous
system. The reformers called attention to the Word
of God and affirmed the right of private judgment in its
study, and also necessarily recognized the right of every
child of God to preach the truth without the authority of
popes and bishops, who falsely claimed a succession in authority
from the original twelve apostles. But ere long that
good work of protest against the iniquitous, antichristian,
counterfeit church of Rome was overcome by the spirit of
the world; and soon the protestants, as they were called,
formed new organizations, which, together with the truths
they had found, perpetuated many of the old errors and
added some new ones; and yet each continued to hold a
little truth. The result was a medley of conflicting creeds, at
war with reason, with the Word of God and with one another.
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And as the investigating energy of the Reformation
period soon died out, these quickly became fossilized, and
have so remained to the present day.
To build up and perpetuate these erroneous doctrinal
systems of what they are pleased to call "Systematic Theology,"
time and talent have been freely given. Their learned
men have written massive volumes for other men to study
instead of the Word of God; for this purpose theological
seminaries have been established and generously endowed;
and from these, young men, instructed in their errors, have
gone out to teach and to confirm the people in them. And
the people, taught to regard these men as God's appointed
ministers, successors of the apostles, have accepted their dictum
without searching the Scriptures as did the noble Bereans
in Paul's day (Acts 17:11), to see if the things taught
them were so.
But now the harvest of all this sowing has come, the day
of reckoning is here, and great is the confusion and perplexity
of the whole nominal church of every denomination,
and particularly of the clergy, upon whom devolves
the responsibility of conducting the defense in this day of
judgment in the presence of many accusers and witnesses,
and, if possible, of devising some remedy to save from complete
destruction what they regard as the true church. Yet
in their present confusion, and in the desire of all the sects
from reasons of policy to fellowship one another, they have
each almost ceased to regard their own particular sect as
the only true church, and now speak of each other as various
"branches" of the one church, notwithstanding their
contradictory creeds, which of necessity cannot all be true.
In this critical hour it is, alas! a lamentable fact that the
wholesome spirit of "The Great Reformation" is dead. Protestantism
is no longer a protest against the spirit of antichrist,
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nor against the world, the flesh or the devil. Its
creeds, at war with the Word of God, with reason, and with
each other, and inconsistent with themselves, they seek to
hide from public scrutiny. Its massive theological works are
but fuel for the fire of this day of Christendom's judgment.
Its chief theological seminaries are hotbeds of infidelity,
spreading the contagion everywhere. Its great men--its
Bishops, Doctors of Divinity, Theological Professors, and
its most prominent and influential clergymen in the large
cities--are becoming the leaders into disguised infidelity.
They seek to undermine and destroy the authority and inspiration
of the sacred Scriptures, to supplant the plan of
salvation therein revealed with the human theory of evolution.
They seek a closer affiliation with, and imitation of,
the Church of Rome, court her favor, praise her methods,
conceal her crimes, and in so doing become confederate
with her in spirit. They are also in close and increasing conformity
to the spirit of the world in everything, imitating
the vain pomp and glory of the world which they claim to
have renounced. Mark the extravagant display in church
architecture, decorations and furnishments, the heavy indebtedness
thereby incurred, and the constant begging and
scheming for money thus necessitated.
A marked departure on this line was the introduction in
the Lindell Avenue Methodist Church of St. Louis, Mo., of
a work of art representing "The Nativity," by R.
Bringhurst. It is sculptured in bas-relief above the altar, the
grand organ and the choir loft. The representation spans an
arch forty-six feet wide and fifty feet high, and every figure
in it is life size. At the highest point of the arch is the figure
of the Virgin, standing erect with the infant Jesus in her
arms. Flying outward from these two figures are shown
seraphim with trumpets, proclaiming the enthronement.
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Ascending either side of the arch are hosts of worshiping
angels with outstretched wings. At either base is the figure
of an angel, that on the left holding a festooned scroll bearing
the inscription: "Peace on Earth," and the similar figure
on the right bearing the closing words of the nativity
announcement: "Good Will to Men." Additional effectiveness
is given by the fact that the bas-relief is mounted on a
splay at an angle of 45 degrees inclined towards the congregation,
thus bringing into bolder relief the high work of
the study and deepening the shadows in proportion.
What an endorsement, not only of the spirit of extravagant
display, but also of the image worship of the church of
Rome! Note, too, the arrangements in connection with
some churches of billiard rooms; and some ministers have
even gone so far as to recommend the introduction of light
wines; and private theatricals and plays are freely indulged
in in some localities.
In much of this the masses of church members have become
the willing tools of the clergy; and the clergy in turn
have freely pandered to the tastes and preferences of
worldly and influential members. The people have surrendered
their right and duty of private judgment, and have
ceased to search the Scriptures to prove what is truth, and
to meditate upon God's law to discern what is righteousness.
They are indifferent, worldly, lovers of pleasure more than
lovers of God: they are blinded by the god of this world and
willing to be led into any schemes which minister to present
worldly desires and ambitions; and the clergy foster this
spirit and pander to it for their own temporal advantage.
Should these religious organizations go down, the offices
and salaries, the prestige and honors of the self-exalted
clergy must all go with them. They are therefore as anxious
now to perpetuate the institutions of nominal Christianity
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as were the Scribes and Pharisees and Doctors of the law
anxious to perpetuate Judaism; and for the same reasons.
(John 11:47,48,53; Acts 4:15-18) And because of
their
prejudices and worldly ambitions Christians are as blind to
the light of the new dispensation now dawning as were the
Jews in the days of the Lord's first advent to the light of the
Gospel dispensation then dawning.
The Charges Preferred Against Ecclesiasticism
The charges preferred against the nominal Christian
church are the sentiments of the waking world and of waking
Christians, both in the midst of Babylon and beyond
her territorial limits. Suddenly, within the last five years
particularly, the professed Christian church has come into
great prominence for criticism, and the scrutinizing gaze of
the whole world is turned upon her. This criticism is so
prevalent that none can fail to hear it; it is in the very air; it
is heard in private conversation, on the streets, the railways,
in the workshops and stores; it floats through the daily
press and is a live topic in all the leading journals, secular
and religious. It is recognized by all the leaders in the
church as a matter that portends no good to her institutions;
and the necessity is felt of meeting it promptly
and wisely (according to their own ideas), if they would
preserve their institutions from the danger which threatens
them.
The nominal Christian church is charged (1) with inconsistency.
The wide distinction is marked, even by the world,
between her claimed standard of doctrine, the Bible, and
her conflicting, and in many respects absurd, creeds. The
blasphemous doctrine of eternal torment is scouted, and no
longer avails to drive men into the church through fear;
and for some time past the Presbyterian and other Calvinistic
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sects have been in a very tempest of criticism of their
time-honored creeds, and are terribly shaken. With the
long discussions on the subject and the desperate attempts
at defense on the part of the clergy, all are acquainted. That
the task of defense is most irksome, and one that they would
gladly avoid, is very manifest; but they cannot avoid it, and
must conduct the defense as best they can. Rev. T. DeWitt
Talmage voiced the popular sentiment among them when
he said:
"I would that this unfortunate controversy about the
confession of faith had not been forced upon the church; but
now, since it is on, I say, Away with it, and let us have a new
creed."
On another occasion the same gentleman said:
"I declare, once for all, that all this controversy throughout
Christendom is diabolic and satanical. A most diabolical
attempt is going on to split the church; and if it is
not stopped it will gain for the Bible a contempt equal to
that for an 1828 almanac that tells what the weather was
six months before and in what quarter of the moon it is best
to plant turnips.
"What position shall we take in regard to these controversies?
Stay out of them. While these religious riots are
abroad, stay at home and attend to business. Why, how do
you expect a man only five or six feet high to wade through
an ocean a thousand feet deep?...The young men now entering
the ministry are being launched into the thickest fog
that ever beset a coast. The questions the doctors are trying
to settle won't be settled until the day after judgment day."
Very true; the day after this judgment day will see all these
perplexing questions settled, and truth and righteousness
established in the earth.
The irksomeness of the task of defense and the dread of
the outcome were also very strongly expressed in a resolution
of assembled Presbyterian clergymen in Chicago, not
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long after the summons to judgment came. The resolution
read as follows:
"Resolved, That we regard with sorrow the controversies
now distracting our beloved church as injurious to her reputation,
her influence and her usefulness, and as fraught, if
pursued, with disaster, not only to the work of our own
church, but to our common Christianity. We therefore earnestly
counsel our brethren that on the one side they avoid
applying new tests of orthodoxy, the harsh use of power
and the repression of honest and devout search for truth;
and on the other side we urgently advise our brethren
against the repetition upon the church of unverified theories,
the questions of doubtful disputation, and especially
where they have, or under any circumstances might have, a
tendency to unsettle the faith of the unlearned in the Holy
Scriptures. For the sake of our church and all her precious interests
and activities we earnestly request a truce and the cessation of
ecclesiastical litigation."
The Presbyterian Banner also published the following doleful
reference to it, which contains some remarkable admissions
of the unhealthy spiritual condition of the
Presbyterian church. It reads:
"A disturbance or alarm in a hospital or asylum might
prove fatal to some of its inmates. An elderly gentleman in
a benevolent institution amused himself awhile by beating
a drum before sunrise. The authorities finally requested this
'lovely brother' to remove his instrument to a respectful distance.
This illustrates why earnest pastors grow serious
when a disturbance arises in the church. The church is like a
hospital where are gathered sin-sick persons who, in a spiritual sense,
are fevered, leprous, paralytic, wounded and half dead. A disturbance,
like the present cruel distraction which emanates
from some Theological Seminaries, may destroy some souls
who are now passing through a crisis. Will Prof. Briggs
please walk softly and remove his drum?"
The church nominal is charged (2) with a marked lack of
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that piety and godliness which she professes, though the
fact is admitted that a few truly pious souls are found here
and there among the obscure ones. Sham and hypocrisy are
indeed obtrusive, and wealth and arrogance make very
manifest that the poor are not welcome in the earthly temples
erected in the name of Christ. The masses of the people
have found this out, and have been looking into their Bibles
to see if such was the spirit of the great Founder of the
church; and there they have learned that one of the proofs
which he gave of his Messiahship was that "the poor had
the gospel preached unto them"; that he said to his followers,
"The poor ye have always with you"; and that they were
to show no preferences for the man with the gold ring or the
goodly apparel, etc. They have found the golden rule, too,
and have been applying it to the conduct of the church,
collectively and individually. Thus, in the light of the Bible,
they are fast arriving at the conclusion that the church is
fallen from grace. And so manifest is the conclusion, that
her defenders find themselves covered with confusion.
The church nominal is charged (3) with failure to accomplish
what she has claimed to be her mission; viz., to convert
the world to Christianity. How the world has
discovered that the time has come when the work of the
church should show some signs of completion seems unaccountable;
but nevertheless, just as in the end of the Jewish
age all men were in expectation of some great change about
to take place (Luke 3:15), so now, in the end of the Gospel
age, all men are in similar expectation. They realize that we
are in a transition period, and the horoscope of the 20th
Century is full of terrors and premonitions of great revolutionary
changes. The present unrest was forcefully expressed
by Hon. Henry Grady, in an eloquent address
before the University Societies, Charlottesville, Va.
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His words were: "We are standing in the daybreak...
The fixed stars are fading from the sky and we are groping
in uncertain light. Strange shapes have come with the
night. Established ways are lost, new roads perplex, and
widening fields stretch beyond the sight. The unrest of
dawn impels us to and fro; but Doubt stalks amid the confusion,
and even on the beaten paths the shifting crowds are
halted, and from the shadows the sentries cry, 'Who comes
there?' in the obscurity of the morning tremendous forces
are at work. Nothing is steadfast or approved. The miracles
of the present belie the simple truths of the past. The church
is besieged from without and betrayed from within. Behind
the courts smoulders the rioter's torch and looms the gibbet
of the anarchists. Government is the contention of partisans
and the prey of spoilsmen. Trade is restless in the grasp of
monopoly, and commerce shackled with limitation. The
cities are swollen, and the fields are stripped. Splendor
streams from the castle, and squalor crouches in the home.
The universal brotherhood is dissolving, and the people are
huddling into classes. The hiss of the Nihilist disturbs
the covert, and the roar of the mob murmurs along the
highway."
For the church to deny that the end of the age, the day of
reckoning, has come, is impossible; for whether she discerns
the time in the light of prophecy or not, the facts of judgment
are forced upon her, and the issue will be realized before
the close of this harvest period.
Ecclestiasticism Takes the Stand and Indirectly
Renders Up Her Account
The church knows that the eyes of all the world are
turned upon her; that somehow it has been discovered that,
while she has claimed her commission to be to convert the
world, the time has arrived when, if that be her mission, that
work should be almost, if not fully, accomplished, and that
really she differs little from the world, except in profession.
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Having assumed this to be her present mission, she has
lost sight of the real purpose of this Gospel age; viz., to
"preach this gospel of the Kingdom in all the world for a witness
to all nations," and to aid in the calling and preparing
of a "little flock" to constitute (with the Lord) that Millennial
Kingdom which shall then bless all the families of the
earth. (Matt. 24:14; Acts 15:14-17) She is
confronted with
the fact that after eighteen centuries she is further from the
results which her claims would demand than she was at the
close of the first century. Consequently apologies, excuses, a
figuring over and re-examining of accounts, the re-dressing
of facts, and extravagant prognostications of great achievements
in the very near future, are now the order of the day,
as, forced by the spirit of inquiry and cross-questioning of
these times, she endeavors to speak in self-defense before
her numerous accusers.
To meet the charge of inconsistency of doctrine with her
recognized standard, the Bible, we see her in great perplexity;
for she cannot deny the conflict of her creeds. So,
various methods are resorted to, which thinking people are
not slow to mark as evidences of her great confusion. There
is much anxiety on the part of each denomination to hold
on to the old creeds because they are the cords by which
they have been bound together in distinct organizations;
and to destroy these suddenly would be to dissolve the organizations;
yet the clergy specially are quite content to say
as little about them as possible, for they are heartily
ashamed of them in the searching light of this day of
judgment.
Some are so ashamed of them that, forgetting their
worldly prudence, they favor discarding them altogether.
Others are more conservative, and think it more prudent to
let them go gradually, and in their place, by degrees, to insert
new doctrines, to amend, revise, etc. With the long discussions
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on Presbyterian creed-revision every one is
familiar. So also the attempts of self-styled high critics to
undermine the authority and inspiration of the sacred
Scriptures, and to suggest a twentieth-century-inspiration,
and a theory of evolution wholly subversive of the divine
plan of salvation from an Adamic fall which the Bible affirms,
but which they deny. Then there is another and a
large class of clergymen who favor an eclectic, or compromise,
theology, which must of necessity be very brief
and very liberal, its object being to waive all objections of
all religionists, Christian and heathen, and, if possible, to
"bring them all into one camp," as some have expressed it.
There is a general boasting on the part of a large class, of
the great things about to be accomplished through instrumentalities
recently set in operation, of which Christian
union or cooperation is the central idea; and when this is
secured--as we are assured it soon will be--then the world's
conversion to Christianity, it is assumed, will quickly
follow.
The charge of lack of piety and godly living is also met
with boastings--boasting of "many wonderful works,"
which often suggest the reproving words of the Lord
recorded in Matt. 7:22,23. But these boastings avail very
little to the interests of Babylon, because the lack of the
spirit of God's law of love is, alas! too painfully manifest to
be concealed. The defense, on the whole, only makes the
more manifest the deplorable condition of the fallen
church. If this great ecclesiasticism were really the true
Church of God, how manifest would be the failure of the
divine plan to choose out a people for his name!
But while these various excuses, apologies, promises and
boasts are made by the church, her leaders see very clearly
that they will not long serve to preserve her in her present
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divided, distracted and confused condition. They see that
disintegration and overthrow are sure to follow soon unless
some mighty effort shall unite her sects and thus give her
not only a better standing before the world, but also increased
power to enforce her authority. We therefore hear
much talk of Christian Union; and every step in the direction
of its accomplishment is proclaimed as evidence of
growth in the spirit of love and Christian fellowship. The
movement, however, is not begotten of increasing love and
Christian fellowship, but of fear. The foretold storm of indignation
and wrath is seen to be fast approaching, and the
various sects seriously doubt their ability to stand alone in
the tempest shock.
Consequently all the sects favor union; but how to accomplish
it in view of their conflicting creeds, is the perplexing
problem. Various methods are suggested. One is to
endeavor first to unite those sects which are most alike in
doctrine, as, for instance, the various branches of the same
families--Presbyterians, Baptists, Methodists, Catholics,
etc.--preparatory to the proposed larger union. Another is
to cultivate in the people a desire for union, and a disposition
to ignore doctrine, and to extend a generous fellowship
to all morally disposed people and seek their
cooperation in what they call Christian work. This sentiment
finds its most earnest supporters among the young
and middle-aged.
The ignoring in late years of many of the disputed doctrines
of the past has assisted in the development of a class of
young people in the church who largely represent the
"union" sentiment of Christendom. Ignorant of the sectarian
battles of the past, these are unencumbered with the
confusion prevalent among their seniors respecting fore-ordination,
election, free grace, etc. But they still have from
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the teachings of childhood (originally from Rome and the
dark ages), the blighting doctrine of the everlasting torment
of all who do not hear and accept the gospel in the
present age; and the theory that the mission of the gospel is
to convert the world in the present age, and thus save them
from that torment. These are banded under various
names--Young Men's and Young Women's Christian
Associations, Christian Endeavor Societies, Epworth
Leagues, King's Daughters and Salvation Armies. Many
of these have indeed "a zeal for God, but not according to
knowledge."
True to their erroneous, unscriptural views, these plan a
"social uplift of the world," to take place at once. It is
commendable
that their efforts are not for evil, but for good.
Their great mistake is in pursuing their own plans, which
however benevolent or wise in human estimation, must of
necessity fall short of the divine wisdom and the divine
plan, which alone will be crowned with success. All others
are doomed to failure. It would be greatly to the blessing of
the true ones among them if they could see the divine plan;
viz., the selection ("election") of a sanctified "little
flock"
now, and by and by the world's uplift by that little flock
when complete and highly exalted and reigning with
Christ as his Millennial Kingdom joint-heirs. Could they
see this, it would or should have the effect of sanctifying all
the true ones among them--though of course this would be
a small minority; for the majority who join such societies
evidently do so for various reasons other than entire consecration
and devotion to God and his service--"even unto
death."
These Christian young people, untaught in the lessons of
church history, and ignorant of doctrines, readily fall in
with the idea of "Union." They decide, "The fault of the
past has been doctrines which caused divisions! Let us now
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have union and ignore doctrines!" They fail to appreciate
the fact that in the past all Christians were anxious for
union, too, just as anxious as people of today, but they
wanted union on the basis of the truth, or else no union at
all. Their rule of conduct was, "Contend earnestly for the
faith once delivered to the saints"; "Have no fellowship
with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove
them." (Jude 3; Eph. 5:11) Many today fail to
see that certain
doctrines are all-important to true union among true
Christians--a union pleasing to God--that the fault of the
past was that Christians were too greatly prejudiced in favor
of their own human creeds to prove and correct them
and all doctrines by the Word of God.
Hence the union or confederacy proposed and sought,
being one which ignores Bible doctrine, but holds firmly to
human doctrines respecting eternal torment, natural immortality,
etc., and which is dominated merely by human
judgment as to object and methods, is the most dangerous
thing that could happen. It is sure to run into extreme error,
because it rejects the "doctrines of Christ" and "the wisdom
from above," and instead relies upon the wisdom of its own
wise men; which is foolishness when opposed to the divine
counsel and methods. "The wisdom of their wise men shall
perish." Isa. 29:14
Then, too, there are many ideas set afloat by progressive
(?) clergymen and others as to what should be the character
and mission of the church in the near future, their proposition
being to bring it down, even closer than at present, to
the ideas of the world. Its work, it appears, is to be to draw
the unregenerate world into it and to secure a liberal financial
patronage; and to do this entertainment and pleasure
must be provided. What true Christian has not been
shocked by the tendencies in this direction, both as he observes
them at home and reads of them elsewhere.
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What stronger evidence could we have of the decline of
real godliness than the following, from the pen of a Methodist
clergyman, and published in a Methodist journal--
The Northwestern Christian Advocate--and called by the Editor
a "friendly satire on existing Methodist conditions," thus
admitting the conditions. Whether meant as an endorsement,
or as a satire, it matters not; facts are facts by
whomsoever told, though doubly forcible when in the nature
of a confession by an interested minister in his own
church journal. We give the article entire as follows, the
italics being ours:
"Some Features of American Methodism
"The revival of religion in the eighteenth century under
the leadership of the Wesleys and Whitefield purified the
moral tone of the Anglo-Saxon race and put in operation
new forces for the elevation of the unevangelized. Secular
historians, both English and American, have united in
crediting the movement originated by these remarkable
men with much in modern church machinery and statement
of doctrine which tends to spread and plant our civilization.
The doctrine of 'free will' preached by them and
their successors has, with the evolution of modern experiments
in secular government, been one of the most popular
dogmas engaging the thoughts of men. Among our American
fore-fathers this doctrine was peculiarly contagious.
Throwing off the yoke of kings, and disgusted with a nationalized
and priest-ridden church, what could be more
enchanting and more in harmony with their political aspirations
than the doctrine that every man is free to make or
mar his own destiny here and hereafter?
"The doctrine of the 'new birth' upon which the Methodists
insisted, and the preaching of which by Whitefield in
New England was like the telling of a fresh and unheard
story, likewise produced effects upon which the secular and
even the unreligious looked with approbation. For this doctrine
not only demanded a 'change of heart,' but also such a
change in the daily life as to make the Methodist easily distinguished
[D175]
from the man of the world by his behavior. The
great purpose for which the church existed was to 'spread
Scriptural holiness over these lands.' This was the legend on
her banner--with this war-cry she conquered.
"Another reason for the phenomenal success of Methodism
in this country is to be found in the fact that to its
simple, popular service the common people were gladly
welcomed. Only those who have been untrained in ritual
can appreciate this apparently insignificant but really very
important fact. To know that you may enter a church
where you can take part in the service without the risk of
displaying your ignorance of form and ceremonies is of
greatest concern if you have no desire to make yourself conspicuous.
Thus the plain, unstudied service of the early
American Methodist church was exactly suited to the
people who had but lately abandoned the pomp of Old
World religions. Lawn sleeves, holy hats, diadems, crowns
and robes were repugnant to their rough and simple tastes.
The religion that taught them that they could make their
appeals to the Almighty without an intermediator of any
kind emphasized the dignity and greatness of their manhood
and appealed to their love of independence.
"The marked triumphs of this church may also be attributed
in part to the fact that she had not then laid down the
Master's whip of small cords. There was in those early days,
from time to time, a cleansing of the church from pretenders
and the unworthy which had a most wholesome effect,
not only on the church itself, but also upon the
surrounding community. For after the storms which often
accompanied the 'turning out' of the faithless, the moral atmosphere
of the whole neighborhood would be purified,
and even the scoffer would see that church-membership
meant something.
"A factor also assisting in the success of which I write was
the pure itinerancy of the ministry which then obtained.
Without doubt there were heroes and moral giants in those
days. The influence of a strong, manly man, possessed by
the idea that here he had 'no continuing city,' making no
provision for his old age, requiring no contract to secure his
support or salary, denying himself the very things the
[D176]
people were most greedy to obtain, and flaming with a zeal
that must soon consume him, must have been abiding and
beneficent wherever it was felt.
"No mean part in achieving her commanding position in
this country was played by the singing of the old-time
Methodists. Serious, sensible words, full of doctrine, joined
to tunes that still live and rule, there was in such singing not
only a musical attraction, but a theological training
whereby the people, uncouth though they might have been,
were indoctrinated in the cardinal tenets of the church. The
singing of a truth into the soul of child or man puts it there
with a much more abiding power than can be found in any
Kindergarten or Quincy method of instruction. Thus, without
debate, doctrines were fixed in the minds of children or
of converts so that no subsequent controversy could shake
them. It remains now to show that
"These Elements of Success Have Become Antiquated,
and That a New Standard of Success Has Been Set Up in
the Methodist Episcopal Church
"Let me not assume the role of boaster, but rather be the
annalist of open facts, a reciter of recent history. So far as
the standard of doctrine is concerned, there is no change in
the position held by the church, but the tone and spirit
which obtain in almost all her affairs show at once the presence
of modern progress and light-giving innovations. The
temper and complexion of this mighty church have so far
changed that all who are interested in the religious welfare
of America must study that change with no common
concern.
"The doctrine of the new birth--'Ye must be born
again'--remains intact, but modern progress has moved the
church away from the old-time strictness that prevented
many good people from entering her fold, because they
could not subscribe to that doctrine, and because they
never had what once was called 'experimental religion.'
Now Universalists and Unitarians are often found in full
fellowship bravely doing their duty.
"The ministry of the present day, polished and cultured as it is in
the leading churches, is too well bred to insist on 'holiness,' as the
fathers
[D177]
saw that grace, but preach that broader holiness that
thinketh no evil even in a man not wholly sanctified. To
espouse this doctrine as it was in the old narrow way would
make one not altogether agreeable in the Chautauqua circles
and Epworth leagues of the present.
"The old-time, simple service still lingers among the
rural populations, but in those cultured circles, where correct
tastes in music, art and literature obtain--among the
city churches--in many instances an elaborate and elegant
ritual takes the place of the voluntary and impetuous praying
and shouting which once characterized the fathers. To
challenge the desirability of this change is to question the
superiority of culture to the uncouth and ill-bred.
"When the church was in an experimental stage, it possibly
might have been wise to be as strict as her leaders then
were. There was little to be lost then. But now wise, discreet
and prudent men refuse to hazard the welfare of a wealthy
and influential church by a bigoted administration of the
law, such as will offend the rich and intellectual. If the
people are not flexible, the gospel surely is. The church was
made to save men, not to turn them out and discourage
them. So our broader and modern ideas have crowded out
and overgrown the contracted and egotistical notion that
we are better than other people, who should be excluded
from our fellowship.
"The love-feast, with its dogmatic prejudices, and the
class-meeting, which was to many minds almost as bad as
the confessional, have been largely abandoned for Epworth
Leagues and Endeavor Societies.
"The present cultured ministry, more than ever in the history
of the church, conforms to the Master's injunction to
be 'wise as serpents and harmless as doves.' Who among them
would have the folly of the old-time preachers to tell his richest official
member who is rolling in luxury to sell all for God and humanity
and take up his cross and follow Christ? He might go away sorrowing
--the minister, I mean.
"While evolution is the law, and progress the watchword,
rashness and radicalism are ever to be deplored, and the
modern Methodist minister is seldom guilty of either. The
rude, rough preacher who used to accuse the God of love of
being wrathful has stepped down and out to give place to
[D178]
his successor, who is careful in style, elegant in diction, and
whose thoughts, emotions and sentiments are poetical and
inoffensive.
"The 'time limit,' whereby a minister may remain in one
charge five years, will be abandoned at the next General
Conference in 1896. In the beginning he could serve one
charge but six months; the time was afterward extended to
one year, then to two years, then to three, and lately to five.
But the ruling, cultured circles of the church see that if her social success
and standing are to compare favorably with other churches, her
pastorate must be fixed so that her strong preachers may become
the centers of social and literary circles. For it must be
remembered that the preacher's business is not now as it often
was--to hold protracted meetings and be an evangelist.
No one sees this more clearly than the preachers themselves.
Great revivalists used to be the desirable preachers sought
after by the churches, and at the annual conferences the
preachers were wont to report the number of conversions during
the year. Now, however, a less enthusiastic and eccentric
idea rules people and priest alike. The greater churches
desire those ministers that can feed the aesthetic nature,
that can parry the blows of modern skepticism and attract
the intellectual and polished, while at the annual conference
the emphasized thing in the report of the preacher is
his missionary collection. The modern Methodist preacher is
an excellent collector of money, thereby entering the very
heart of his people as he could not by any old-fashioned exhortation
or appeal.
"How great the lesson that has been so well learned by
these leaders of Christian thought; viz., that the gospel should
never offend the cultured and polite taste. To a church that can so flexibly
conform to the times the gates of the future open wide with
a cheery greeting. What more fitting motto can be found
for her than the herald angels sang: 'Peace on earth, good
will to men.' Rev. Chas. A. Crane."
The following, by Bishop R. S. Foster, of the M. E.
Church, we clip from the Gospel Trumpet. It bears the same
testimony, though in different language; a little too plainly
perhaps for some, as the bishop has since been retired against
his wish and despite his tears.
[D179]
Bishop Foster Said:
"The church of God is today courting the world. Its
members are trying to bring it down to the level of the ungodly.
The ball, the theater, nude and lewd art, social luxuries,
with all their loose moralities, are making inroads into
the secret enclosure of the church; and as a satisfaction for
all this worldliness, Christians are making a great deal of
Lent and Easter and Good Friday and church ornamentations.
It is the old trick of Satan. The Jewish church struck
on that rock; the Romish church was wrecked on the same,
and the Protestant church is fast reaching the same doom.
"Our great dangers, as we see them, are assimilation to
the world, neglect of the poor, substitution of the form for
the fact of godliness, abandonment of discipline, a hireling
ministry, an impure gospel--which, summed up, is a fashionable
church. That Methodists should be liable to such
an outcome and that there should be signs of it in a hundred
years from the 'sail loft' seems almost the miracle of
history; but who that looks about him today can fail to see
the fact?
"Do not Methodists, in violation of God's Word and
their own discipline, dress as extravagantly and as fashionably
as any other class? Do not the ladies, and often the
wives and daughters of the ministry, put on 'gold and
pearls and costly array?' Would not the plain dress insisted
upon by John Wesley, Bishop Asbury, and worn by Hester
Ann Rogers, Lady Huntington, and many others equally
distinguished, be now regarded in Methodist circles as fanaticism?
Can any one going into the Methodist church in
any of our chief cities distinguish the attire of the communicants
from that of the theater or ball goers? Is not worldliness
seen in the music? Elaborately dressed and
ornamented choirs, who in many cases make no profession
of religion and are often sneering skeptics, go through a
cold artistic or operatic performance, which is as much in
harmony with spiritual worship as an opera or theater. Under
such worldly performance spirituality is frozen to
death.
"Formerly every Methodist attended 'class' and gave testimony
of experimental religion. Now the class meeting is
[D180]
attended by very few, and in many churches it is abandoned.
Seldom do the stewards, trustees and leaders of the
church attend class. Formerly nearly every Methodist
prayed, testified or exhorted in prayer meeting. Now but
very few are heard. Formerly shouts and praises were
heard: now such demonstrations of holy enthusiasm and
joy are regarded as fanaticism.
"Worldly socials, fairs, festivals, concerts and such like
have taken the place of the religious gatherings, revival
meetings, class and prayer meetings of earlier days.
"How true that the Methodist discipline is a dead letter.
Its rules forbid the wearing of gold or pearls or costly array;
yet no one ever thinks of disciplining its members for violating
them. They forbid the reading of such books and the
taking of such diversions as do not minister to godliness, yet
the church itself goes to shows and frolics and festivals and
fairs, which destroy the spiritual life of the young as well
as the old. The extent to which this is now carried on is
appalling.
"The early Methodist ministers went forth to sacrifice
and suffer for Christ. They sought not places of affluence
and ease, but of privation and suffering. They gloried not in
their big salaries, fine parsonages and refined congregations,
but in the souls that had been won for Jesus. Oh, how
changed! A hireling ministry will be a feeble, timid, truckling,
time-serving ministry, without faith, endurance and
holy power. Methodism formerly dealt in the great central
truth. Now the pulpits deal largely in generalities and in
popular lectures. The glorious doctrine of entire sanctification
is rarely heard and seldom witnessed in the
pulpits."
While special efforts are being made to enlist the sympathies
and cooperation of the young people of the churches
in the interests of religious union, by bringing them together
socially and avoiding religious controversy and doctrinal
teaching, still more direct efforts are being made to
bring the adult membership into sympathy with the union
movement. For this the leaders in all denominations are
scheming and working; and many minor efforts culminated
[D181]
in the great Parliament of Religions held in Chicago
in the summer of 1893. The object of the Parliament was
very definite in the minds of the leaders, and found very
definite expression; but the masses of the church membership
followed the leaders seemingly without the least consideration
of the principle involved--that it was a grand
compromise of Christianity with everything unchristian. And now
that there is a projected extension of the movement for a
universal federation of all religious bodies, proposed to be
held in the year 1913, and in view of the fact that Christian
Union is being actively pushed along this line of compromise,
let those who desire to remain loyal to God mark
well the expressed principles of these religious leaders.
Rev. J. H. Barrows, D. D., the leading spirit of the (Chicago)
World's Parliament of Religions, while engaged in
promoting its extension, was reported by a San Francisco
journal as having expressed himself to its representative
with reference to his special work of bringing about religious
unity, as follows:
"The union of the religions," he said in brief, "will come
about in one of two ways. First, those churches which are
most nearly on common ground of faith and doctrine must
unite--the various branches of Methodism and Presbyterianism,
for instance. Then when the sects are united
among themselves Protestantism in general will draw together.
In the progress of education Catholics and Protestants
will discover that the differences between them are
not really cardinal, and will broach reunion. This accomplished,
the union with other different religions [that is,
Mohammedanism, Buddhism, Brahminism, Confucianism,
etc.--heathen religions] is only a question of time.
"Second--The religions and churches may join in civil
unity on an ethical basis, as advocated by Mr. Stead [a Titanic
victim, a Spiritualist]. The religious organizations
have common interests and common duties in the communities
in which they exist, and it is possible that they will
federate for the promotion and accomplishment of these
[D182]
ends. I, myself, am disposed to look for the union to come
through the first process. However that may be, the congresses
of religion are beginning to take shape. Rev. Theo.
E. Seward reports a greatly augmented success of his
'Brotherhood of Christian Unity' in New York, while very
recently there has been organized in Chicago, under the
leadership of C. C. Bonney, a large and vigorous 'Association
for the Promotion of Religious Unity.'"
The Great Parliament of Religions
The Chicago Herald, commenting favorably upon the proceedings
of the Parliament (italics are ours), said:
"Never since the confusion at Babel have so many religions,
so many creeds, stood side by side, hand in hand, and almost
heart to heart, as in that great amphitheater last
night. Never since written history began has varied mankind
been so bound about with Love's golden chain. The
nations of the earth, the creeds of Christendom, Buddhist
and Baptist, Mohammedan and Methodist, Catholic and
Confucian, Brahmin and Unitarian, Shinto and Episcopalian,
Presbyterian and Pantheist, Monotheist and
Polytheist, representing all shades of thought and conditions
of men, have at last met together in the common
bonds of sympathy, humanity and respect."
How significant is the fact that the mind of even this enthusiastic
approver of the great Parliament should be carried
away back to the memorable confusion of tongues at
Babel! Was it not, indeed, that instinctively he recognized
in the Parliament a remarkable antitype?
The Rev. Barrows, above quoted, spoke enthusiastically
of the friendly relations manifested among Protestant ministers,
Catholic priests, Jewish rabbis and, in fact, the leaders
of all religions extant, by their correspondence in
reference to the great Chicago Parliament. He said:
"The old idea, that the religion to which I belong is the
only true one, is out of date. There is something to be
[D183]
learned from all religions, and no man is worthy of the religion
he represents unless he is willing to grasp any man by
the hand as his brother. Some one has said that the time is
now ripe for the best religion to come to the front. The time for a man
to put on any airs of superiority about his particular religion is past.
Here will meet the wise man, the scholar and the prince of
the East in friendly relation with the archbishop, the rabbi,
the missionary, the preacher and the priest. They will sit together
in congress for the first time. This, it is hoped, will
help to break down the barriers of creed."
Rev. T. Chalmers, of the Disciples church, said:
"This first Parliament of Religions seems to be the harbinger
of a still larger fraternity--a fraternity that will combine
into one world-religion what is best, not in one alone, but
in all of the great historic faiths. It may be that, under the
guidance of this larger hope, we shall need to revise our
phraseology and speak more of Religious unity, than of Christian
unity. I rejoice that all the great cults are to be brought
into touch with each other, and that Jesus will take his
place in the companionship of Gautama, Confucius and
Zoroaster."
The New York Sun, in an editorial on this subject, said:
"We cannot make out exactly what the Parliament proposes
to accomplish...It is possible, however, that the
Chicago scheme is to get up some sort of a new and compound
religion, which shall include and satisfy every variety of religious
and irreligious opinion. It is a big job to get up a new
and eclectic religion satisfactory all around; but Chicago is
confident."
It would indeed be strange if the spirit of Christ and the
spirit of the world would suddenly prove to be in harmony,
that those filled with the opposite spirits should see eye to
eye. But such is not the case. It is still true that the spirit of
the world is enmity to God (James 4:4); that its theories and
philosophies are vain and foolish; and that the one divine
revelation contained in the inspired Scriptures of the
apostles and prophets is the only divinely inspired truth.
[D184]
One of the stated objects of the Parliament, according to
its president, Mr. Bonney, was to bring together the world's
religions in an assembly "in which their common aims and
common grounds of union may be set forth, and the marvelous
religious progress of the nineteenth century be
reviewed."
The real and only object of that review evidently was to
answer the inquiring spirit of these times--of this judgment
hour--to make as good a showing as possible of the church's
progress, and to inspire the hope that, after all the seeming
failure of Christianity, the church is just on the eve of a
mighty victory; that soon, very soon, her claimed mission
will be accomplished in the world's conversion. Now mark
how she proposes to do it, and observe that it is to be done,
not by the spirit of truth and righteousness, but by the spirit
of compromise, of hypocrisy and deceit. The stated object
of the Parliament was fraternization and religious union;
and anxiety to secure it on any terms was prominently
manifest. They were even willing, as above stated, to revise
their phraseology to accommodate the heathen religionists,
and call it religious unity, dropping the obnoxious name
Christian, and quite contented to have Jesus step down
from his superiority and take his place humbly by the side
of the heathen sages, Gautama, Confucius and Zoroaster.
The spirit of doubt and perplexity, and of compromise and
general faithlessness, on the part of Protestant Christians,
and the spirit of boastfulness and of counsel and authority
on the part of Roman Catholics and all other religionists,
were the most prominent features of the great Parliament.
Its first session was opened with the prayer of a Roman
Catholic--Cardinal Gibbons--and its last session was closed
with the benediction of a Roman Catholic--Bishop Keane.
And during the last session a Shinto priest of Japan invoked
[D185]
upon the motley assembly the blessing of eight million
deities.
Rev. Barrows had for two years previous been in correspondence
with the representative heathen of other lands,
sending the Macedonian cry around the world to all its
heathen priests and apostles, to "Come over and help us!"
That the call should thus issue representatively from the
Presbyterian church, which for several years past had been
undergoing a fiery ordeal of judgment, was also a fact significant
of the confusion and unrest which prevail in that
denomination, and in all Christendom. And all Christendom
was ready for the great convocation.
For seventeen days representative Christians of all denominations,
sat together in counsel with the representatives
of all the various heathen religions, who were repeatedly
referred to in a complimentary way by the Christian
orators as "wise men from the east"--borrowing the expression
from the Scriptures, where it was applied to a very different
class--to a few devout believers in the God of Israel and in
the prophets of Israel who foretold the advent of Jehovah's
Anointed, and who were patiently waiting and watching
for his coming, and giving no heed to the seducing spirits of
worldly wisdom which knew not God. To such truly wise
ones, humble though they were, God revealed his blessed
message of peace and hope.
The theme announced for the last day of the Parliament
was "The Religious Union of the Whole Human Family"; when
would be considered "The elements of perfect religion as
recognized
and set forth in the different faiths," with a view to determining
"the characteristics of the ultimate religion" and "the
center of the coming religious unity of mankind."
Is it possible that thus, by their own confession, Christian
(?) ministers are unable, at this late day, to determine what
[D186]
should be the center of religious unity, or the characteristics
of perfect religion? Are they indeed so anxious for a
"world-religion"
that they are willing to sacrifice any or all of the
principles of true Christianity, and even the name "Christian,"
if necessary, to obtain it? Even so, they confess. "Out
of thine own mouth will I judge thee, thou wicked and
slothful servant," saith the Lord. The preceding days of the
conference were devoted to the setting forth of the various
religions by their respective representatives.
The scheme was a bold and hazardous one, but it should
have opened the eyes of every true child of God to several
facts that were very manifest; namely: (1) that the nominal
Christian church has reached its last extremity of hope in
its ability to stand, under the searching judgments of this
day when "the Lord hath a controversy with his people,"
nominal spiritual Israel (Micah 6:1,2); (2) that instead of
repenting of their backslidings and lack of faith and zeal
and godliness, and thus seeking a return of divine favor,
they are endeavoring, by a certain kind of union and cooperation,
to support one another, and to call in the aid of
the heathen world to help them to withstand the judgments
of the Lord in exposing the errors of their human creeds
and their misrepresentations of his worthy character; (3)
that they are willing to compromise Christ and his gospel,
for the sake of gaining the friendship of the world and its
emoluments of power and influence; (4) that their blindness
is such that they are unable to distinguish truth from
error, or the spirit of the truth from the spirit of the world;
and (5) that they have already lost sight of the doctrines of
Christ.
Doubtless temporary aid will come from the sources
whence it is so enthusiastically sought; but it will be only a
preparatory step which will involve the whole world in the
impending doom of Babylon, causing the kings and merchants
[D187]
and traders of the whole earth to mourn and lament
for this great city. Rev. 18:9,11,17-19
In viewing the proceedings of the great Parliament our
attention is forcibly drawn to several remarkable features:
(1) To the doubting and compromising spirit and
attitude of nominal Christianity, with the exceptions of the
Roman and Greek Catholic Churches. (2) To the confident
and assertive attitude of Catholicism and of all other religions.
(3) To the clean-cut distinctions, observed by the
heathen sages, between the Christianity taught in the Bible,
and that taught by the Christian missionaries of the various
sects of Christendom, who, along with the Bible, carried
their unreasonable and conflicting creeds to foreign lands.
(4) To the heathen estimate of missionary effort, and its future
prospects in their lands. (5) To the influence of the
Bible upon many in foreign lands, notwithstanding its misinterpretations
by those who carried it abroad. (6) To the
present influence and probable results of the great Parliament.
(7) To its general aspect as viewed from the prophetic
standpoint.
Compromising the Truth
The great religious Parliament was called together by
Christians--Protestant Christians; it was held in a professedly
Protestant Christian land; and was under the leading
and direction of Protestant Christians, so that Protestants
may be considered as responsible for all its proceedings. Be
it observed, then, that the present spirit of Protestantism is
that of compromise and faithlessness. This Parliament was
willing to compromise Christ and his gospel for the sake of
the friendship of antichrist and heathendom. It gave the
honors of both opening and closing its deliberations to representatives
of papacy. And it is noteworthy that, while the
faiths of the various heathen nations were elaborately set
[D188]
forth by their representatives, there was no systematic presentation
of Christianity in any of its phases, although various
themes were discoursed upon by Christians. How
strange it seems that such an opportunity to preach the gospel
of Christ to representative, intelligent and influential
heathen should be overlooked and ignored by such an assemblage!
Were the professed representatives of Christ's
gospel ashamed of the gospel of Christ? (Rom. 1:16) In the
discourses Roman Catholics had by far the largest showing,
being represented no less than sixteen times in the sessions
of the Parliament.
And not only so, but there were those there, professing
Christianity, who earnestly busied themselves in tearing
down its fundamental doctrines--who told the representative
heathen of their doubts as to the inerrancy of the Christian
Scriptures; that the Bible accounts must be received
with a large degree of allowance for fallibility; and that
their teachings must be supplemented with human reason
and philosophy, and only accepted to the extent that they
accord with these. There were those there, professing to be
Orthodox Christians, who repudiated the doctrine of the
ransom, which is the only foundation of true Christian
faith, others, denying the fall of man, proclaimed the opposite
theory of evolution--that man never was created perfect,
that he never fell, and that consequently he needed no
redeemer; that since his creation in some very low condition,
far removed from the "Image of God," he has been
gradually coming up, and is still in the process of an evolution
whose law is the survival of the fittest. And this, the
very opposite of the Bible doctrine of ransom and restitution,
was the most popular view.
Below we give a few brief extracts indicating the compromising
spirit of Protestant Christianity, both in its attitude
toward that great antichristian system, the Church of
[D189]
Rome, and also toward the non-Christian faiths.
Hear Dr. Chas. A. Briggs, Professor in a Presbyterian
Theological Seminary, declaim against the sacred Scriptures.
The gentleman was introduced by the President, Dr.
Barrows, as "one whose learning, courage and faithfulness
to his convictions have given him a high place in the church
universal," and was received with loud applause. He said:
"All that we can claim for the Bible is inspiration and accuracy
for that which suggests the religious lessons to be imparted.
God is true, he cannot lie; he cannot mislead or
deceive his creatures. But when the infinite God speaks to
finite man, must he speak words which are not error? [How
absurd the question! If God does not speak the truth, then
of course he is not true.] This depends not only upon God's
speaking, but on man's hearing, and also on the means of
communication between God and man. It is necessary to
show the capacity of man to receive the word, before we can
be sure that he transmitted it correctly. [This "learned and
reverend" (?) theological professor should bear in mind that
God was able to choose proper instruments for conveying
his truth, as well as to express it to them; and that he did so
is very manifest to every sincere student of his Word. Such
an argument to undermine the validity of the Sacred Scriptures
is a mere subterfuge, and was an insult to the intelligence
of an enlightened audience.] The inspiration of
the holy Scriptures does not carry with it inerrancy in every
particular."
Hear Rev. Theodore Munger, of New Haven, dethrone
Christ and exalt poor fallen humanity to his place. He said:
"Christ is more than a Judean slain on Calvary. Christ is
humanity as it is evolving under the power and grace of God, and any
book touched by the inspiration of this fact [not that Jesus
was the anointed Son of God, but that the evolved humanity
as a whole constitute the Christ, the Anointed] belongs
to Christian literature."
He instanced Dante, Shakespeare, Goethe, Shelley, Matthew
Arnold, Emerson and others, and then added:
[D190]
"Literature with few exceptions--all inspired literature--
stands squarely upon humanity and insists upon it on ethical
grounds and for ethical ends, and this is essential Christianity
...A theology that insists on a transcendent God,
who sits above the world and spins the thread of its affairs,
does not command the assent of those minds which express
themselves in literature; the poet, the man of genius, the
broad and universal thinker pass it by; they stand too near
God to be deceived by such renderings of his truth."
Said the Rev. Dr. Rexford of Boston (Universalist):
"I would that we might all confess that a sincere worship,
anywhere and everywhere in the world, is a true worship...
The unwritten but dominant creed of this hour I assume to
be that, whatever worshiper in all the world bends before
The Best he knows, and walks true to the purest light that
shines for him, has access to the highest blessings of
heaven."
He surely did strike the keynote of the present dominant
religious sentiment; but did the Apostle Paul so address the
worshipers of "The Unknown God" on Mars' Hill? or did
Elijah thus defend the priests of Baal? Paul declares that
the only access to God is through faith in Christ's sacrifice
for our sins; and Peter says, "There is none other name under
heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved."
Acts 4:12; 17:23-31; 1 Kings 18:21,22
Hear the Rev. Lyman Abbot, Editor of the Outlook, and
formerly Pastor of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, N. Y., claim
for all the church that divine inspiration which, through
Christ and the twelve apostles, gave us the New Testament,
that the man of God might be thoroughly furnished. (2 Tim. 3:17)
He said:
"We do not think that God has spoken only in Palestine,
and to the few in that narrow province. We do not think he
has been vocal in Christendom and dumb everywhere else.
No! we believe that he is a speaking God in all times and in
all ages."
[D191]
But how did he speak to the Prophets of Baal? He has not
revealed himself except to his chosen people--to fleshly Israel
in the Jewish age, and to spiritual Israel in the Gospel
age. "You only have I known of all the families of the
earth." Amos 3:2; 1 Cor. 2:6-10
A letter from Lady Somerset (England), read with complimentary
introduction by President Barrows, made the
following concessions to the Church of Rome:
"I am in sympathy with every effort by which men may
be induced to think together along the lines of their agreement,
rather than of their antagonism...The only way to
unite is never to mention subjects on which we are irrevocably
opposed. Perhaps the chief of these is the historic episcopate,
but the fact that he believes in this while I do not,
would not hinder that great and good prelate, Archbishop
Ireland, from giving his hearty help to me, not as a Protestant
woman, but as a temperance worker. The same was
true in England of that lamented leader, Cardinal Manning,
and is true today of Mgr. Nugent, of Liverpool, a
priest of the people, universally revered and loved. A consensus
of opinion on the practical outline of the golden rule,
declared negatively by Confucius and positively by Christ,
will bring us all into one camp."
The doctrine of a vicarious atonement was seldom referred
to, and by many was freely set aside as a relic of the
past and unworthy of the enlightened nineteenth century.
Only a few voices were raised in its defense, and these were
not only a very small minority in the Parliament, but their
views were evidently at a discount. Rev. Joseph Cook was
one of this small minority, and his remarks were afterward
criticised and roundly denounced from a Chicago pulpit.
In his address Mr. Cook said that the Christian religion was
the only true religion, and the acceptance of it the only
means of securing happiness after death. Referring for illustration
of the efficacy of the atonement to purge even the
foulest sins, to one of Shakespeare's characters, he said:
[D192]
"Here is Lady Macbeth. What religion can wash Lady
Macbeth's red right hand? That is the question I propose to
the four continents and the isles of the sea. Unless you can
answer that you have not come with a serious purpose to
the Parliament of religions. I turn to Mohammedanism.
Can you wash her red right hand? I turn to Confucianism
and Buddhism. Can you wash her red right hand?"
In replying to this after the Parliament Rev. Jenkin
Lloyd Jones, Pastor of All Soul's church, Chicago, and one
enthusiastically interested in the Parliament, said:
"In order that we may discover the immorality of the vicarious
atonement--this 'look-to-Jesus-and-be-saved' kind
of a scheme with which the great Boston orator undertook
to browbeat out of countenance the representatives of other
faiths and forms of thought at the Parliament--let us study
closely the character of the deed, the temper of the woman
to whom he promised such swift immunity if she would
only 'look on the cross.' This champion of orthodoxy indignantly
flung into the faces of the representatives of all
religions of the world the assertion that it is 'impossible in
the very nature of things for one to enter into the kingdom
of heaven except he be born again' through this Christ
atonement, this supernatural vicariousness that washes her
red hand white and makes the murderess a saint. All I have
to say to such Christianity is this: I am glad I do not believe
in it; and I call upon all lovers of morality, all friends of justice,
all believers in an infinite God whose will is rectitude,
whose providence makes for righteousness, to deny it. Such
a 'scheme of salvation' is not only unreasonable but it is immoral.
It is demoralizing, it is a delusion and a snare in this
world, however it may be in the next...I turn from Calvary
if my vision there leaves me selfish enough to ask for a
salvation that leaves Prince Sidartha outside of a heaven in
which Lady Macbeth or any other red-handed soul is eternally
included."
Subsequently an "oriental platform meeting" was held
in the same church, when the same reverend (?) gentleman
read select sayings from Zoroaster, Moses, Confucius, Buddha,
[D193]
Socrates and Christ, all tending to show the universality
of religion, which was followed by the address of an
Armenian Catholic. After this address, said the reporter for
the public press:
"Mr. Jones said that he had had the temerity to ask
Bishop Keane, of the Catholic University of Washington, if
he would attend this meeting and stand on such a radical
platform. The Bishop had replied with a smile that he
would be in Dubuque or he might be tempted to come. 'I
then asked him,' said Mr. Jones, 'if he could suggest any
one.' The Bishop replied, 'You must not be in too much of a
hurry. We are getting along very fast. It may not be a long
time before I shall be able to do so.'*
*However, Rome has since concluded that the Chicago Parliament was
neither a credit to her, nor popular with her supporters, and has announced
that papists will have nothing to do with such promiscuous Parliaments
in the future. And distinct marks of papal disapprobation are
not lacking as against those Roman prelates who took so prominent a
part in the Chicago Parliament. Protestants may have all the glory!
"'The Roman Catholic Church,' continued Mr. Jones,
'under the leadership of such men as Cardinal Gibbons,
Archbishop Ireland and Bishop Spalding, is getting along,
and these men are forcing the laggards to work. People tell
us that we have given up the Parliament of religions to the
Catholics on one hand and the Pagans on the other. We will
hear from our Pagan friends now. That word pagan does
not have the same meaning as it did, and I thank God for
it.'"
Prof. Henry Drummond was on the program of the Parliament
for an address on Christianity and Evolution, but,
as he failed to arrive, his paper was read by Dr. Bristol. In it
he said that a better understanding of the genesis and nature
of sin might at least modify some of the attempts made
to get rid of it--referring disparagingly to the doctrine of
atonement, which his doctrine of Evolution would render
null and void.
[D194]
A Few Defenders of the Faith
In the midst of this compromising spirit, so bold and outspoken,
it was indeed refreshing to find a very few representatives
of Protestant Christianity who had the moral
courage, in the face of so much opposition, both latent and
expressed, to defend the faith once delivered to the saints;
though even these show signs of perplexity, because they do
not see the divine plan of the ages and the important relationship
of the fundamental doctrines of Christianity to the
whole marvelous system of divine truth.
Prof. W. C. Wilkinson, of the Chicago University, spoke
on "The Attitude of Christianity toward Other Religions."
He directed his hearers to the Scriptures of the Old and
New Testaments for an exposition of Christianity, to the
hostile attitude of Christianity toward all other religions,
which must of necessity be false if it be true, and to our
Lord's exclusive claim of power to save, as manifested in
such expressions as:
"No man cometh unto the Father [that is, no man can be
saved] but by me."
"I am the bread of life."
"If any man thirst, let him come unto me and drink."
"I am the light of the world."
"I am the door of the sheep."
"All that came before me are thieves and robbers."
"I am the door; by me if any man enter in he shall be
saved."
"Such," said he, "are a few specimens of the expressions
from Jesus' own lips of the sole, exclusive claim to be himself
alone the Savior of man.
"It may be answered, 'But Jesus also said, 'I, if I be lifted
up, will draw all men unto me'; and we are hence warranted
in believing, of many souls involved in alien religions,
that, drawn consciously or unconsciously to Jesus,
they are saved, notwithstanding the misfortune of their religious
environment.
[D195]
"To this, of course, I agree, I am grateful that such seems
indeed to be the teaching of Christianity. [But this hope
flows from a generous heart rather than from a knowledge
of the divine plan of salvation. Prof. W. did not then see
that the drawing of the world to Christ belongs to the Millennial
age, that only the drawing of the Church is now in
progress, and that knowledge of the Lord, the drawing
power now, will be the power then; "For the earth shall be
filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord, as the
waters cover the sea." Hab. 2:14] I simply ask to have it
borne steadily in mind that it is not at all the extension of
the benefits flowing from the exclusive power of Jesus to
save, that we are at present discussing, but strictly this question:
Does Christianity recognize any share of saving efficacy
as inherent in the non-Christian religions? In other
words, is it anywhere in Scripture represented that Jesus
exerts his saving power, in some degree, greater or less,
through religions not his own? If there is any hint, any
shadow of hint, in the Bible, Old Testament or New, looking
in the direction of an affirmative answer to that question,
I confess I never have found it. Hints far from
shadowy I have found, and in abundance, to the contrary.
"I feel the need of begging you to observe that what I say
in this paper is not to be misunderstood as undertaking on
behalf of Christianity to derogate anything whatever from
the merit of individual men among the nations, who have
risen to great ethical heights without aid from historic
Christianity in either its New Testament or its Old Testament
form. But it is not of persons, either the mass or the
exceptions, that I task myself here to speak. I am leading
you to consider only the attitude assumed by Christianity
toward the non-Christian religions.
"Let us advance from weighing the immediate utterances
of Jesus to take some account of those upon whom, as
his representatives, Jesus, according to the New Testament,
conferred the right to speak with an authority equal to his
own. Speaking of the adherents generally of the Gentile religions,
he uses this language: 'Professing themselves to be
wise, they became fools, and changed the glory of the incorruptible
[D196]
God for the likeness of an image of corruptible
man, and of birds, and four-footed beasts, and creeping
things.'
"Man, bird, beast, reptile--these four specifications in
their ladder of descent seem to indicate every different form
of Gentile religion with which Christianity, ancient or
modern, came into historic contact. The consequences penally
visited by the offended jealous God of Hebrew and of
Christian, for such degradation of the innate worshiping
instinct, such profanation of the idea, once pure in human
hearts, of God the incorruptible, are described by Paul in
words whose mordant, flagrant, caustic, branding power
has made them famous and familiar: 'Wherefore God gave
them up to the lusts of their hearts, unto uncleanness, that
their bodies should be dishonored among themselves; for
that they exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshiped
and served the creature rather than the Creator,
who is blessed forever.'
"I arrest the quotation unfinished. The remainder of the
passage descends into particulars of blame well known, and
well known to be truly charged against the ancient pagan
world. No hint of exceptions here in favor of points defectively
good, or at least not so bad, in the religions condemned;
no qualification, no mitigation of sentence suggested.
Everywhere heavy shotted, point blank denunciation.
No idea submitted of there being in some cases true and acceptable
worship hidden away, disguised and unconscious,
under false forms. No possibility glanced at of there being a
distinction made by some idolaters, if made only by a very
few discerning among them, between the idol served and
the one incorruptible jealous God as meant by such exceptional
idolaters to be merely symbolized in the idol ostensibly
worshiped by them. Reserve none on behalf of
certain initiated, illuminated souls seeking and finding purer
religion in esoteric 'mysteries' that were shut out from
the profane vulgar. Christianity leaves no loophole of escape
for the judged and reprobate anti-Christian religions
with which it comes in contact. It shows instead only indiscriminate
damnation [condemnation] leaping out like
forked lightning from the glory of his power upon those incorrigibly
[D197]
guilty of the sin referred to, the sin of worship
paid to gods other than God.
"There is no pleasing alleviation anywhere introduced in
the way of assurance, or even of possible hope, that a benign
God will graciously receive into his ear the ascriptions
formally given to another as virtually, though misconceivingly,
intended for himself. That idea, whether just
or not, is not scriptural. It is indeed, anti-scriptural, therefore
anti-Christian. Christianity does not deserve the praise
of any such liberality. As concerns the sole, the exclusive,
the incommunicable prerogatives of God, Christianity is, let
it be frankly admitted, a narrow, a strict, a severe, a jealous
religion. Socrates, dying, may have been forgiven his proposal
of a cock to be offered in sacrifice to Aesculapius; but
Christianity, the Christianity of the Bible, gives us no shadow
of reason for supposing that such idolatrous act on his part
was translated by God into worship acceptable to himself.
"Peter said, 'Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter
of persons, but in every nation he that feareth him and
worketh righteousness is acceptable to him.'
"To fear God first, and then also to work righteousness,
these are the traits characterizing ever and everywhere the
man acceptable to God. But evidently to fear God is not, in
the idea of Christianity, to worship another than he. It will
accordingly be in degree as a man escapes the ethnic religion
dominant about him, and rises--not by means of it,
but in spite of it--into the transcending element of the true
divine worship, that he will be acceptable to God.
"Of any ethnic religion, therefore, can it be said that it is
a true religion, only not perfect? Christianity says, No.
Christianity speaks words of undefined, unlimited hope
concerning those, some of those, who shall never have
heard of Christ. These words Christians, of course, will hold
and cherish according to their inestimable value. But let us
not mistake them as intended to bear any relation whatever
to the erring religions of mankind. Those religions the Bible
nowhere represents as pathetic and partly successful gropings
after God. They are one and all represented as groping
downward, not groping upward. According to Christianity
they hinder, they do not help. Their adherents' hold on
[D198]
them is like the blind grasping of drowning men on roots
and rocks that only tend to keep them to the bottom of the
river. The truth that is in the false religion may help, but it
will be the truth, not the false religion.
"According to Christianity the false religion exerts all its
force to choke and to kill the truth that is in it. Hence the
historic degeneration represented in the first chapter of Romans
as affecting false religions in general. If they were upward
reachings they would grow better and better. If, as
Paul teaches, they in fact grow worse and worse, it must be
because they are downward reachings.
"The attitude, therefore, of Christianity toward religions
other than itself is an attitude of universal, absolute, eternal,
unappeasable hostility, while toward all men everywhere,
the adherents of the false religions by no means
excepted, its attitude is an attitude of grace, mercy, peace
for whosoever will [receive it]. How many will be found
that will [receive it], is a problem which Christianity leaves
unsolved."
The Rev. James Devine, of New York City, also spoke on
the message of Christianity to other religions, clearly presenting
the doctrine of redemption through the precious
blood of Christ. He said:
"We are brought now to another fundamental truth in
Christian teaching--the mysterious doctrine of atonement.
Sin is a fact which is indisputable. It is universally recognized
and acknowledged. It is its own evidence. It is, moreover,
a barrier between man and his God. The divine
holiness and sin, with its loathsomeness, its rebellion, its
horrid degradation and its hopeless ruin, cannot coalesce in
any system of moral government. God cannot tolerate sin
or temporize with it or make a place for it in his presence.
He cannot parley with it; he must punish it. He cannot
treat with it; he must try it at the bar. He cannot overlook
it; he must overcome it. He cannot give it a moral status; he
must visit with the condemnation it deserves.
"Atonement is God's marvelous method of vindicating,
once for all, before the universe, his eternal attitude toward
sin, by the voluntary self-assumption, in the spirit of sacrifice,
of its penalty. This he does in the person of Jesus
[D199]
Christ. The facts of Christ's birth, life, death and resurrection
take their place in the realm of veritable history, and
the moral value and propitiatory efficacy of his perfect obedience
and sacrificial death become a mysterious element of
limitless worth in the process of readjusting the relation of
the sinner to his God.
"Christ is recognized by God as a substitute. The merit of
his obedience and the exalted dignity of his sacrifice are
both available to faith. The sinner, humble, penitent, and
conscious of unworthiness, accepts Christ as his redeemer,
his intercessor, his savior, and simply believes in trusting
in his assurances and promises, based as they are upon
his atoning intervention, and receives from God, as the gift
of sovereign love, all the benefits of Christ's mediatorial
work. This is God's way of reaching the goal of pardon
and reconciliation. It is his way of being himself just and
yet accomplishing the justification of the sinner. Here
again we have the mystery of wisdom in its most august
exemplification.
"This is the heart of the gospel. It throbs with mysterious
love; it pulsates with ineffable throes of divine healing; it
bears a vital relation to the whole scheme of government; it
is in its hidden activities beyond the scrutiny of human
reason; but it sends the life-blood coursing through history
and it gives to Christianity its superb vitality and its undying
vigor. It is because Christianity eliminates sin from
the problem that its solution is complete and final.
"Christianity must speak in the name of God. To him it
owes its existence, and the deep secret of its dignity and
power is that it reveals him. It would be effrontery for it to
speak simply upon its own responsibility, or even in the
name of reason. It has no philosophy of evolution to propound. It
has a message from God to deliver. It is not itself a philosophy;
it is a religion. It is not earth-born; it is God-wrought.
It comes not from man, but from God, and is intensely alive
with his power, alert with his love, benign with his goodness,
radiant with his light, charged with his truth, sent
with his message, inspired with his energy, pregnant with
his wisdom, instinct with the gift of spiritual healing and
mighty with supreme authority.
"It has a mission among men, whenever or wherever it
[D200]
finds them, which is as sublime as creation, as marvelous as
spiritual existence and as full of mysterious meaning as
eternity. It finds its focus, and as well its radiating center, in
the personality of its great revealer and teacher, to whom,
before his advent, all the fingers of light pointed, and from
whom, since his incarnation, all the brightness of the day
has shone.
"Its spirit is full of simple sincerity, exalted dignity and
sweet unselfishness. It aims to impart a blessing rather than
to challenge a comparison. It is not so anxious to vindicate
itself as to confer its benefits. It is not so solicitous to secure
supreme honor for itself as to win its way to the heart. It
does not seek to taunt, to disparage or humiliate its rival,
but rather to subdue by love, attract by its own excellence
and supplant by virtue of its own incomparable superiority.
It is itself incapable of a spirit of rivalry, because of its
own indisputable right to reign. It has no use for a sneer, it
can dispense with contempt, it carries no weapon of violence,
it is not given to argument, it is incapable of trickery
or deceit, and it repudiates cant. It relies ever upon its own
intrinsic merit, and bases all its claims on its right to be
heard and honored.
"Its miraculous evidence is rather an exception than a
rule. It was a sign to help weak faith. It was a concession
made in the spirit of condescension. Miracles suggest mercy
quite as much as they announce majesty. When we consider
the unlimited sources of divine power, and the ease with
which signs and wonders might have been multiplied in bewildering
variety and impressiveness, we are conscious of a
rigid conservation of power and a distinct repudiation of
the spectacular. The mystery of Christian history is the
sparing way in which Christianity has used its resources. It
is a tax upon faith, which is often painfully severe, to note
the apparent lack of energy and dash and resistless force in
the seemingly slow advances of our holy religion. [It must of
necessity be so to those who have not yet come to an understanding
of the divine plan of the ages.]
"Doubtless God had his reasons, but in the meantime we
cannot but recognize in Christianity a spirit of mysterious
reserve, of marvelous patience, of subdued undertone, of
[D201]
purposeful restraint. It does not 'cry, nor lift up, nor cause
its voice to be heard in the street.' Centuries come and go
and Christianity touches only portions of the earth, but
wherever it touches it transfigures. It seems to despise material
adjuncts, and counts only those victories worth having
which are won through spiritual contact with the individual
soul. Its relation to other religions has been characterized
by singular reserve, and its progress has been marked
by an unostentatious dignity which is in harmony with the
majestic attitude of God, its author.
"We are right, then, in speaking of the spirit of this message
as wholly free from the commonplace sentiment of rivalry,
entirely above the use of spectacular or meretricious
methods, infinitely removed from all mere devices or dramatic
effect, wholly free from cant or doublefacedness, with
no anxiety for alliance with worldly power or social eclat,
caring more for a place of influence in a humble heart than
for a seat of power on a royal throne, wholly intent on
claiming the loving allegiance of the soul and securing the
moral transformation of character, in order that its own
spirit and principles may sway the spiritual life of men.
"It speaks, then, to other religions with unqualified
frankness and plainness, based on its own incontrovertible
claim to a hearing. It acknowledges the undoubted sincerity
of personal conviction and the intense earnestness of
moral struggle in the case of many serious souls who, like
the Athenians of old, 'worship in ignorance'; it warns, and
persuades, and commands, as is its right; it speaks as Paul
did in the presence of cultured heathenism on Mars' Hill, of
that appointed day in which the world must be judged, and
of 'that man' by whom it is to be judged; it echoes and re-echoes
its invariable and inflexible call to repentance; it requires
acceptance of its moral standards; it exacts submission,
loyalty, reverence and humility.
"All this it does with a superb and unwavering tone of
quiet insistence. It often presses its claim with argument,
appeal and tender urgency; yet in it all and through it all
should be recognized a clear, resonant, predominant tone
of uncompromising insistence, revealing that supreme personal
will which originated Christianity, and in whose
[D202]
name it ever speaks. It delivers its message with an air of
untroubled confidence and quiet mastery. There is no anxiety
about precedence, no undue care for externals, no possibility
of being patronized, no undignified spirit of
competition. It speaks, rather, with the consciousness of
that simple, natural, incomparable, measureless supremacy
which quickly disarms rivalry, and in the end challenges
the admiration and compels the submission of hearts free
from malice and guile."
Among these noble utterances in defense of the truth was
also that of Count Bernstorff, of Germany. He said:
"I trust that nobody is here who thinks lightly of his own
religion [though he certainly learned to the contrary before
the parliament closed. This was said at its beginning.] I for
myself declare that I am here as an individual evangelical
Christian, and that I should never have set my foot in this
Parliament if I thought that it signified anything like a consent
that all religions are equal, and that it is only necessary
to be sincere and upright. I can consent to nothing of this
kind. I believe only the Bible to be true, and Protestant
Christianity the only true religion. I wish no compromise of any
kind.
"We cannot deny that we who meet in this Parliament
are separated by great and important principles. We admit
that these differences cannot be bridged over; but we meet,
believing everybody has the right to his faith. You invite everybody
to come here as a sincere defender of his own faith.
I, for my part, stand before you with the same wish that
prompted Paul when he stood before the representatives of
the Roman Court and Agrippa, the Jewish king. I would to
God that all that hear me today were both almost, and altogether,
such as I am. I cannot say 'except these bonds.' I
thank God I am free; except for all these faults and deficiencies
which are in me and which prevent me from embracing
my creed as I should like to do.
"But what do we then meet for, if we cannot show tolerance?
Well, the word tolerance is used in different ways. If
the words of King Frederick of Prussia--'In my country everybody
can go to heaven after his own fashion'--are used
as a maxim of statesmanship, we cannot approve of it too
[D203]
highly. What bloodshed, what cruelty would have been
spared in the world if it had been adopted. But if it is the
expression of the religious indifference prevalent during this last century
and at the court of the monarch who was the friend of
Voltaire, then we must not accept it.
"St. Paul, in his epistle to the Galatians, rejects every
other doctrine, even if it were taught by an angel from
heaven. We Christians are servants of our Master, the living
Savior. We have no right to compromise the truth he intrusted to us;
either to think lightly of it, or to withhold the message he
has given us for humanity. But we meet together, each one
wishing to gain the others to his own creed. Will this not
be a Parliament of war instead of peace? Will it take us
further from, instead of bringing us nearest to, each other?
I think not, if we hold fast the truth that our great vital
doctrines can only be defended and propagated by spiritual
means. An honest fight with spiritual weapons need not
estrange the combatants; on the contrary, it often brings
them nearer.
"I think this conference will have done enough to engrave
its memory forever on the leaves of history if this
great principle [religious liberty] finds general adoption.
One light is dawning in every heart, and the nineteenth
century has brought us much progress in this respect; yet
we risk to enter the twentieth century before the great principle
of religious liberty has found universal acceptance."
In marked contrast with the general spirit of the Parliament
was also the discourse of Mr. Grant, of Canada. He
said:
"It seems to me that we should begin this Parliament of
Religions, not with a consciousness that we are doing a
great thing, but with an humble and lowly confession of sin
and failure. Why have not the inhabitants of the world
fallen before the truth? The fault is ours. The Apostle Paul,
looking back on centuries of marvelous, God-guided history,
saw as the key to all its maxims this: that Jehovah had
stretched out his hands all day long to a disobedient and
gainsaying people; that, although there was always a remnant
of the righteous. Israel as a nation did not understand
Jehovah, and therefore failed to understand her own marvelous
mission.
[D204]
"If St. Paul were here today would he not utter the same
sad confession with regard to the nineteenth century of
Christendom? Would he not have to say that we have been
proud of our Christianity, instead of allowing our Christianity
to humble and crucify us; that we have boasted of
Christianity as something we possessed, instead of allowing
it to possess us; that we have divorced it from the moral and
spiritual order of the world, instead of seeing that it is that
which interpenetrates, interprets, completes and verifies
that order; and that so we have hidden its glories and obscured
its power. All day long our Savior has been saying, 'I
have stretched out my hands to a disobedient and gainsaying
people.' But the only one indispensable condition of
success is that we recognize the cause of our failure, that we
confess it, with humble, lowly, penitent and obedient
minds, and that with quenchless Western courage and faith
we now go forth and do otherwise."
Would that these sentiments had found an echo in the
great Parliament!--but they did not. On the other hand, it
was characterized by great boastfulness as to the "marvelous
religious progress of the nineteenth century"; and
Count Bernstorff's first impression, that it meant a bold
compromise of Christian principles and doctrine, was the
correct one, as the subsequent sessions of the Parliament
proved.
The Contrasted Attitudes of Catholicism,
Heathenism and Protestant Christianity
The confident and assertive attitude of Catholicism and
the various heathen religions was in marked contrast with
the skepticism of Protestant Christianity. Not a sentence
was uttered by any of them against the authority of their
sacred books; they praised and commended their religions,
while they listened with surprise to the skeptical and infidel
discourses of Protestant Christians against the Christian religion
and against the Bible, for which even the heathen
showed greater respect.
[D205]
As evidence of the surprise of the foreigners on learning
of this state of things among Christians, we quote the following
from the published address of one of the delegates
from Japan at a great meeting held in Yokohama to welcome
their return and to hear their report. The speaker
said:
"When we received the invitation to attend the Parliament
of Religions, our Buddhist organization would not
send us as representatives of the body. The great majority
believed that it was a shrewd move on the part of Christians
to get us there and then hold us up to ridicule or try to convert
us. We accordingly went as individuals. But it was a
wonderful surprise which awaited us. Our ideas were all
mistaken. The Parliament was called because the Western
nations have come to realize the weakness and folly of
Christianity, and they really wished to hear from us of our
religion, and to learn what the best religion is. There is no
better place in the world to propagate the teachings of
Buddhism than America. Christianity is merely an adornment
of society in America. It is deeply believed by very
few. The great majority of Christians drink and commit
various gross sins, and live very dissolute lives, although it is
a very common belief and serves as a social adornment. Its
lack of power proves its weakness. The meetings showed the
great superiority of Buddhism over Christianity, and the
mere fact of calling the meetings showed that the Americans
and other Western people had lost their faith in Christianity
and were ready to accept the teachings of our
superior religion."
It is no wonder that a Japanese Christian said, at the
close of the addresses, "How could American Christians
make so great a mistake as to hold such a meeting and injure
Christianity as these meetings will do in Japan?"
Those who are posted in history know something of the
character of that great antichristian power, the Church of
Rome, with which affiliation is so earnestly sought by Protestants;
and those who are keeping open eyes on her present
operations know that her heart and character are still unchanged.
[D206]
Those who are at all informed know well that the
Greek Catholic Church has supported and approved, if indeed
it has not been the instigator of, the Russian persecution
of the Jews, "Stundists" and all other Christians
who, awaking from the blindness and superstition of the
Greek Church, are seeking and finding God and truth
through the study of his Word. The persecution incited by
the Greek Catholic priests and prosecuted by the police are
of the most cruel and revolting nature. But, nevertheless,
union and cooperation with both these systems, the Roman
and Greek Catholic Churches, is most earnestly sought,
as also with all the forms of heathen superstition and
ignorance.
The Gross Darkness of the Heathenism with
which Christians Desire and Seek Alliance
Of the gross darkness of the heathenism with which cooperation
and sympathy are now craved by Christians, we
may gain some idea from the following indignant retort of
Dr. Pentecost against the critical tone which some of the
foreigners assumed toward Christianity and Christian missions.
He said:
"I think it is a pity that anything should tend to degenerate
the discussions of this Parliament into a series of criminations
and recriminations; nevertheless, we Christians
have been sitting patiently and listening to a series of criticisms
upon the results of Christianity from certain representatives
of the Eastern religions. For instance, the slums
of Chicago and New York, the nameless wickedness palpable
to the eye even of the strangers who are our guests;
the licentiousness, the drunkenness, the brawls, the murders,
and the crimes of the criminal classes have been scored
up against us. The shortcomings of Congress and government
both in England and America have been charged to
Christianity. The opium trade, the rum traffic, the breach
of treaties, the inhuman and barbarous laws against the
Chinaman, etc., have all been charged upon the Christian
[D207]
church. [But if Christians claim that these are Christian
nations, can they reasonably blame these heathen representatives
for thinking and judging them accordingly?]
"It seems almost needless to say that all these things, the
immoralities, drunkenness, crimes, unbrotherliness, and
the selfish greed of these various destructive traffics which
have been carried from our countries to the Orient lie outside
the pale of Christianity. [No, not if these are Christian
nations. In making this claim, the church is chargeable
with the sins of the nations, and they are justly charged
against her.] The Church of Christ is laboring night and
day to correct and abolish these crimes. The unanimous
voice of the Christian Church condemns the opium traffic,
the liquor traffic, the Chinese acts of oppression, and all
forms of vice and greed of which our friends from the East
complain.
"We are willing to be criticized; but when I recall the fact
that these criticisms are in part from gentlemen who represent
a system of religion whose temples, manned by the
highest casts of Brahmanical priesthood, are the authorized
and appointed cloisters of a system of immorality and
debauchery the parallel of which is not known in any Western
country, I feel that silence gives consent. I could take
you to ten thousand temples, more or less--more rather
than less--in every part of India, to which are attached
from two to four hundred priestesses, whose lives are not all
they should be.
"I have seen this with my own eyes, and nobody denies it
in India. If you talk to the Brahmans about it, they will say
it is a part of their system for the common people. Bear in
mind this system is the authorized institution of the Hindoo
religion. One needs only to look at the abominable carvings
upon the temples, both of the Hindoos and Buddhists, the
hideous symbols of the ancient Phallic systems, which are
the most popular objects worshiped in India, to be impressed
with the corruption of the religions. Bear in mind,
these are not only tolerated, but instituted, directed and
controlled by the priests of religion. Only the shameless
paintings and portraiture of ancient Pompeii equal in obscenity
the things that are openly seen in and about the entrances
to the temples of India.
[D208]
"It seems a little hard that we should bear the criticism
which these representatives of Hindooism make upon the
godless portion of Western countries, when they are living
in such enormous glass houses as these, every one of them
erected, protected and defended by the leaders of their own
religion.
"We have heard a good deal about the 'fatherhood of
God and the brotherhood of man,' as being one of the essential
doctrines of the religions of the East. As a matter of
fact, I have never been able to find--and I have challenged
the production all over India--a single text in any of the
Hindoo sacred literature that justifies or even suggests the
doctrine of the 'fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of
man.' This is a pure plagiarism from Christianity. We rejoice
that they have adopted and incorporated it. How can
a Brahman, who looks upon all low-caste men, and especially
upon the poor pariahs, with a spirit of loathing, and
regards them as a different order of beings, sprung from
monkeys and devils, presume to tell us that he believes in
the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man? If a
Brahman believes in the brotherhood of man, why will he
refuse the social amenities and common hospitalities to
men of other castes, as well as to his Western brethren,
whom he so beautifully enfolds in the condescending arms
of his newly found doctrine of the fatherhood of God and
the brotherhood of man?
"If there is any brotherhood of man in India the most
careless observer need not hesitate to say that there is no sisterhood
recognized by them. Let the nameless horrors of
which the Hindoo women of India are the subjects answer
to this statement.
"Until the English government put down a strong hand
the ancient religious Hindoo institution of Suttee, hundreds
of Hindoo widows every year gladly flew to the funeral
pyres of their dead husbands, thus embracing the
flames that burned their bodies rather than to deliver themselves
to the nameless horrors and living hell of Hindoo
widowhood. Let our Hindoo friends tell us what their religion
has done for the Hindoo widow, and especially the
child widow, with her head shaved like a criminal, stripped
[D209]
of her ornaments, clothed in rags, reduced to a position of
slavery worse than we can conceive, made the common
drudge and scavenger of the family, and not infrequently
put to even worse and nameless uses. To this state and condition
the poor widow is reduced under the sanction of
Hindooism. Only two years ago the British government
was appealed to to pass a new and stringent law 'raising the
age of consent' to twelve years, at which it was lawful for
the Hindoo to consummate the marriage relation with his
child wife. The Christian hospitals, filled with abused little
girls barely out of their babyhood, became so outrageous a
fact that the government had to step in and stop these
crimes, which were perpetrated in the name of religion. So
great was the excitement in India over this that it was
feared that a religious revolution which would almost lead
to a new mutiny was imminent.
"We have been criticized by our Oriental friends for
judging with an ignorant and prejudiced judgment, because
at a recent challenge in the early part of this Parliament
only five persons were able to say that they had read
the Bible of Buddha; so it was taken for granted that our
judgment was ignorant and unjust. The same challenge
might have been made in Burmah or Ceylon, and outside
of the priesthood it is almost fair to say that not so many
would have been able to say they had read their own Scriptures.
The Badas of the Hindoos are objects of worship.
None but a Brahman may teach, much less read them. Before
the Christian missionary went to India, the Sanskrit
was practically a dead language. If the Indian Scriptures
have at least been translated into the vernacular or given to
the Western nations, it is because the Christian missionary
and Western scholars have rediscovered them, unearthed
them, translated them and brought them forth to the light
of day. The amount of the Sanskrit Scriptures known by the
ordinary Indian who has secured a Western education is
only those portions which have been translated into English
or the vernacular by European or Western scholars.
The common people, ninety-nine one-hundredths of all,
know only tradition. Let us contrast this dead exclusiveness
on the part of these Indian religions with the fact that the
[D210]
Christian has translated his Bible into more than three
hundred languages and dialects, and has sent it broadcast
by hundreds of millions among all the nations and tongues
and peoples of the earth. We court the light, but it would
seem that the Bibles of the East love the darkness rather
than light, because they will not bear the light of universal
publication.
"The new and better Hindooism of today is a development
under the influence of a Christian environment,
but it has not yet attained to that ethical standard which
gives it right to read the Christian Church a lesson in morals.
Until India purges her temples of worse than Augean
filth, and her pundits and priests disown and denounce the
awful acts and deeds done in the name of religion, let her be
modest in proclaiming morals to other nations and
people."
Heathen Reformers Feeling After God
While Christendom stood representatively before the
representative heathen world, boastful of its religious progress,
and knowing not that it was "poor and blind and miserable
and naked" (Rev. 3:17), the contrast of an evident
feeling after God on the part of some in heathen lands was
very marked; and the keenness with which they perceived
and indirectly criticized the inconsistencies of Christians is
worthy of special note.
In two able addresses by representative Hindoos, we
have set before us a remarkable movement in India which
gives some idea of the darkness of heathen lands, and also of
the influence of our Bible, which the missionaries carried
there. The Bible has been doing a work which the conflicting
creeds that accompanied it, and claimed to interpret it,
have hindered, but have not destroyed. From Japan also we
hear of similar conditions. Below we append extracts from
three addresses remarkable for their evident sincerity,
thought and clear expression, and showing the very serious
attitude of heathen reformers who are feeling after God, if
haply they might find him.
[D211]
A Voice from New India
Mr. Mozoomdar addressed the assembly as follows:
MR. PRESIDENT, REPRESENTATIVES OF NATIONS AND RELIGIONS:
The Brahmo-Somaj of India, which I have the honor
to represent, is a new society; our religion is a new religion,
but it comes from far, far antiquity, from the very roots of
our national life, hundreds of centuries ago.
"Sixty-three years ago the whole land of India was full of
a mighty clamor. The great jarring noise of a heterogeneous
polytheism rent the stillness of the sky. The cry of widows;
nay, far more lamentable, the cry of those miserable women
who had to be burned on the funeral pyres of their dead
husbands, desecrated the holiness of God's earth. We had the
Buddhist goddess of the country, the mother of the people,
ten handed, holding in each hand the weapons for the defense
of her children. We had the white goddess of learning,
playing on her Vena, a stringed instrument of music, the
strings of wisdom. The goddess of good fortune, holding in
her arms, not the horn, but the basket of plenty, blessing the
nations of India, was there; and the god with the head of an
elephant; and the god who rides on a peacock, and the
thirty-three millions of gods and goddesses besides. I have
my theory about the mythology of Hindooism, but this is
not the time to take it up.
"Amid the din and clash of this polytheism and social
evil, amid all the darkness of the times, there arose a man, a
Brahman, pure bred and pure born, whose name was Raja
Ram Dohan Roy. Before he became a man he wrote a book
proving the falsehood of all polytheism and the truth of the
existence of the living God. This brought upon his head
persecution. In 1830 this man founded a society known as
the Brahmo-Somaj--the society of the worshipers of the one
living God.
"The Brahmo-Somaj founded this monotheism upon the
inspiration of the old Hindoo Scriptures, the Vedas and the
Upanishads.
"In the course of time, as the movement grew, the members
began to doubt whether the Hindoo Scriptures were
really infallible. In their souls they thought they heard a
voice which here and there, at first in feeble accents, contradicted
[D212]
the Vedas and the Upanishads. What shall be our
theological principles? Upon what principles shall our religion
stand? The small accents in which the question first
was asked became louder and louder, and were more and
more echoed in the rising religious society, until it became
the most practical of all problems--upon what book shall
all true religion stand?
"Briefly they found that it was impossible that the Hindoo
Scriptures should be the only record of true religion.
They found that although there were truths in the Hindoo
Scriptures, they could not recognize them as the only infallible
standard of spiritual reality. So twenty-one years
after the founding of the Brahmo-Somaj the doctrine of
the infallibility of the Hindoo Scriptures was given up.
"Then a further question came. Are there not other scriptures
also? Did I not tell you the other day, that on the imperial
throne of India Christianity now sat with the Gospel
of Peace in one hand and the scepter of civilization in the
other? The Bible has penetrated into India. The Bible is the
book which mankind shall not ignore. Recognizing therefore,
on the one hand, the great inspiration of the Hindoo
scriptures, we could not but on the other hand recognize the
inspiration and the authority of the Bible. And in 1861 we
published a book in which extracts from all scriptures were
given as the book which was to be read in the course of our
devotions. It was not the Christian missionary that drew
our attention to the Bible; it was not the Mohammedan
priests who showed us the excellent passages in the Koran;
it was no Zoroastrian who preached to us the greatness of
his Zend-Avesta; but there was in our hearts the God of infinite
reality, the source of inspiration of all the books, of
the Bible, of the Koran, of the Zend-Avesta, who drew our
attention to the excellencies as revealed in the record of
holy experiences everywhere. By his leading and by his
light it was that we recognized these facts, and upon the
rock of everlasting and eternal reality our theological basis
was laid.
"Was it theology without morality? What is the inspiration
of this book or the authority of that prophet without
personal holiness--the cleanliness of this God-made
[D213]
temple? Soon after we had got through our theology, the
fact stared us in the face that we were not good men, pure
minded, holy men, and that there were innumerable evils
about us, in our houses, in our national usages, in the organization
of our society. The Brahmo-Somaj, therefore,
next turned its hand to the reformation of society. In 1851
the first intermarriage was celebrated. Intermarriage in India
means the marriage of persons belonging to different
castes. Caste is a sort of Chinese wall that surrounds every
household and every little community, and beyond the limits
of which no audacious man or woman shall stray. In the
Brahmo-Somaj we asked, 'Shall this Chinese wall disgrace
the freedom of God's children forever?' No! Break it down;
down with it, and away.
"Next, my honored leader and friend, Keshub Chunder
Sen, so arranged that marriage between different castes
should take place. The Brahmans were offended. Wise-acres
shook their heads; even leaders of the Brahmo-Somaj
shrugged up their shoulders and put their hands in their
pockets. 'These young firebrands,' they said, 'are going to
set fire to the whole of society.' But intermarriage took
place, and widow-marriage took place.
"Do you know what the widows of India are? A little girl
of ten or twelve years happens to lose her husband before
she knows his features very well, and from that tender age
to her dying day she shall go through penances and austerities
and miseries and loneliness and disgrace which you
tremble to hear of. I do not approve of or understand the
conduct of a woman who marries a first time and then a
second time and then a third time and a fourth time--who
marries as many times as there are seasons in the year. I do
not understand the conduct of such men and women. But I
think that when a little child of eleven loses what men call
her husband, to put her to the wretchedness of a lifelong
widowhood and inflict upon her miseries which would disgrace
a criminal, is a piece of inhumanity which cannot too
soon be done away with. Hence, intermarriages and widow
marriages. Our hands were thus laid upon the problem of
social and domestic improvement, and the result of that
was that very soon a rupture took place in the Brahmo-Somaj.
[D214]
We young men had to go--we, with all our social reform
--and shift for ourselves as we best might. When these
social reforms were partially completed, there came another
question.
"We had married the widow; we had prevented the
burning of widows; what about our personal purity, the
sanctification of our own consciences, the regeneration of
our own souls? What about our acceptance before the awful
tribunal of the God of infinite justice? Social reform and
the doing of public good is itself only legitimate when it develops
into the all-embracing principle of personal purity
and the holiness of the soul.
"My friends, I am often afraid, I confess, when I contemplate
the condition of European and American society,
where your activities are so manifold, your work is so extensive
that you are drowned in it, and you have little time to
consider the great questions of regeneration, of personal
sanctification, of trial and judgment and of acceptance before
God. That is the question of all questions.
"After the end of the work of our social reform, we were
therefore led into the great subject, How shall this unregenerate
nature be regenerated; this defiled temple, what
waters shall wash it into a new and pure condition? All
these motives and desires and evil impulses, the animal inspirations,
what will put an end to them all, and make man
what he was, the immaculate child of God, as Christ was, as
all regenerated men were? Theological principle first,
moral principle next; and in the third place the spiritual of
the Brahmo-Somaj--devotions, repentance, prayer, praise,
faith; throwing ourselves entirely and absolutely upon the
spirit of God and upon his saving love.
[This heathen philosopher sees to only a partial extent
what sin is, as is indicated by his expression, "an immaculate
child of God...as all regenerated men were." He does not
see that even the best of the fallen race are far from being
actually spotless, immaculate, perfect; hence that they all
need the merit of Christ's perfection and sin-sacrifice to justify
them. He speaks of prayers, faith, etc., and the mercy of
God, but he has not yet learned that justice is the foundation
[D215]
underlying all of God's dealings; and that only
through the merit of Christ's sacrifice can God be just, and
yet the justifier of sinners believing in Christ, and thus covered
by his great atonement for sin, made eighteen centuries
ago--once for all--to be testified to all in due time.]
"Moral aspirations do not mean holiness; a desire to be
good, does not mean to be good. The bullock that carries on
his back hundredweight of sugar does not taste a grain of
sweetness because of his unbearable load. And all our aspirations,
and all our fine wishes, and all our fine dreams, and
fine sermons, either hearing or speaking them--going to
sleep over them or listening to them intently--these will
never make life perfect. Devotion only, prayer, direct perception
of God's spirit, communion with him, absolute self-abasement
before his majesty, devotional fervor, devotional
excitement, spiritual absorption, living and moving
in God--that is the secret of personal holiness. And in the
third stage of our career, therefore, spiritual excitement,
long devotions, intense fervor, contemplation, endless self-abasement,
not merely before God but before man, became
the rule of our lives. God is unseen; it does not harm anybody
or make him appear less respectable if he says to God:
'I am a sinner; forgive me.' But to make your confessions
before man, to abase yourselves before your brothers and
sisters, to take the dust off the feet of holy men, to feel that
you are a miserable, wretched object in God's holy congregation--
that requires a little self humiliation, a little moral
courage.
"The last principle I have to take up is the progressiveness
of the Brahmo-Somaj.
"Christianity declares the glory of God; Hindooism
speaks about his infinite and eternal excellence; Mohammedanism,
with fire and sword, proves the almightiness
of his will; Buddhism says how peaceful and joyful he
is. He is the God of all religions, of all denominations, of all
lands, of all scriptures, and our progress lay in harmonizing
these various systems, these various prophecies and developments
into one great system. Hence the new sytem
of religion in the Brahmo-Somaj is called the New
[D216]
Dispensation. The Christian speaks in terms of admiration
of Christianity; so does the Hebrew of Judaism; so does the
Mohammedan of the Koran; so does the Zoroastrian of the
Zend-Avesta. The Christian admires his principles of spiritual
culture; the Hindoo does the same; the Mohammedan
does the same.
"But the Brahmo-Somaj accepts and harmonizes all
these precepts, systems, principles, teachings and disciplines
and makes them into one system, and that is his religion.
For a whole decade, my friend, Keshub Chunder Sen, myself
and other apostles of the Brahmo-Somaj have traveled
from village to village, from province to province, from
continent to continent, declaring this new dispensation and
the harmony of all religious prophecies and systems unto
the glory of the one true, living God. But we are a subject
race; we are uneducated; we are incapable; we have not the
resources of money to get men to listen to our message. In
the fullness of time you have called this august Parliament
of religions, and the message that we could not propagate
you had taken into your hands to propagate.
"I do not come to the sessions of this Parliament as a
mere student, nor as one who has to justify his own system. I
come as a disciple, as a follower, as a brother. May your labors
be blessed with prosperity, and not only shall your
Christianity and your America be exalted, but the Brahmo-Somaj
will feel most exalted: and this poor man who has
come such a long distance to crave your sympathy and your
kindness shall feel himself amply rewarded.
"May the spread of the New Dispensation rest with you
and make you our brothers and sisters. Representatives of
all religions, may all your religions merge into the Fatherhood
of God and the brotherhood of man, that Christ's
prophecy may be fulfilled, the world's hope may be fulfilled,
and mankind may become one kingdom with God,
our Father."
Here we have a clear statement of the object and hopes of
these visiting philosophers; and who shall say that they
failed to use their opportunities? If we heard much before
the Parliament of the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood
[D217]
of unregenerated men--with no recognized need of
a Savior, a Redeemer, to make a reconciliation for iniquity
and to open up "a new and living way [of return to God's
family] through the veil, that is to say, his flesh," we have
heard much more of the same thing since. If we heard before
the Parliament of society's redemption by moral reforms,
as in opposition to redemption by the precious
blood, we have heard still more of his Christless religion
since. It is the final stage of the falling away of these last
days of the Gospel age. It will continue and increase: the
Scriptures declare that "a thousand shall fall at thy side";
and the Apostle Paul urges, "Take unto you the whole armor
of God, that you may be able to stand in that evil day";
and John the Revelator significantly inquires, "Who shall
be able to stand?" The entire tenor of Scripture indicates
that it is God's will that a great test should now come upon
all who have named the name of Christ, and that all the
great mass of "tare"-professors should fall away from all
profession of faith in the ransom-sacrifice made once for all by
our Lord Jesus; because they never received this truth in the
love of it. 2 Thess. 2:10-12
A Voice from Japan
When Kinza Ringe M. Harai, the learned Japanese
Buddhist, read his paper on "The Real Position of Japan
toward Christianity," the brows of some of the Christian
missionaries on the platform contracted and their heads
shook in disapproval. But the Buddhist directed his stinging
rebukes at the false Christians who have done so much
to impede the work of spreading the gospel in Japan. The
paper follows:
"There are very few countries in the world so misunderstood
as Japan. Among the innumberable unfair judgments,
the religious thought of my countrymen is especially
misrepresented, and the whole nation is condemned as
[D218]
heathen. Be they heathen, pagan, or something else, it is a
fact that from the beginning of our history Japan has received
all teachings with open mind; and also that the instructions
which came from outside have commingled with
the native religion in entire harmony, as is seen by so many
temples built in the name of truth with a mixed appellation
of Buddhism and Shintoism; as is seen by the affinity
among the teachers of Confucianism and Taoism, or other
isms, and the Buddhists and Shinto priests; as is seen by the
individual Japanese, who pays his respects to all teachings
mentioned above; as is seen by the peculiar construction of
the Japanese houses, which have generally two rooms, one
for a miniature Buddhist temple and the other for a small
Shinto shrine, before which the family study the respective
scriptures of the two religions. In reality Synthetic religion
is the Japanese speciality, and I will not hesitate to call it
Japanism.
"But you will protest and say: 'Why, then, is Christianity
not so warmly accepted by your nation as other religions?'
This is the point which I wish especially to present before
you. There are two causes why Christianity is not so cordially
received. This great religion was widely spread in our
country, but in 1637 the Christian missionaries, combined
with the converts, caused a tragic and bloody rebellion
against the country, and it was understood that those missionaries
intended to subjugate Japan to their own mother
country. This shocked Japan, and it took the government
of the Sho-gun a year to suppress this terrible and intrusive
commotion. To those who accuse us that our mother country
prohibited Christianity, not now, but in a past age, I
will reply that it was not from religious or racial antipathy,
but to prevent such another insurrection; and to protect
our independence we were obliged to prohibit the promulgation
of the gospels.
"If our history had had no such record of foreign devastation
under the disguise of religion, and if our people had
had no hereditary horror and prejudice against the name of
Christianity, it might have been eagerly embraced by the
whole nation. But this incident has passed, and we may forget
it. Yet it is not entirely unreasonable that the terrified
suspicion, or you may say superstition, that Christianity is
[D219]
the instrument of depredation, should have been avoidably
or unavoidably aroused in the oriental mind, when it is an
admitted fact that some of the powerful nations of Christendom
are gradually encroaching upon the Orient, and
when the following circumstance is daily impressed upon
our mind, reviving a vivid memory of the past historical occurrence.
The circumstance of which I am about to speak is
the present experience of ourselves, to which I especially
call the attention of this Parliament, and not only this Parliament,
but also the whole of Christendom.
"Since 1853, when Commodore Perry came to Japan as
the ambassador of the President of the United States of
America, our country began to be better known by all western
nations, the new ports were widely opened and the prohibition
of the gospels was abolished, as it was before the
Christian rebellion. By the convention at Yeddo, now
Tokio, in 1858, the treaty was stipulated between America
and Japan and also with the European powers. It was the
time when our country was yet under the feudal government;
and on account of our having been secluded for over
two centuries since the Christian rebellion of 1637, diplomacy
was quite a new experience to the feudal officers, who
put their full confidence upon western nations, and without
any alteration, accepted every article of the treaty presented
from the foreign governments. According to the
treaty we are in a very disadvantageous situation; and
amongst the others there are two prominent articles, which
deprive us of our rights and advantages. One is the exterritoriality
of western nations in Japan, by which all cases in
regard to right, whether of property or person, arising between
the subjects of the western nations in my country as
well as between them and the Japanese are subjected to the
jurisdiction of the authorities of the western nations. Another
regards the tariff, which, with the exception of 5 per
cent ad valorem, we have no right to impose where it might
properly be done.
"It is also stipulated that either of the contracting parties
to this treaty, on giving one year's previous notice to the
other, may demand a revision thereof on or after the 1st of
July, 1872. Therefore in 1871 our government demanded a
revision, and since then we have been constantly requesting
[D220]
it, but foreign governments have simply ignored our
requests, making many excuses. One part of the treaty between
the United States of America and Japan concerning
the tariff was annulled, for which we thank with sincere
gratitude the kind-hearted American nation; but I am
sorry to say that, as no European power has followed in the
wake of America in this respect, our tariff right remains in
the same condition as it was before.
"We have no judicial power over the foreigners in Japan,
and as a natural consequence we are receiving injuries, legal
and moral, the accounts of which are seen constantly in
our native newspapers. As the western people live far from
us they do not know the exact circumstances. Probably they
hear now and then the reports of the missionaries and their
friends in Japan. I do not deny that their reports are true;
but if any person wants to obtain any unmistakable information
in regard to his friend he ought to hear the opinions
about him from many sides. If you closely examine with
your unbiased mind what injuries we receive, you will be
astonished. Among many kinds of wrongs there are some
which were utterly unknown before and entirely new to us
'heathen,' none of whom would dare to speak of them even
in private conversation.
"One of the excuses offered by foreign nations is that our
country is not yet civilized. Is it the principle of civilized
law that the rights and profits of so-called uncivilized or the
weaker should be sacrificed? As I understand it, the spirit
and the necessity of law is to protect the rights and welfare
of the weaker against the aggression of the stronger; but I
have never learned in my shallow studies of law that the
weaker should be sacrificed for the stronger. Another kind
of apology comes from the religious source, and the claim is
made that the Japanese are idolaters and heathen.
Whether our people are idolaters or not you will know at
once if you will investigate our religious views without prejudice
from authentic Japanese sources.
"But admitting, for the sake of the argument, that we are
idolaters and heathen, is it Christian morality to trample
upon the rights and advantages of a non-christian nation,
coloring all their natural happiness with the dark stain of
[D221]
injustice? I read in the Bible, 'Whosoever shall smite thee
on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also'; but I cannot
discover there any passage which says, 'Whosoever shall
demand justice of thee smite his right cheek, and when he
turns smite the other also.' Again, I read in the Bible, 'If any
man will sue thee at the law, and take away thy coat, let
him have thy cloak also;' but I cannot discover there any
passage which says, 'If thou shalt sue any man at the law,
and take away his coat, let him give thee his cloak also.'
"You send your missionaries to Japan, and they advise us
to be moral and believe Christianity. We like to be moral,
we know that Christianity is good and we are very thankful
for this kindness. But at the same time our people are rather
perplexed and very much in doubt about this advice when
we think that the treaty stipulated in the time of feudalism,
when we were yet in our youth, is still clung to by the powerful
nations of Christendom; when we find that every year
a good many western vessels engaged in the seal fishery are
smuggled into our seas; when legal cases are always decided
by the foreign authorities in Japan unfavorably to us; when
some years ago a Japanese was not allowed to enter a university
on the Pacific coast of America because of his being
of a different race; when a few months ago the school board
of San Francisco enacted a regulation that no Japanese
should be allowed to enter the public schools there; when
last year the Japanese were driven out in wholesale from
one of the territories in the United States of America; when
our business men in San Francisco were compelled by some
union not to employ the Japanese assistants or laborers, but
the Americans; when there are some in the same city who
speak on the platforms against those of us who are already
here; when there are many men who go in processions
hoisting lanterns marked 'Jap must go;' when the Japanese
in the Hawaiian islands are deprived of their suffrage;
when we see some western people in Japan who erect before
the entrance in their houses a special post upon which is the
notice, 'No Japanese is allowed to enter here,' just like a
board upon which is written, 'No dogs allowed;' when we
are in such a situation, is it unreasonable--notwithstanding
the kindness of the western nations, from one point of view,
[D222]
who send their missionaries to us--for us intelligent 'heathen'
to be embarrassed and hesitate to swallow the sweet
and warm liquid of the heaven of Christianity? If such be
the Christian ethics, well, we are perfectly satisfied to be
heathen.
"If any person should claim that there are many people
in Japan who speak and write against Christianity, I am
not a hypocrite, and I will frankly state that I was the first
in my country who ever publicly attacked Christianity--
no, not real Christianity, but false Christianity, the wrongs done
toward us by the people of Christendom. If any reprove
the Japanese because they have had strong anti-Christian
societies, I will honestly declare that I was the first in
Japan who ever organized a society against Christianity
--no, not against real Christianity, but to protect ourselves from false
Christianity, and the injustice which we receive from the
people of Christendom. Do not think that I took such a
stand on account of my being a Buddhist, for this was my
position many years before I entered the Buddhist Temple.
But at the same time I will proudly state that if any one discussed
the affinity of all religions before the public, under
the title of Synthetic Religion, it was I. I say this to you because
I do not wish to be understood as a bigoted Buddhist
sectarian.
"Really there is no sectarian in my country. Our people
well know what abstract truth is in Christianity, and we, or
at least I, do not care about the names if I speak from the
point of teaching. Whether Buddhism is called Christianity
or Christianity is named Buddhism, whether we are called
Confucianists or Shintoists, we are not particular; but we
are particular about the truth taught and its consistent application.
Whether Christ saves us or drives us into hell,
whether Gautama Buddha was a real person or there never
was such a man, it is not a matter of consideration to us, but
the consistency of doctrine and conduct is the point on
which we put the greater importance. Therefore, unless the
inconsistency which we observe is renounced, and especially
the unjust treaty by which we are entailed is revised
upon an equitable basis, our people will never cast away
their prejudices about Christianity in spite of the eloquent
orator who speaks its truth from the pulpit. We are very often
[D223]
called 'barbarians,' and I have heard and read that
Japanese are stubborn and cannot understand the truth of
the Bible. I will admit that this is true in some sense, for,
though they admire the eloquence of the orator and wonder
at his courage, though they approve his logical argument,
yet they are very stubborn and will not join
Christianity as long as they think it is a western morality to
preach one thing and practice another...
"If any religion teaches injustice to humanity, I will oppose
it, as I ever have opposed it, with my blood and soul. I
will be the bitterest dissenter from Christianity, or I will be
the warmest admirer of its gospel. To the Promoters of the
Parliament and the ladies and gentlemen of the world who
are assembled here, I pronounce that your aim is the realization
of the Religious Union, not nominally, but practically.
We, the forty million souls of Japan, standing firmly
and persistently upon the basis of international justice,
await still further manifestations as to the morality of
Christianity."
What a comment is this upon the causes of Christendom's
failure to convert the world to truth and righteousness!
And how it calls for humiliation and repentance,
rather than boasting!
A voice from the young men of the Orient was sounded
by Herant M. Kiretchjian, of Constantinople as follows:
"Brethren from the Sunrising of all lands: I stand here to
represent the young men of the Orient, in particular from
the land of the pyramids to the ice-fields of Siberia, and in
general from the shores of the Aegean to the waters of Japan.
But on this wonderful platform of the Parliament of
Religions, where I find myself with the sons of the Orient
facing the American public, my first thought is to tell you
that you have unwittingly called together a council of your
creditors. We have not come to wind up your affairs, but to
unwind your hearts. Turn to your books, and see if our
claim is not right. We have given you science, philosophy,
theology, music and poetry, and have made history for you
at tremendous expense. And moreover, out of the light that
shone upon our lands from heaven, there have gone forth
those who shall forever be your cloud of witnesses and your
[D224]
inspiration--saints, apostles, prophets, martyrs. And with
that rich capital you have amassed a stupendous fortune, so
that your assets hide away from your eyes your liabilities.
We do not want to share your wealth, but it is right that we
should have our dividend, and, as usual, it is a young man
who presents the vouchers.
"You cannot pay this dividend with money. Your gold
you want yourselves. Your silver has fallen from grace. We
want you to give us a rich dividend in the full sympathy of
your hearts. And, like the artisan who, judging by their
weight, throws into his crucible nuggets of different shape
and color, and, after fire and flux have done their work,
pours it out and behold, it flows pure gold, so, having called
together the children of men from the ends of the earth, and
having them here before you in the crucible of earnest
thought and honest search after truth, you find, when this
Parliament is over, that out of prejudice of race and dogma,
and out of the variety of custom and worship, there flows
out before your eyes nothing but the pure gold of humanity;
and henceforth you think of us, not as strangers in foreign
lands, but as your brothers, in China, Japan and
India, your sisters in the Isles of Greece and the hills and
valleys of Armenia, and you shall have paid us such a dividend
out of your hearts, and received yourselves withal
such a blessing, that this will be a Beulah land of prophecy
for future times, and send forth the echo of that sweet song
that once was heard in our land of 'Peace on earth and good
will toward men.'
"There has been so much spoken to you here, by men of
wisdom and experience of the religious life of the great east,
that you would not expect me to add anything thereto. Nor
would I have stood here presuming to give you any more
information about the religions of the world. But there is a
new race of men that have risen up out of all the great past
whose influence will undoubtedly be a most important factor
in the work of humanity in the coming century. They
are the result of all the past, coming in contact with the new
life of the present--I mean the young men of the Orient;
they who are preparing to take possession of the earth with
their brothers of the great west.
[D225]
"I bring you a philosophy from the shores of the Bosphorus
and a religion from the city of Constantine. All my
firm convictions and deductions that have grown up within
me for years past have, under the influence of this Parliament,
been shaken to their roots. But I find today those
roots yet deeper in my heart, and the branches reaching
higher into the skies. I cannot presume to bring you anything
new, but if all the deductions appear to you to be
logical from premises which human intelligence can accept,
then I feel confident that you will give us credit for honest
purpose and allow us the right as intelligent beings to hold
fast to that which I present before you.
"When the young men of today were children, they
heard and saw every day of their lives nothing but enmity
and separation between men of different religions and nationalities.
I need not stop to tell you of the influence of such
a life upon the lives of young men, who found themselves
separated and in camps pitched for battle against their
brother men with whom they had to come in contact in the
daily avocations of life. And as the light of education and
ideas of liberty began to spread over the whole Orient with
the latter part of this century, this yoke became more galling
upon the necks of the young men of the Orient, and the
burden too heavy to bear.
"Young men of all the nationalities I have mentioned,
who for the past thirty years have received their education
in the universities of Paris, Heidelberg, Berlin and other
cities of Europe, as well as the Imperial Lyceum of Constantinople,
have been consciously or unconsciously, passively
or aggressively, weaving the fabric of their religion, so
that to the thousand young men, for whom their voice is an
oracle, it has come like a boon, and enlisted their heart and
mind.
"They find their brothers in large numbers in all the
cities of the Orient where European civilization has found
the least entrance, and there is scarcely any city that will
not have felt their influence before the end of the century.
Their religion is the newest of all religions, and I should not
have brought it upon this platform were it not for the fact
that it is one of the most potent influences acting in the Orient
[D226]
and with which we religious young men of the east have
to cope efficiently, if we are to have the least influence with
the peoples of our respective lands.
"For, remember, there are men of intelligence, men of excellent
parts, men who, with all the young men of the Orient,
have proved that in all arts and sciences, in the marts of
the civilized world, in the armies of the nations and at the
right hand of kings they are the equal of any race of men,
from the rising of the sun to the setting thereof. They are
men, moreover, for the most part, of the best intentions and
most sincere convictions, and, when you hear their opinion
of religion and think of the position they hold, you cannot,
I am sure, as members of the Religious Parliament, feel
anything but the greatest concern for them and the lands in
which they dwell.
"I represent, personally, the religious young men of the
Orient; but let me, by proxy, for the young men of the newest
religion, speak before you to the apostles of all religions:
'You come to us in the name of religion to bring us what we
already have. We believe that man is sufficient unto himself,
if, as you say, a perfect God has created him. If you will
let him alone, he will be all that he should be. Educate him,
train him, don't bind him hand and foot, and he will be a
perfect man, worthy to be the brother of any other man.
Nature has sufficiently endowed man, and you should use
all that is given you in your intelligence before you trouble
God to give you more. Moreover, no one has found God.
We have all the inspiration we want in sweet poetry and enchanting
music, and in the companionship of refined and
cultured men and women. If we are to listen to it, we would
like Handel to tell us of the Messiah, and if the heavens
resound, it is enough to have Beethoven's interpretation.
"'We have nothing against you Christians, but as to all
religions, we must say that you have done the greatest possible
harm to humanity by raising men against men and
nation against nation. And now, to make a bad thing
worse, in this day of superlative common sense you come to
fill the minds of men with impossible things and burden
their brains with endless discussions of a thousand sects. For
there are many I have heard before you, and I know how
many could follow. We consider you the ones of all men to
[D227]
be avoided, for your philosophy and your doctrines are
breeding pessimism over the land.'
"Then, with a religious instinct and innate respect that
all orientals have, I have to say suddenly; 'But, see here, we
are not infidels or atheists or skeptics. We simply have no
time for such things. We are full of the inspiration for the
highest life, and desire freedom for all young men of the
world. We have a religion that unites all men of all lands,
and fills the earth with gladness. It supplies every human
need, and, therefore, we know that it is the true religion, especially
because it produces peace and the greatest harmony.
So, we do not want any of your 'isms' nor any other
system or doctrine. We are not materialists, socialists, rationalists
or pessimists, and we are not idealists. Our religion
is the first that was, and it is also the newest of the
new--we are gentlemen. In the name of peace and humanity,
can you not let us alone? If you invite us again in the
name of religion, we shall have a previous engagement, and
if you call again to preach, we are not at home.'
"This is the Oriental young man, like the green bay tree.
And where one passes away, so that you do not find him in
his place, there are twenty to fill the gap. Believe me, I have
not exaggerated; for word for word, and ten times more
than this, I have heard from intelligent men of the army
and navy, men in commerce and men of the bars of justice
in conversation and deep argument, in the streets of Constantinople,
in the boats of the Golden Horn and the Bosphorus,
in Roumania and Bulgaria, as well as in Paris and
New York and the Auditorium of Chicago, from Turk and
Armenian, from Greek and Hebrew, as well as Bulgarian
and Servian, and I can tell you that this newest substitute
for religion, keeping the gates of commerce and literature,
science and law, through Europe and the Orient, is a most
potent force in shaping the destinies of the nations of the
east, and has to be accounted for intelligently in thinking of
the future of religion, and has to be met with an argument
as powerful in the eyes of the young men of the Orient, as
that which science and literature have put in the hands of
the great army of the new gentlemen class.
"There is another class of young men in the Orient, who
call themselves the religious young men, and who hold to
[D228]
the ancient faith of their fathers. Allow me to claim for
these young men, also, honesty of purpose, intelligence of
mind, as well as a firm persuasion. For them also I come to
speak to you, and in speaking for them I speak also for myself.
You will naturally see that we have to be from earliest
days in contact with the New Religion; so let me call it for
convenience. We have to be in colleges and universities with
those same young men. We have to go hand in hand with
them in all science and history, literature, music and poetry,
and naturally with them we share in the firm belief in
all scientific deduction and hold fast to every principle of
human liberty.
"First, all the young men of the Orient who have the
deepest religious convictions stand for the dignity of man. I
regret that I should have to commence here; but, out of the
combined voices and arguments of philosophies and theologies,
there comes before us such an unavoidable inference
of an imperfect humanity that we have to come out
before we can speak on any religion for ourselves and say:
'We believe that we are men.' For us it is a libel on humanity,
and an impeachment of the God who created man, to
say that man is not sufficient within himself, and that he
needs religion to come and make him perfect.
[Note how the natural man accuses and excuses himself
in the same breath. Imperfection cannot be denied; but
power to make ourselves perfect in time is claimed, and
thus the necessity for the "precious blood" of the
"sin-offering,"
which God has provided, is ignored by the heathen as it
is now being denied by the worldly-wise of Christendom.]
"It is libeling humanity to look upon this or that family
of man and to say that they show conceptions of goodness
and truth and high ideals and a life above simple animal
desires, because they have had religious teaching by this or
that man, or a revelation from heaven. We believe that if
man is man he has it all in himself, just as he has all his bodily
capacities. Will you tell me that a cauliflower that I
plant in the fields grows up in beauty and perfection of its
convolutions, and that my brain, which the same God has
created a hundred thousand times more delicate and perfect,
[D229]
cannot develop its convolutions and do the work that
God intended I should do and have the highest conceptions
that he intended I should have; that a helpless pollywog
will develop, and become a frog with perfect, elastic limbs
and a heaving chest, and that frogs will keep together in
contentment and croak in unity, and that men need religion
and help from outside in order that they may develop
into the perfection of men in body and soul and recognize
the brotherhood of man and live upon God's earth in
peace? I say it is an impeachment of God, who created man,
to promulgate and acquiesce in any such doctrine.
"Nor do we accept the unwarranted conclusions of science.
We have nothing to do with the monkeys. If they want
to speak to us, they will have to come up to us. There is a
western spirit of creating difficulties which we cannot understand.
One of my first experiences in the United States was taking
part in a meeting of young ladies and gentlemen in the City
of Philadelphia. The subject of the evening was whether
animals had souls, and the cat came out prominently. Very
serious and erudite papers were read. But the conclusion
was that, not knowing just what a cat is and what a soul is,
they could not decide the matter, but it still was a serious
matter bearing upon religion. Now suppose an Armenian
girl should ask her mother if cats had souls. She would settle
the question in parenthesis and say, for example: 'My sweet
one, you must go down and see if the water is boiling (What
put the question into your head? Of course cats have souls.
Cats have cats' souls and men have men's souls). Now go
down.' And the child would go down rejoicing in her humanity.
And if my Armenian lady should one day be confronted
with the missing link of which we hear so much, still
her equanimity would remain unperturbed and she would
still glory in humanity by informing you that the missing
link had the soul of a missing link and man had the soul of a
man.
"So far we come with young men of the gentlemen class,
hand in hand upon the common plane of humanity. But
here is a corner where we part, and take widely diverging
paths. We cry, 'Let us alone, and we will expand and rise up
to the height of our destiny;' and, behold, we find an invisible
[D230]
power that will not let us alone. We find that we can do
almost everything in the ways of science and art. But when
it comes to following our conception of that which is high
and noble, that which is right and necessary for our development,
we are wanting in strength and power to advance
toward it. I put this in the simplest form, for I cannot enlarge
upon it here. But the fact for us is as real as the dignity
of man, that there is a power which diverts men and women
from the path of rectitude and honor, in which they know
they should walk. You cannot say it is inherent in man, for
we feel it does not belong to us. And if it did not belong to
us, and it was the right conception of man to go down into
degradation and misery, rapacity, and the desire of crushing
down his fellow man, we would say, 'Let him alone, and
let him do that which God meant that he should do.'
"So, briefly, I say to any one here who is preparing to boil
down his creed, put this in it before it reaches the boiling
point: 'And I believe in the devil, the arch-enemy of God,
the accuser of God to man.' One devil for the whole universe?
We care not. A legion of demons besieging each soul?
It matters not to us. We know this, that there is a power outside
of man which draws him aside mightily. And no power
on earth can resist it.
"And so, here comes our religion. If you have a religion to
bring to the young men of the Orient, it must come with a
power that will balance, yea, counterbalance the power of
evil in the world. Then will man be free to grow up and be
that which God intended he should be. We want God. We
want the spirit of God. And the religion that comes to us, in
any name or form, must bring that, or else, for us, it is no
religion. And we believe in God, not the God of protoplasms,
that hides between molecules of matter, but God
whose children we are.
"So we place as the third item of our philosophy and protest
the dignity of God. Is chivalry dead? Has all conception
of a high and noble life, of sterling integrity, departed from
the hearts of men, that we cannot aspire to knighthood and
princeship in the courts of our God? We know we are his
children, for we are doing his works and thinking his
[D231]
thoughts. What we want to do is to be like him. Oh, is it true
that I can cross land and sea and reach the heart of my
mother, and feel her arms clasping me, but that I, a child of
God, standing helpless in the universe, against a power that
I cannot overcome, cannot lift up my hands to him, and cry
to him, that I may have his spirit in my soul and feel his
everlasting arms supporting me in my weakness?
"And here comes the preacher from ancient days, and
the modern church, and tells us of one who did overcome
the world, and that he came down from above. We need not
to be told that he came from above, for no man born of
woman did any such thing. But we are persuaded that by
the means of grace and the path which he shows us to walk
in, the spirit of God does come into the hearts of men, and
that I can feel it in my heart fighting with me against sin
and strengthening my heart to hold resolutely to that
which I know to be right by the divine in me.
"And so with a trembling hand but firm conviction, with
much sadness with humanity but joy of eternal triumph, I
come with you all to the golden gates of the twentieth century,
where the elders of the coming commonwealth of humanity
are sitting to pass judgment upon the religion that
shall enter those gates to the support of the human heart. I
place there by the side of ancient Oriental Confucianism
and modern Theosophy, ancient Oriental Buddhism and
modern Spiritualism, and every faith of ancient days and
modern materialism, rationalism and idealism--there I
place ancient Oriental Christianity with its Christ, the
power of God and the wisdom of God; and its cross, still
radiant in the love of God,
"'Towering o'er the wrecks of time.'"
This speaker, although not a delegated representative of
the Armenian Catholic Church, evidently presents matters
from the standpoint of the Armenian Christians, whom the
Turks have lately persecuted in a most barbarous manner.
His address makes many excellent points; but it must not
be thought that he is a fair sample of the young men of the
[D232]
Orient; he is a long way in advance of those for whom he
spoke. Neither does his address afford a true view of Armenian
Catholicism, with its prayers for the dead; its worship
of pictures and of saints and of the Virgin Mary; its confessionals;
and its blasphemous doctrine of the Mass;* all
closely resembling the devices of Antichrist. Those who sacrifice
the "abomination" of the Mass thereby show that
they have little knowledge and appreciation of the real
cross and its one sacrifice, "once for all." The "Oriental
Christianity" to which this young man points us is not the
one which we respect, nor after which we would pattern: we
go back to the Christianity declared and illustrated by
Christ, our Lord and Redeemer, and by his apostles, and as
set forth in the Scriptures: not Oriental, nor Occidental,
nor Catholic (i.e., universal or general), but the power of
God and the wisdom of God only to "every one that" BELIEVETH
unto righteousness. Rom. 1:16
*Vol. III, p. 98.
The thoughtful observer cannot read the noble sentiments
of some of these who are feeling after God and aspiring
toward righteousness, without marking the contrast
between their serious sincerity and their noble purpose and
effort to lift up before their fellowmen the highest standards
of righteousness they can discern, and the compromising
attitude of so many Christians who have been more
highly favored by birth and environment with a knowledge
of the truth, who are now anxious to sell it at the
immense sacrifice of its noble principles, merely to gain the
present popular favor. To whom much has been given of
him much will be required by the Lord, who is now weighing
them all in the balances.
But while a few of the foreign representatives call out our
admiration and respect, the great majority of them were rejoicing
[D233]
in their privilege of parading and recommending
their superstitions to such a representative assembly of the
civilized and enlightened nations. Buddhism, Shintoism,
Brahminism, Confucianism and Mohammendanism were
repeatedly set forth with great boldness, and the Mohammedan
apostle had the audacity even to recommend
polygamy. This was almost too much for the audience, but
their manifestations of disapproval were quickly silenced
by the chairman, Dr. Barrows, who reminded them of the
object of the Parliament--to give all a fair hearing without
dispute. So all had an abundant hearing and freely argued
their points before the already unsettled minds of thousands
of professed Christians, and as a result they have
much reason to expect converts to their religions here in
America. The same privileges were also granted to many of
the antichristian movements, such as Christian Science,
Theosophy, Swedenborgianism, etc.
Closing Sentiments of the Great Parliament
The closing sentiments of the great Parliament show how
determined is this spirit of compromise on the part of Protestant
Christianity. So desperate are the straits to which the
judgment of this day has driven them, that they hail with
the greatest enthusiasm the least indication of a disposition
toward union even on the part of the very grossest forms of
heathenism. We give the following brief extracts:
Suamie Vive Kananda (priest of Bombay, India) said:
"Much has been said of the common ground of religious
unity. I am not going just now to venture my own theory;
but if any one here hopes that this unity would come by the
triumph of any one of these religions and the destruction of
the others, to him I say, Brother, yours is an impossible
hope. Do I wish that the Christian would become Hindoo?
God forbid. Do I wish that the Hindoo or Buddhist would
[D234]
become Christian? God forbid. The Christian is not to become
a Hindoo, or a Buddhist to become a Christian.
Learn to think without prejudice...If theology and
dogma stand in your way in the search for truth, put them
aside. Be earnest and work out your own salvation with
diligence, and the fruits of holiness will be yours."
Vichand Ghandi (Jainist of India) said:
"If you will permit a 'heathen' to deliver his message of
peace and love, I shall only ask you to look at the multifarious
ideas presented to you in a liberal spirit and not
with superstition and bigotry...I entreat you to examine
the various religious systems from all standpoints."
The Right Rev. Shabita, high priest of the Shinto religion
in Japan, said:
"What I wish to do is to assist you in carrying out the
plan of forming the universal brotherhood under the one
roof of truth. You know unity is power. Now I pray that the
eight million deities protecting the beautiful cherry tree country
of Japan may protect you and your government forever,
and with this I bid you good-bye."
H. Dharmapala, of Ceylon, said:
"I, on behalf of four hundred and seventy-five millions of
my co-religionists, followers of the gentle Lord Buddha
Gautama, tender my affectionate regards to you...You
have learned from your brothers of the far East their presentation
of the respective religious systems they follow;...
you have listened with commendable patience to the teachings
of the all-merciful Buddha through his humble followers,"
etc., etc.
Bishop Keane (Roman Catholic) said:
"When the invitation to this Parliament was sent to the
old Catholic church, people said, 'Will she come?' And the
old Catholic church said, 'Who has as good a right to come
to a Parliament of all the religions of the world as the old
Catholic universal church?'...Even if she has to stand
alone on that platform, she will stand on it. And the old
church has come, and is rejoiced to meet her fellow-men,
her fellow-believers, her fellow-lovers of every shade of humanity
[D235]
and every shade of creed...But will we not pray
that there may have been planted here a seed that will grow
to union wide and perfect. If it were not better for us to be
one than to be divided, our Lord would not have prayed
that we might all be one as he and the Father are one. [But
they are not praying for such a union as exists between the
Father and the Son: the proposed union is a vastly different
one.]"
The sentiments thus expressed found fullest acceptance
in the Parliament from Protestant representatives. Thus,
for instance, Rev. Dr. Candlin, missionary to China, said:
"The conventional idea of religion which obtains among
Christians the world over is that Christianity is true, while
all other religions are false; that Christianity is of God,
while all other religions are of the devil; or else, with a little
spice of moderation, that Christianity is a revelation from
heaven, while other religions are manufactures of men. You
know better, and with clear light and strong assurance can
testify that there may be friendship instead of antagonism
between religion and religion, that so surely as God is our
common father, our hearts alike have yearned for him and
our souls in devoutest moods have caught whispers of grace
dropped from his throne. Then this is Pentecost, and behind is
the conversion of the world."
Is it indeed? What resemblance is there, in this effort to
compromise truth and righteousness, for the fellowship of
Antichrist and Idolatry, to that faithful, prayerful assembly
in Jerusalem, patiently waiting for the power from on high?
And what manifestation was there of a similar outpouring
of the Holy Spirit upon this motley company? If the conversion
of the world is to follow this, we beg leave to inquire,
To what is the world to be converted? Such a
promise, even with all the flourish of trumpets, does not satisfy
the probing disposition of this judgment hour.
Rev. Dr. Bristol, of the Methodist church, said:
"Infinite good and only good will come from this Parliament.
To all who have come from afar we are profoundly
[D236]
and eternally indebted. Some of them represent civilization
that was old when Romulus was founding Rome; whose
philosophies and songs were ripe in wisdom and rich in
rhythm before Homer sang his Iliads to the Greeks; and they
have enlarged our ideas of our common humanity. They have
brought to us fragrant flowers from eastern faiths, rich gems from
the old mines of great philosophies, and we are richer tonight from
their contributions of thought, and particularly from our contact with
them in spirit. [What a confession!]
"Never was there such a bright and hopeful day for our
common humanity along the lines of tolerance and universal
brotherhood. And we shall find that by the words that
these visitors have brought to us, and by the influence they
have exerted, they will be richly rewarded in the consciousness
of having contributed to the mighty movement
which holds in itself the promise of one faith, one Lord, one
Father, one brotherhood.
"The blessings of our God and our Father be with you,
brethren from the east; the blessings of our Savior, our elder
brother, the teacher of the brotherhood of man, be with you
and your peoples forever."
Rev. Augusta Chapin said:
"We who welcomed now speed the parting guests. We are
glad you came, O wise men of the East. With your wise words, your
large toleration and your gentle ways we have been glad to sit at your
feet and learn of you in these things. We are glad to have seen you face
to face, and we shall count you henceforth more than ever our friends
and coworkers in the great things of religion.
"And we are glad now that you are going to your far-away
homes, to tell the story of all that has been said and
done here in this great Parliament, and that you will thus
bring the Orient into nearer relations with the Occident,
and make plain the sympathy which exists among all religions.
We are glad for the words that have been spoken by
the wise men and women of the west, who have come and
have given us their grains of gold after the washing. What I
said in the beginning I will repeat now at the ending of this
Parliament: It has been the greatest gathering in the name
of religion ever held on the face of the earth."
[D237]
Rev. Jenkin Lloyd Jones said:
"I bid you, the parting guests, the godspeed that comes
out of a soul that is glad to recognize its kinship with all
lands and with all religions; and when you go, you go leaving
behind you in our hearts not only more hospitable
thoughts for the faiths you represent, but also warm and
loving ties that bind you into the union that will be our joy
and our life forevermore."
Dr. Barrows (chairman) said:
"Our hopes have been more than realized. The sentiment which
has inspired this Parliament has held us together. The principles
in accord with which this historic convention has proceeded
have been put to the test, and even strained at times,
but they have not been inadequate. Toleration, brotherly
kindness, trust in each other's sincerity, a candid and earnest
seeking after the unities of religion, the honest purpose
of each to set forth his own faith without compromise and
without unfriendly criticism--these principles, thanks to
your loyalty and courage, have not been found wanting.
"Men of Asia and Europe, we have been made glad by
your coming, and have been made wiser. I am happy that
you have enjoyed our hospitalities," etc.
The remarks of President Bonney were very similar; and
then, with a prayer by a Jewish rabbi and a benediction by
a Roman Catholic bishop, the great Parliament came to a
close; and five thousand voices joined in repeating the angel's
message of "Peace on earth and good will toward
men."
The Outlook
But Oh, at what sacrifice of principle, of truth, and of
loyalty to God were the foregoing announcements made to
the world; and that, too, on the very threshold of a divinely
predicted time of trouble such as never was since there was
a nation; a trouble which all thinking people begin to realize,
and the crisis and outcome of which they greatly fear.
And it is this fear that is driving this heterogeneous mass
[D238]
together for mutual protection and cooperation. It is
merely a stroke of human policy to try to quiet the fears of
the church by crying Peace! Peace! when there is no peace.
(Jer. 6:14) This cry of peace issuing from the church
representatively
is characterized by the same ludicrous ring of
insincerity that issued from the nations representatively at
the great Kiel celebration noted in the previous chapter.
While the civil powers thus proclaimed peace with the tremendous
roar of cannon, the ecclesiastical powers proclaim
it with a great, bold, boastful compromise of truth and
righteousness. The time is coming when the Lord himself
will speak peace unto the nations (Zech. 9:10); but it will not
be until he has first made known his presence in the whirlwind
of revolution and in the storm of trouble. Nah. 1:3
Viewed from its own standpoint, the Parliament was
pronounced a grand success, and the thoughtless, always
charmed with noise and glitter and show, responded,
Amen! They foolishly imagine that the whole unregenerate
world is to be gathered into one universal bond of religious
unity and brotherhood, and yet all are to think and act and
grope along in the darkness of ignorance and superstition
and to walk in the wicked ways above referred to, just as
they have always done, refusing "the light that shines in the
face of Jesus Christ," which is the only true light. (2 Cor. 4:6;
John 1:9; 3:19) And Christians are rejoicing in this
prospect, and hailing such an imaginary event as the most
glorious event in history.
But while the general impression created by the great
Parliament was that it was the first step, and a long one,
toward a realization of the angel's message at the birth of
Christ, of peace on earth and good will toward men, rightly
viewed it was another manifestation of the faithlessness of
Christendom. Surely, as saith the prophet, "The wisdom of
their wise men shall perish, and the understanding of their
[D239]
prudent men shall be hid." (Isa. 29:14) And again we hear
him say, "Associate yourselves, O ye people, and ye shall be
broken in pieces; and give ear, all ye of far countries: gird
[bind] yourselves [together] and ye shall be broken in
pieces. Take counsel together, and it shall come to naught;
speak the word [for Unity] and it shall not stand."
Isa. 8:9,10
With the Psalmist we would again propound the question,
"Why do the people imagine a vain thing? [Why do
they cry Peace! Peace! when there is no peace?] The kings
of the earth [civil and ecclesiastical] set themselves, and the
rulers take counsel together, against the Lord and against
his Anointed, saying, Let us break their bands asunder, and
cast away their cords from us."
"He that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh: the Lord
shall have them in derision. Then shall he speak to them in
his wrath, and vex them in his sore displeasure." Psa. 2:1-5
When God's chosen people--spiritual Israel now, like
fleshly Israel anciently--abandon his Word and his leading,
and seek to ally themselves with the nations that know not
God, and to blend divine truth with the world's philosophies,
they take such steps at a peril which they do not realize;
and they would do well indeed to mark God's recompenses
to his ancient people, and take warning.
Several very unfavorable results of the Parliament are
clearly discernible:
(1) It introduced to the already unsettled mind of Christians
the various heathen philosophies, and that in their
most favorable aspects. Afterwards we learned that one of
the delegates to the Parliament from India--Mr. Virchandi
R. Gandhi, of Bombay, secretary of Jainas Society--had returned
to America to propagate his views, making Chicago
his headquarters. We quote the following published description
of his purposes:
[D240]
"Mr. Gandhi does not come to make proselytes. The rule
of the Jainist faith forbids that; but he comes to found a
school of Oriental philosophy, whose headquarters will be in
Chicago, with branches in Cleveland, Washington, New
York, Rochester and other cities. He does not come as a missionary
to convert Americans to any form of Hindooism.
According to his own idea, 'the true idea of Hindoo worship
is not a propagandism, but a spirit--a universal spirit of love
and power, and answerable to the realization of brotherhood,
not brotherhood of man alone, but of all living things, which
by the lips of all nations is indeed sought, but by the practice
of the world is yet ignored.' Roughly, these are the tenets of
his creed and the platform upon which he stands, not beseeching
Americans to join him, but willing to have their
co-operation."
Doubtless the impression made upon many minds is that
there are no religious certainties. Such a result was even
hinted at by one of the delegates from Syria--Christophore
Jibara, who said:
"My Brothers and Sisters in the worship of God: All the
religions now in this general and religious congress are parallel
to each other in the sight of the whole world. Every one of these
religions has supporters who realize and prefer their own to
other religions, and they might bring some arguments or
reasons to convince others of the value and truth of their
own form of religion. From such discussions a change may
come; perhaps even doubts about all religions; or a supposition
that all of them are identical faiths. And, therefore, the esteem of
every religion may fall or decrease; doubt may be produced against all
the inspired books, or a general neglect may happen, and no one remain
to hold a certain religion, and many may entirely neglect the
duties of religion, for the reason of restlessness in their
hearts and the opinion which prevails in one form of religion,
just as is going on among many millions in Europe and America.
Therefore, I think that a committee should be selected from the
great religions, to investigate the dogmas and to make a full and perfect
comparison, approving the true one, and announcing it to the
people."
[D241]
(2) It made special friendship between "Babylon the
great, the mother of harlots," the Church of Rome, and her
many daughters, the various Protestant sects, who glory
in their shame, and are proud to own the disreputable
relationship.
(3) It took a long step, which will be followed by others
already proposed, towards the affiliation, in some sense, of
all religions--toward a yet closer union of the church (nominal)
and the world. It was publicly announced by the
President at the last session of the Parliament that a
"proclamation of fraternity would be issued to promote the
continuation in all parts of the world of the great work in
which the congresses of 1893 had been engaged."
(4) It practically said to the heathen that there is really
no necessity for Christian missions; that Christians are
themselves uncertain of their religion; that their own religions
are good enough, if followed sincerely; and that
Christianity, to say the least, can only be received with a
large measure of incredulity. It is a cause of astonishment to
note how the heathen representatives have measured nominal
Christianity; how clearly they have made distinctions
between the Christianity of "Christendom" and the Christianity
of the Bible; and how keenly their rebukes were often
administered.
(5) It said to distracted Christendom, Peace! Peace! when
there is no peace, instead of sounding an alarm, as saith the
Prophet (Joel 2:1): "Blow ye the trumpet in Zion, and
sound an alarm in my holy mountain;...for the day of the
Lord cometh, for it is nigh at hand," and calling upon all to
humble themselves under the mighty hand of God.
(6) It was evidently a measure of policy, originating in
the fears of the leaders in Christendom, as they discerned
the approaching trouble of this day of the Lord; and the
movement had its beginning in the distracted and perplexed
[D242]
Presbyterian church. This cry of Peace! Peace! in
the very midst of the rising storm reminds us of the prophecy
--"When they shall say, Peace and safety, then sudden
destruction cometh upon them." 1 Thess. 5:3
Let not the children of God be deluded by Babylon's
false prognostications. In God only can we find a safe retreat.
(Psa. 91) Let us rally closer round the cross of Christ,
which is our only hope. Let the universal brotherhood of
false religions and apostate Christianity prove the value of
that relationship; but let us recognize only the brotherhood
in Christ--the brotherhood of all who trust in Christ alone
for salvation, through faith in his precious blood. Other
men are not children of God, and will not be until they
come unto him by faith in Christ as their Redeemer, their
substitute. They are the "children of wrath," even as were
we before we came into Christ (Eph. 2:3); and some are the
"children of the Wicked One," whose works they do. When
God condemned Adam and his posterity to death, on account
of sin, he no longer owned and treated them as sons.
And only as men come into Christ by faith in his precious
blood are they reinstated in that blessed relationship to
God. Consequently, if we are no longer the children of
wrath, but are owned of God as his sons through Christ,
other men, not so recognized of God, are not in any sense
our brethren. Let all the children of light watch and be sober
(1 Thess. 5:5,6); let the soldiers of the cross be valiant
for the truth, and receive no other gospel, though it be declared
by an angel from heaven (Gal. 1:8); and let them
negotiate no union with any class save the consecrated and
faithful followers of "the Lamb of God, which taketh away
the sin of the world."
While the church nominal is thus willing and eager to
compromise and unite with all the heathen religions of the
world in a great "world religion" which would perpetuate all
[D243]
their false doctrines and evil practices, let us hear some admissions
and statements of facts from others who are not so
infatuated with the idea of religious unity, facts which show
the deplorable condition of the world, the baneful results of
the false religions, and the utter hopelessness of ever converting
the world through the instrumentality of the
church in her present condition. Not until the church--not
the false, but the true church, whose names are written in
heaven, the loyal and faithful consecrated ones begotten
and led of the spirit of God--is endued with power from on
high, not until she has reached her full development and
has been exalted with Christ in the Millennial Kingdom,
will she be able to accomplish the world's conversion to
God and his righteousness.
From a number of the Missionary Review, of a few years
ago, we have the following acknowledgment of the failure
of the church in the work of the world's conversion:
"One thousand million souls, two-thirds of the human
race--heathen, pagan, Moslem--most of them have yet to
see a Bible or hear the gospel message. To these thousand
millions, less than 10,000 Protestant missionaries, men and
women all included, are now sent out by the churches of
Christendom. Thibet, almost all of Central Asia, Afghanistan,
Beloochistan, nearly all of Arabia, the greater portion
of the Soudan, Abyssinia and the Philippine Islands are
without a missionary. Large districts of Western China and
Eastern and Central Congo Free State, large portions of
South America and many of the islands of the sea are almost
or altogether unoccupied."
A little pamphlet entitled, "A Century of Protestant Missions,"
by Rev. James Johnston, F.S.S., gives the following
figures, which, it has been remarked are "sufficiently appalling
to electrify Christendom." The import of the
pamphlet is that (1) Protestantism has gained but
3,000,000 converts from heathenism during the last hundred
[D244]
years, whilst the number of heathen has increased during
that period by at least 200,000,000. (2) The swift
advance of heathenism is not due merely to the natural
growth of heathen populations, but to the fact that the adherents
of Brahma, Buddha and Mohammed can boast of
more numerous converts to their creeds than can the Protestant
Christian churches. Thus for every convert to Christianity
which Hindooism has lost, it has gained a thousand
from the aboriginal tribes of India which it is constantly absorbing.
Buddhism is making marked progress among the
tribes of the Northern dependencies of China--even following
the Chinese emigrants and planting its strange temples
on the soil of Australia and America. But the most extraordinary
progress of all has been achieved by Mohammedanism.
In certain parts of Africa it is spreading with amazing
swiftness. Also, in a less but rapid degree, in India and the
Archipelago. These are facts which the gentleman feels
obliged to admit, but he endeavors to silence criticism by
affirming that the church can yet accomplish the world's
conversion. He attempts to establish that the Protestant
churches have ample resources, both of money and of men,
to change the whole aspect of affairs, and to evangelize the
world; and the Methodist Times, quoting the above, expressed
the same opinion, boastfully adding:
"No man need be stunned by the awful facts we have
now briefly named...God has so well ordered the course
of events during the last hundred years that we are well able
to conquer the whole heathen world in the name of the
Lord. What we have done proves what we might have done
if we had provided ourselves with the two human essentials--a
daring policy and plenty of money."
Says another theorizer: "If we had a tenth of the income of
church members it would fully suffice for all gospel work at
home and abroad. Or if we had, for foreign work, a tenth of
[D245]
their annual savings, after all home expenses are paid, we could put
12,000 missionaries in the field at once."
Yes, money is the one thing considered needful. If the
nominal church could only bring about a sufficiency of the
spirit of self-denial to secure a tenth of the income of church
members, or even a tenth of their annual savings, the salvation
of the world would begin to look more hopeful to them.
But this is one of the most hopeless features of the delusive
hope. It would be an easier matter to half convert the heathen
to a profession of Christianity than to overcome to this
extent the spirit of the world in the churches.
But if the above twelve thousand missionaries could be
placed in the foreign field at once, would they be more successful
than their brethren in this favored land? Hear the
pertinent confession of the late well known Protestant
clergyman, Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage. He said, as reported
in The Christian Standard:
"Oh! we have magnificent church machinery in this
country; we have sixty thousand ministers; we have costly
music; we have great Sunday-schools; and yet I give you
the appalling statistic that in the last twenty-five years the
churches in this country have averaged less than two conversions
a year each.
"There has been an average of four or five deaths in the
churches. How soon, at that rate, will this world be brought
to God? We gain two; we lose four. Eternal God! what will
this come to? I tell you plainly that while here and there a
regiment of the Christian soldiery is advancing, the church
is falling back for the most part to ghastly Bull Run
defeat."
Some time ago Canon Taylor of the English church discussed
the question, Are Christian Missions a Failure? and
the paper was read before the English Church Congress. In
it he took the ground that the Mohammedan religion is not
only equal to Christianity in some respects, but is far better
[D246]
suited to the needs and capacities of many peoples in Asia
and Africa; that at its present rate of progress Christianity
can never hope to overtake heathenism. Estimating the excess
of births over deaths in Asia and Africa as 11,000,000 a
year, and the annual increase of Christians as 60,000, it
would take the missionary societies 183 years to overtake
one year's increase in the heathen population. He said:
"To extort from Sunday school children their hoarded
pence, for the ostensible object of converting 'the poor heathen,'
and to spend nearly #12,000 a year in fruitless missions
to lands where there are no heathen, seems to me to be
almost a crime; the crime of obtaining money under false
pretenses."
In giving his opinion of the cause of missionary failures:
that it is Sectarianism, together with lack of full consecration
to the work on the part of the missionaries, who
endeavor to live as princes surrounded by more than European
luxuries, Mr. Taylor referred to Dr. Legge, a missionary
of thirty-four years standing, saying:
"He thinks we shall fail to make converts so long as
Christianity presents itself infected with the bitter internal
animosities of Christian sects, and associated in the minds
of the natives with the drunkenness, the profligacy, and the
gigantic social evil conspicuous among Christian nations.
Bishop Steere thought that the two greatest hindrances to
success were the squabbles among the missionaries themselves,
and the rivalry of the societies."
But while Canon Taylor and many others whose sentiments
were voiced in the great Religious Parliament would
silence criticism by telling us that the heathen religions are
good enough, and better suited to the needs of the respective
countries than Christianity would be, we have a different
suggestion from the report of the late Bishop Foster, of the
Methodist Episcopal church, who, after an extended tour
of the world years ago, gave the following picture of the
world's sad condition in the darkness of heathenism. He said:
[D247]
"Call to your aid all the images of poverty and degradation
you have ever seen in solitary places of the extremest
wretchedness--those sad cases which haunted you with
horror after you had passed from them, those dreary abodes
of filth and gaunt squalor: crowd them into one picture,
unrelieved by a single shade of tempered darkness or colored
light, and hang it over one-half the globe; it will still
fail to equal the reality. You must put into it the dreary
prospect of hopeless continuance; you must take out of it all
hope, all aspiration even. The conspicuous feature of heathenism
is poverty. You have never seen poverty. It is a
word the meaning of which you do not know. What you
call poverty is wealth, luxury. Think of it not as occasional,
not as in purlieus, not as exceptional in places of deeper
misery, but as universal, continent wide. Put into it hunger
nakedness, bestiality; take out of it expectation of something
better tomorrow; fill Africa with it, fill Asia with it;
crowd the vision with men, women and children in multitude
more than twenty times the population of all your
great cities, towns and villages and rural districts, twenty
for every one in all your states and territories--the picture
then fails to reach the reality.
"Put now, into the picture the moral shading of no God,
no hope; think of these miserable millions, living like beasts
in this world and anticipating nothing better for the world
to come. Put into the picture the remembrance that they
are beings who have the same humanity that we have, and
consider that there are no hearts among all these millions
that do not have human cravings, and that might not be
purified and ennobled; that these lands, under the doom of
such wretchedness, might equal, and many of them even
surpass, the land in which we dwell, had they what we
could give them. Paint a starless sky, hang your picture
with night, drape the mountains with long, far-reaching
vistas of darkness, hang the curtains deep along every shore
and landscape, darken all the past, let the future be draped
in deeper and yet deeper night, fill the awful gloom with
hungry, sad-faced men and sorrow-driven women and
hopeless children: this is the heathen world--the people
seen in vision by the ancient prophet, 'who sit in the region
[D248]
and shadow of death;' to whom no light has yet come, sitting
there still, through the long, long night, waiting and
watching for the morning.
"A thousand millions in the region and shadow of death;
the same region where their fathers lived twenty-five hundred
years ago, waiting still, passing on through life in poverty
so extreme that they are not able to provide for their
merely brute wants; millions of them subsisting on roots
and herbs and the precarious supply that nature, unsubdued
by reason, may furnish. Those of them living under
forms of government and semi-civilization, which in a
manner, regulate property and enforce industry, after their
tyrants have robbed them of their earnings, do not average
for the subsistence of themselves and their children three
cents a day, or its equivalent--not enough to subsist an animal;
multitudes of them not half fed, not half clothed, living
in pens and styes not fit for swine, with no provision of
any kind for their human wants. Ground down by the tyranny
of brute force until all the distinctive traces of humanity
are effaced from them save the upright form and the
uneradicable dumb and blind yearnings after, they know
not what--these are the heathen, men and women, our
brothers and sisters.
"The grim and ghastly shadows of the picture would
freeze us, were they not cast in the perspective, and the
sheen and gilding thrown over it by imagination. From our
standpoint of comfortable indifference they are wholly concealed.
They are too far away, and we are too much taken
up with our pleasures to see them or even think of them.
They do not emerge in the picture; and if we do think of
them at all, it is in the light, not of reality, but of misleading
fancy. We see the great cities and the magnificence of the
Mikadoes and Rajahs, and the pomp of courts, and voluptuous
beauty of the landscapes--all of them transfigured by
imagination and the deceptive glare in which works of
travel invest them. We are enchanted with the vision. If we
would look deeper into the question of the homes of the
people, and their religious condition, again we are attracted
by the great temples and the fancy sketches of travelers
of some picturesque and inviting domestic scene. We
[D249]
are comforted. The heathen world is not in so bad a case,
after all, we say. They have their religion; they have their
pleasures. This is the relieving thought with which we contemplate
the world. Oh, fatal delusion! The real picture lies
in shadow. The miserable, groping, sinful millions, without
God and without hope, homeless, imbruted, friendless,
born to a heritage of rayless night, and doomed to live and
die in the starless gloom--these are not seen. They are there,
gliding about in these death shades, gaunt and hungry and
naked and hopeless, near brute beasts; they are not in small
numbers, crouching in the by-ways, and hiding themselves,
as unfortunates, from their fellows; but they are in millions
upon millions, filling all those fancy painted lands, and
crowding the streets and avenues of their magnificent cities,
and appalling us, if we could but see them, by their multitude.
There their fathers lived and died without hope.
There they grind out their miserable lives. There their children
are born to the same thing. There, living or dying, no
man cares for their souls.
"That is the non-Christian world. It has great cities, great
temples, magnificent mausoleums, a few pampered tyrants
who wrap themselves in trappings of gold, but the glare of
its shrines and thrones falls upon a background of ebon
night, in which the millions crouch in fear and hunger and
want. I have seen them, in their sad homes and diabolical
orgies, from the Bosphorus to the Ganges, in their temples
and at their feasts, crouching and bowing before grim idols
and stone images and monkey gods; seen them drifting
through the streets and along the highways; seen their rayless,
hopeless, hungry faces, and never can the image be effaced
from memory.
"I think we should agree that there is no hope for man in
the non-Christian world. It has nothing to give us, not a
ray, not a crumb. It hangs as a ponderous weight about the
neck of the race, sinking it deeper and deeper into night,
death. Its very breath is contagious. Its touch is death. Its
presence appalls us as some gigantic specter from the realm
of night, towering and swaying through the centuries and
darkening all ages.
"I raise no question about whether these countless millions
[D250]
can be saved in the world to come. I do not affirm that
giving them the gospel will improve their prospects or at all
increase their chance in that direction. Possibly as many of
them will be saved without the gospel as with it. That question
does not come into the problem which I am discussing
--the outlook of the world--by which I mean the
outlook for time, not for eternity. If the awful thought
could once take possession of my mind that the whole world
must, of necessity, be lost forever, simply because they are
heathen, I would not send them a Gospel which reveals
such a God. That grim thought alone would shut out all
hope for the world, and make eternity itself a dungeon, no
difference who might be saved. For how could any rational
creature enjoy even a heaven with a God whose government
could permit such a stain of shame and dishonor, of
cruelty and injustice? Convince men that there is a God at
the head of the universe, who, without fault of theirs, or any
chance of escape, will damn the dead, the living and the
yet-to-live millions of heathenism, and at the same time
turn earth into a gigantic terror, where ghastly horrors will
admit of no relief, and you make it forever impossible that
he should be worshiped by any but devils, and by them
only because he becomes their chief."
The Bishop also mentioned the fact that, while the population
of the world is estimated at 1,450,000,000, nearly
1,100,000,000 are non-Christian; and that many (yes,
nearly all) of the nominally Christian are either heathen or
antichristian. Then in view of the church's failure to convert
the world in eighteen hundred years, and of the hopelessness
of the task, he attempted to relieve the church of the
responsibility she has assumed by suggesting that these
heathen millions must be saved without faith in Christ.
And by the way of relieving God from the responsibility of
the present distress among men, he said, "God is doing the
best he can with the power he has got."
The Church Times some years ago published an article by a
Maori, of which the following extracts are very suggestive
of the cause of the church's failure to enlighten the world to
[D251]
any considerable degree. The letter originally appeared in a
New Zealand newspaper, and runs as follows:
"You published a few days ago the account of what took
place at a meeting of Maoris, convened by the Bishop of
Christ church. I was present at the meeting, and wish you to
give me an opportunity of answering one of the questions
put to us by the Bishop, namely: 'Why is the fire of Christian
faith so low among the Maori people in my diocese?' I
will tell you what I believe is the reason. We Maoris are confused
and bewildered in our minds by the extraordinary way in
which you Europeans treat your religion. Nobody amongst
you seems to be sure whether it means anything or nothing.
At the bidding of the early missionaries we substituted
what they told us was a true religion for that of our forefathers,
which they called false. We accepted the Book containing
the history and precepts of the 'True Religion' as
being really the Word of God binding upon us, his creatures.
We offered daily, morning and evening, worship to
the Creator in every pah and village throughout New Zealand.
We kept the seventh day holy, abstaining from every
kind of work out of respect to the divine command, and for
the same reason abolished slavery and polygamy, though
by doing so we completely disorganized our social system
and reduced our gentry to poverty and inflicted much pain
on those who were forced to sever some of the tenderest ties
of human relationship. Just when we were beginning to
train up our children to know and to obey God as manifested
in Jesus Christ, Europeans came in great numbers to
this country. They visited our villages and appeared very
friendly, but we noticed that they did not pay the same respect
to the Bible as we novices did. The Roman Catholics
told us they alone knew the correct interpretation, and that
unless we joined them our souls would be lost. The Baptists
followed, who ridiculed our presenting our children to
Christ in baptism, and told us that as we had not been immersed
we were not baptized Christians at all. Then came
the Presbyterians, who said the office of a Bishop was unscriptural,
and that in submitting to be confirmed by
Bishop Selwyn we had gone through a meaningless ceremony.
Lastly came the Plymouth Brethren, who told us
[D252]
that Christ never instituted a visible church or ministry at
all, but that everybody ought to be his own minister and
make his own creed.
"Besides the confusion in our minds caused by the godless
example of the majority of Europeans, and the contradictory
teaching given by ministers of religion, we were
puzzled by the behavior of the government, which, while
professing to be bound by the moral law contained in the
Bible, did not hesitate, when we became powerless, to break
solemn promises made to us when we were more numerous
and strong than the Europeans. Great was our surprise
when the Parliament, composed not of ignorant, low-born
men, but of European gentlemen, and professing Christians,
put the Bible out of the schools, and, while directing
the teachers to diligently instruct the children of New Zealand
in all kinds of knowledge, told them on no account to
teach them anything about the Christian religion, anything
about God and his laws. My heathen master taught
me to fear and reverence the Unseen Powers, and my parents
taught me to order every action of my life in obedience
to the Atuas, who would punish me if I offended them. But
my children are not taught now in the schools of this Christian
country to reverence any being above a policeman,
or to fear any judge of their actions above a Resident
Magistrate.
"I think, when the Bishop of Christ church asked us the
other day the question I have already referred to, we might
fairly have asked him to tell us first why the fire of faith
burns so low among his own people. We might have quoted
apt words from that Book which English people want everyone
but themselves to take for their rule of life, and reverence
as the Word of the living God: 'Physician, heal
thyself.'
"Can ignorant Maoris be blamed for lukewarmness in
the service of God, whose existence one of his ordained ministers
tells them no man in Christendom can prove? I sometimes
think, sir, that my children would have had a better
chance of developing into honorable men and women, and
would have had a better prospect of happiness when the
time comes for them to enter the unseen world and meet
their Maker, if, like the first Maori king (Potatu), I had refused
[D253]
to make an open profession of your religion till, as he
said: 'You had settled among yourselves what religion
really is.' Better, I think, the real belief in the unseen spiritual
world which sustained my forefathers than the make-believe
which the European people have asked us to substitute
for it.
Yours, etc.,
"TANGATA MAORI."
The following extract from an article in the North American
Review by Wong Chin Foo, an educated Chinaman, a
graduate of one of our New England colleges, gives similarly
suggestive reasons for preferring the religion of his
fathers to Christianity. Wong Chin Foo said:
"Born and raised a heathen, I learned and practiced its
moral and religious code; and acting thereupon I was useful
to myself and many others. My conscience was clear,
and my hopes as to future life were undimmed by distracting
doubt. But, when about seventeen, I was transferred
to the midst of your showy Christian civilization,
and at this impressible period of life Christianity presented
itself to me at first under its most alluring aspects; kind
Christian friends became particularly solicitious for my
material and religious welfare, and I was only too willing to
know the truth. Then I was persuaded to devote my life to
the cause of Christian missions. But before entering this
high mission, the Christian doctrine I would teach had to
be learned, and here on the threshold I was bewildered by
the multiplicity of Christian sects, each one claiming a monopoly
of the only and narrow road to heaven.
"I looked into Presbyterianism only to retreat shudderingly
from a belief in a merciless God who had long foreordained
most of the helpless human race to an eternal hell.
To preach such a doctrine to intelligent heathen would
only raise in their minds doubts of my sanity, if they did not
believe I was lying. Then I dipped into Baptist doctrines,
but found so many sects therein of different 'shells,' warring
over the merits of cold-water initiation and the method and
time of using it, that I became disgusted with such trivialities;
and the question of close communion or not only impressed
me that some were very stingy and exclusive with
[D254]
their bit of bread and wine, and others a little less so. Methodism
struck me as a thunder-and-lightning religion--all
profession and noise. You struck it, or it struck you, like a
spasm--and so you 'experienced' religion. The Congregationalists
deterred me with their starchiness and self-conscious
true-goodness, and their desire for only high-toned
affiliates. Unitarianism seemed all doubt, doubting even itself.
A number of other Protestant sects based on some novelty
or eccentricity--like Quakerism--I found not worth a
serious study by the non-Christian. But on one point this
mass of Protestant dissension cordially agreed, and that
was in a united hatred of Catholicism, the older form of
Christianity. And Catholicism returned with interest this
animosity. It haughtily declared itself the only true church,
outside of which there was no salvation--for Protestants especially;
that its chief prelate was the personal representative
of God on earth; and that he was infallible. Here was
religious unity, power and authority with a vengeance. But,
in chorus, my solicitous Protestant friends besought me not
to touch Catholicism, declaring it was worse than heathenism
--in which I agreed; but the same line of argument
also convinced me that Protestantism stood in the same category.
In fact, the more I studied Christianity in its various
phases, and listened to the animadversions of one sect upon
another, the more it seemed to me 'sounding brass and
tinkling cymbals.'
"Call us heathen if you will, the Chinese are still superior
in social administration and social order. Among four hundred
millions of Chinese there are fewer murders and robberies
in a year than there were in New York State. True,
China supports a luxurious monarch whose every whim
must be gratified; yet, withal, its people are the most lightly
taxed in the world, having nothing to pay but from tilled
soil, rice and salt; and yet she has not a single dollar of national
debt...
"Christians are continually fussing about religion; they
build great churches and make long prayers, and yet there
is more wickedness in the neighborhood of a single church
district of one thousand people in New York, than among
one million heathen, churchless and unsermonized. Christian
[D255]
talk is long and loud about how to be good and to act
charitably. It is all charity and no fraternity--'There, dog,
take your crust and be thankful!' And is it, therefore, any
wonder that there is more heart-breaking and suicides in
the single state of New York in a year than in all China?
"The difference between the heathen and the Christian is
that the heathen does good for the sake of doing good. With
the Christian, what little good he does he does it for immediate
honor and for future reward; he lends to the Lord and
wants compound interest. In fact, the Christian is the worthy
heir of his religious ancestors. The heathen does much
and says little about it, the Christian does little good, but
when he does he wants it in the papers and on his tombstone.
Love men for the good they do you is a practical
Christian idea, not for the good you should do them as a
matter of human duty. So Christians love the heathen; yes,
the heathen's possessions; and in proportion to these the
Christian's love grows in intensity. When the English
wanted the Chinaman's gold and trade, they said they
wanted 'to open China for their missionaries.' And opium
was the chief, in fact the only, missionary they looked after
when they forced the ports open. And this infamous
Christian introduction among Chinamen has done more
injury, social and moral, in China, than all the humanitarian
agencies of Christianity could remedy in two hundred
years. And on you, Christians, and on your greed of gold, we lay
the burden of the crime resulting; of tens of millions of honest,
useful men and women sent thereby to premature death after
a short, miserable life, besides the physical and moral
prostration it entails even where it does not prematurely
kill! And this great national curse was thrust on us at the
point of Christian bayonets. And you wonder why we are
heathen? The only positive point Christians have impressed
on heathenism is that they would sacrifice religion,
honor, principle, as they do life, for--gold. And they sanctimoniously
tell the poor heathen: 'You must save your soul
by believing as we do!'...
"'Do unto others as you wish they would do unto you,' or
'Love your neighbor as yourself,' is the great divine law
which Christians and heathen alike hold, but which the
[D256]
Christians ignore. This is what keeps me the heathen I
am! And I earnestly invite the Christians of America to
Confucius."
The following similar instance was reported by the press,
of a woman from India--Pundita Ramabai--who visited
Boston a few years ago and was preparing to return to India
to engage in teaching the high caste women of India. She
did not find it easy to tell to what denomination of Christians
she belonged. A reporter asked the question, and she
answered:
"I belong to the universal church of Christ. I meet good
Baptists, Methodists, Episcopalians and Presbyterians, and
each one tells something about the Bible. So it seems to me
better to go there myself and find the best I can. [A wise decision.]
And there I find Christ the Savior of the world, and
to him I give my heart. I was baptized when in England,
and I commune with all Christian people who allow me to
do so. I do not profess to be of any particular denomination,
for I would go back to India simply as a Christian. To my
mind it appears that the New Testament, and especially the
words of our Savior, are a sufficiently elaborate creed. I believe
as the Savior has told us, and his message through
John has come to us, that God is a spirit, is light and love;
that he created, illuminates and pervades the universe; that
Jesus, his Son and Servant, the apostle of our faith, was sent
by him to be the savior and leader of his children; that as
many as believe on him have the right to be the sons of
God; and that the holy spirit is our guide and comforter,
the great gift of God through Christ; that there is but one
Church, and that all who acknowledge Jesus as their Savior
are members of that Church. I believe that whatever is
needed for my salvation will be given me, and I pray earnestly
that God may grant me grace to be a seeker and follower
of truth and a doer of his will. In Boston they said I
was a Unitarian; I told them I was not. Neither am I a Trinitarian.
I do not understand these modern inventions at
all. I am simply a Christian, and the New Testament
teaches me my religion."
The Japanese converts to Christianity manifested a similar
[D257]
spirit, their noble course being both a severe rebuke
to the nominal churches and their creeds and a beautiful
commentary on the power of the Word of God. Of their
opinions of the creeds of Christendom, and of their
determination to stand by the Bible alone, we have the following
published account:
"When the Japanese Empire was thrown open to American
commerce, the American churches were zealous to
proselyte that country to their several confessions of faith.
The missionaries sent out found that their division would
be an effectual barrier to success, and agreed to conceal
their differences and work together for souls alone, simply
presenting one God, and Christ crucified for sinners, until
they should obtain a foothold. The dissimulation succeeded
so well that in 1873, in respect to the clamor for sectarian
harvests on the part of home Boards, it was agreed
that the converts were sufficiently numerous to warrant a
division of the spoil.
"But when the deceit was carefully exposed to the converts
from heathenism, an unexpected difficulty arose.
These Japanese Christians assembled and drew up a petition,
setting forth the joy and peace and righteousness they
had found in Christ Jesus, and objecting to being divided,
contrary to the Word and spirit of God, and urging the missionaries,
since they had confessed such a deplorable state
of things in their own country, to return to America and
leave the further evangelization of Japan to them.
"Copies of this petition were forwarded to the various
Boards by which the missionaries were supported and controlled,
and agents were sent out to investigate and report.
One of these agents, whose letter was published in The Independent
(N. Y.), says that to these minds, just brought from
the darkness of heathenism, 'the simple joys of salvation
overshadow all other considerations,' and 'it will be many
years before they can be indoctrinated into the nice distinctions
which divide Christendom.' Nevertheless, these
whose 'other considerations' overshadowed the 'joys of salvation'
and shut out the love of God, persevered in the work
of dividing. The spirit of God, as it always does, prompted
these honest souls to meet in the name of Jesus only. The
[D258]
most difficult thing in the work of the sectarian missionary
is to 'indoctrinate the convert into the nice distinctions
which divide Christendom.' Very few of the adherents of
any sect in America are so indoctrinated. They are prejudiced
and overcome by other considerations than real
convictions. A very small per cent, have anything like intelligent
consciences about professions of faith and the distinctions
by which they are separated from other sects."
Such are the sentiments of intelligent heathen, bewildered
and confused by the misrepresentations of the divine
character and doctrines. But we rejoice to know that, notwithstanding
the conflict of creeds and the unchristian conduct
of multitudes of professed Christians, and of the so-called
Christian nations, all Christian missionary effort
among the heathen peoples has not been in vain, but that
here and there the seeds of divine truth have dropped into
good and honest hearts and brought forth the fruits of
righteousness and true Christian character. Such fruits,
however, cannot be credited to the creeds, but to the Word
and spirit of God, despite the confusion of human creeds.
The Lord refers to the Old and New Testament Scriptures
as "My two witnesses" (Rev. 11:3), and faithfully they
have
borne their testimony to every nation.
As to whether the heathen religionists will have any disposition
to affiliate with nominal Christianity, we have no
affirmative indications. On the contrary, their representatives
at the World's Parliament of Religions were impressed
chiefly with the inferiority of the Christian religion to their
estimate of their own; but the "sure word of prophecy" indicates
very clearly that the various Protestant sects will
form a cooperative union or federacy, and that Catholicism
and Protestantism will affiliate, neither losing its identity.
These are the two ends of the ecclesiastical heavens
which, as their confusion increases, shall roll together as a
scroll (Isa. 34:4; Rev. 6:14) for
self-protection--as distinct
[D259]
and separate rolls, yet in close proximity to each other.
For this desired end Protestants show themselves ready
to make almost any compromise, while Papacy has assumed
a most conciliatory attitude. Every intelligent observer is
aware of these facts; and every reader of history knows the
baneful character of that great antichristian system that
now sees, in the great confusion of Protestantism, its opportunity
for readvancing to power. And, though realizing
in itself a strength superior to that of divided Protestantism,
the great Papal system also fears the approaching crisis,
and hence desires most anxiously the union of Christendom,
Papal and Protestant, civil and religious.
The following extract from a paper by the noted "Paulist
father," Walter Elliot, of New York city, read at the Columbian
Catholic Congress of 1893, shows the purpose of the
church of Rome to take advantage of the present confusion
of Protestantism. He said:
"The collapse of dogmatic Protestantism is our opportunity.
Denominations, and 'creeds,' and 'schools,' and 'confessions'
are going to pieces before our eyes. Great men built
them, and little men can demolish them. This new nation
cannot but regard with disdain institutions [Protestant]
hardly double its own short life, and yet utterly decrepit;
cannot but regard with awe an institution [the Roman
Catholic Church] in whose life the great republic could
have gone through its career nearly a score of times. I tell
you that the vigor of national youth must be amazed at the
freshness of perennial [Roman Catholic] religion, and must
soon salute it as divine. The dogmas of older Protestantism are
fading out of our people's minds, or are being thrust out."
Pope Leo XIII in an encyclical, offered Roman Catholics
a premium to have them pray for the conversion of Protestants
to the church of Rome, the premium being release for
a time from the pains of purgatory. From his address to Protestants,
which formed a portion of the encyclical, we quote
the following words:
[D260]
"It is with burning charity that we now turn towards
those people, who in a more recent age under the influence
of exceptional convulsions, temporal and material, left the
bosom of the Roman church. Forgetful of past vicissitudes,
let them raise their spirits above human things, and, thirsting
only for truth and salvation, consider the church
founded by Jesus Christ. If they will then compare their
own churches with this church and see to what a pass religion
has come with them, they will admit readily that having
forgotten the primitive traditions in several important
points, the ebb and flow of variety has made them slip into
new things. And they will not deny that of the truths which
the authors of this new state of things had taken with them
when they seceded hardly any certain and authoritative
formula remains...
"We know full well how many long and painful labors
are necessary to bring about the order of things which we
would see restored, and some may think perhaps that we
are too hopeful, pursuing an ideal rather to be desired than
expected. But we place all our hope and trust in Jesus
Christ, the Savior of the human race, remembering the
great things which were accomplished once by the so-called
madness of the cross and of its preaching to the wise world,
which looked on stupefied and confounded. Especially do
we implore princes and rulers, in the name of their political
foresight and solicitude for the interests of their peoples, to
weigh our designs equitably, and second them by their favor
and authority. Were only a part of the fruits that we expect
to ripen, the benefit would not be small amid the
present rapid downfall of all things, and when to the prevailing
unrest is joined fear of the future.
"The last century left Europe wearied by disasters and
still trembling from the convulsions by which she had been
shaken. Might not the century which now wears to its end
hand down as a heritage to the human race some few
pledges of concord and the hope of the great benefits held
out by the unity of Christian faith?"
That the trend of Protestantism is Romeward cannot be
denied. That was the real significance of the prominent
part given to Roman Catholics in the great Religious Parliament;
[D261]
and it is the expressed anxiety of all interested in
the Protestant Union movement to secure alliance, if not
union, with the Church of Rome. One of the items in the
Presbyterian creed now considered obnoxious, and which it
is proposed shall be changed, is that referring to the Papacy
as Antichrist.
The following letter of a Methodist clergyman on
Church Union addressed to Cardinal Gibbons, strongly indicates
this tendency amongst Protestants:
Taunton, Mass.
"Dear Cardinal: You are, without doubt familiar with
and interested in the fact that there is a movement among
the Protestant churches toward reunion. If such a reunion is
to take place, why may it not include the Roman Catholic
church? Has not the Roman church some foundation to
propose upon which we may all stand? Cannot she meet us
with concessions which may be temporary, if she believes
us wrong, until we learn of Christ and his plans more
perfectly?
"Of one thing I feel sure, that personally I have a growing
tendency to look more and more carefully for the good
in all branches of the Christian church, and I apprehend
that I am not alone in this. Sincerely yours,
Geo. W. King, Pastor First M. E. Church."
To this the Cardinal replied as follows:
Cardinal's Residence, Baltimore.
"Rev. Geo. W. King, Dear Sir: In reply to your favor I
beg to say that your aspirations for the reunion of Christendom
are worthy of all praise.
"This reunion would be only fragmentary if the Catholic
Church were excluded. It would also be impossible; for
there can be no union possible without a solid Scriptural
basis, and that is found in the recognition of Peter and his
successor as the visible head of the church.
"There can be no stable government without a head, either
in civil, military or ecclesiastical life. Every State must
have its governor, and every town must have its mayor or
municipal chief with some title. If the churches of the world
[D262]
look for a head, where will they find one with the standard
of authority or prescription except the Bishop of Rome?--
not in Canterbury or Constantinople.
"As for the terms of reunion, they would be easier than is
commonly imagined. The Catholic church holds to all the
positive doctrines of all the Protestant churches, and the acknowledgment
of the Pope's judicial supremacy would
make the way easy for accepting her other doctrines. You
are nearer to us than you imagine. Many doctrines are ascribed
to the church which she repudiates.
Faithfully yours in Christ, J. Card. Gibbons."
To this the following was sent in reply, and by consent of
both gentlemen the letters were made public in the interest
of the union desired.
"Dear Cardinal: Your reply has been read with much interest.
May I not now inquire if it would not be a wise and
valuable thing for the Catholic church to set forth to the
Protestant churches a possible basis of union (describing
the matter in sufficient detail) somewhat after the order of
the Chicago-Lambeth propositions of the Episcopal
church? I know how much the Methodist church, and indeed
the entire Christian church, is misunderstood by
many, and I conceive it more than possible, inevitably, that
the Catholic church should likewise be misunderstood and
misjudged in many things. Cannot the Catholic church
correct this misunderstanding on the part of Protestants to
a large degree at least, and would not this hasten the desired
reunion?
"I believe the present divided condition of Christendom
to be full of folly, shame and disgrace, and have no objection
to a central authority under certain conditions of limitation
or restraint.
Sincerely yours, Geo. W. King."
The sentiments of the popular Young People's Society of
Christian Endeavor toward the Church of Rome were very
clearly indicated at its annual convention in Montreal in
1893. Among the delegates at the convention was a noted
Hindoo from Bombay, India, Rev. Mr. Karmarkar, a convert
[D263]
to Protestant Christianity. In his remarks before the
Society he stated that Romanism was a hindrance to missionary
work in India. The statement met with very manifest
disapproval in the convention; but when the French
Romanist dailies took up the matter and published what
the Hindoo had said, commenting angrily upon it, and in
consequence a subsequent session of the convention was
disturbed by a mob of Roman Catholics, the presiding officer
of the convention endeavored to appease their wrath by
rising in the midst of the assembly and declaring that he
and the delegates were not responsible for Mr. Karmarkar,
thus leaving their guest alone to bear the brunt of their
wrath, for thus courageously testifying to the truth. Evidently
Mr. Karmarkar was the only Protestant at that convention,
the only one who neither feared, sympathized
with, nor worshiped the beast. (Rev. 20:4) The following
were his words as reported by The American Sentinel,
Aug. 1893:
"There is a remarkable correspondence between Romish
worship and Hindoo worship. Romanism is but a new label
on the old bottles of paganism containing the deadly poison
of idolatry. Often the Hindoos ask us, when seeing the
Romish worship, 'What is the difference between Christianity
and Hindooism?' In India we have not only to contend
with the hydra-headed monster of Idolatry, but also
the octopus of Romanism."
Among the few voices raised in opposition to this action
of the Christian Endeavor Society were the following resolutions
presented at a patriotic meeting of the citizens of
Boston, and unanimously adopted by two thousand
people:
"Whereas, At the Christian Endeavor convention now in
session at Montreal, Rev. S. V. Karmarkar clearly and
truthfully stated the hindrances to the progress of Christianity
in India, mentioning the demoralizing influences of
the Roman Catholic church, thereby arousing the animosity
[D264]
of French Roman Catholics, who endeavored to
prevent free speech in a Protestant convention by riotous
acts; therefore
"Resolved, That we, Protestant citizens of Boston, fully endorse
Rev. S. V. Karmarkar in boldly stating facts; and we
deeply regret that a company of Christians sought to pacify
Romanists by a rising vote (which was loudly applauded),
apparently censuring a man of God for telling the truth.
"Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions be sent to the
daily and patriotic papers, and forwarded to Rev. S. V.
Karmarkar."
Another popular Protestant institution, the Chautauqua
Literary Circle, at one of its large annual conventions, sent
the following message to a similar assembly of Roman
Catholics, more recently instituted and located on Lake
Champlain. The message was adopted by unanimous vote
and with great enthusiasm, and read thus:
"Chautauqua sends greetings and best wishes to the
Catholic Summer School." In reply Chancellor Vincent received
the following from Dr. Thomas J. Conarty, head of
the Catholic Summer School at Plattsburgh, Lake Champlain:
"The scholars of the Catholic Summer School of
America are deeply grateful for Chautauqua's cordial
greetings, and send best wishes to Chautauqua in return."
Another company of Protestants, chiefly Covenanters, is
very solicitous to have this nation (which, from the beginning
of its life has repudiated the doctrine of the divine
right of kings, and which has never acknowledged the right
of any man to rule as "king by the grace of God") put on the
garb of Christian profession, however greatly it might dishonor
that profession. One of the chief objects of this National
Reform Movement, as it is called, is to enforce upon
all the strict observance of Sunday as a day of worship. And
in hope of securing their ends by a majority vote of the
people, they are very solicitous to have their influence augmented
by the Roman Catholic vote. Hence they express
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their willingness to make almost any concessions, even to
sell their religious liberty, bought with the blood of the
martyrs, to gain the cooperation of the Church of Rome.
Hear their proposition expressed by the chief organ of the
denomination, The Christian Statesman, thus:
"Whenever they [the Roman Catholic Church] are willing
to cooperate in resisting the progress of political atheism,
we will gladly join hands with them." Again, "We may
be subjected to some rebuffs in our first proffers; for the
time is not yet come when the Roman Church will consent
to strike hands with other churches, as such; but the time
has come to make repeated advances, and gladly accept cooperation
in any form in which they may be willing to exhibit
it. It is one of the necessities of the situation." Rev. S. F.
Scovel
(Presbyterian)
The same journal also marked the duty of the United
States' government as follows: "Our remedy for all those
malific influences is to have the government simply set up
the moral law and recognize God's authority behind it, and
lay its hand on any religion that does not conform to it." Yes,
"the
necessities of the situation" are indeed forcing the religious
powers of Christendom into peculiar positions, and it does
not require a very keen observation to note the backward
turn of the wheels of religious progress; nor to surmise
where religious liberty will be brought to an abrupt end.
Said an Episcopal clergyman, Rev. F. H. Hopkins, in an
article published in The Century Magazine:
"Of one thing I am certain: If at the time of any of the
great separations among Christians in the past, the condition
of the church had been what it is today, and if the
mind and temper of those who became separatists then had
been the same as that of their representatives now, no separation
would have taken place at all. [Very true!] This
change on both sides is a proof, to me, that the God of unity
and love is, in his own time and way, bringing us all together
again in him. [But to those not intoxicated with the
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spirit or wine of great Babylon (Rev. 17:2) it is proof of the
decline of vital godliness and love of the truth; and an evidence
that the spirit of that noble movement, The Great Reformation,
is dead.]"
Hear, further, the more sober testimony of Archdeacon
Farrar. On resigning his position as editor of The Review of
the Churches, he made this remarkable statement:
"The whole cause of the Reformation is going by default,
and if the alienated laity do not awake in time and assert
their rights as sharers in the common priesthood of all
Christians, they will awake too late, to find themselves
members of a church which has become widely popish in
all but name."
While we see that, in this country, the church nominal,
both Papal and Protestant, is seeking the protection and cooperation
of the state, that the various sects are associating
themselves together for mutual cooperation and defense,
ignoring their doctrinal differences and emphasizing their
points of agreement, and that all are anxious for a speedy
union at any price which will not affect their policy, in Europe
the case is somewhat reversed. There the civil powers
feel their insecurity and danger most, and they consequently
look to the ecclesiastical powers for what assistance
they may be able to render. Here the languishing eye
of the church looks imploringly to the state, while there the
tottering thrones seek props from the church.
Such is the unhappy condition of that great system
which is now brought to judgment before the assembled
world--that system which proudly styles itself Christendom
(Christ's Kingdom), but which Christ promptly and emphatically
disowns, and most appropriately names "Babylon."
How manifest the absurdity of applying the name
Christendom to the kingdoms of this world! Do the
prophets portray any such condition of things in the
glorious Kingdom of God? Will the great Prince of Peace
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go about imploring the nations to recognize his authority
and grant him his rights--of territory, of wealth, or of dominion?
Will he beg a pittance from the poorest peasant or
court the favor of the affluent? Or will he implore his subjects
to bestir themselves and exert their dying energies to
support his tottering throne? Oh, no; with dignity and authority,
when the appointed time comes, he will take unto
himself his great power and begin his glorious reign; and
who shall hinder or obstruct his way?
Thus there is a general banding together of the powers
that be, both civil and ecclesiastical, and a mutual dependence
one upon another; and with these are bound up the
interests of all the rich, the great and mighty--the interests
of kings and emperors and statesmen and lords and ladies
and titled officials and priests and bishops, and the clergy of
every grade, great capitalists, bankers, monopolistic corporations,
etc., etc. The present status of the conflict is but a
clashing of ideas and a general preparation for the impending
crisis. The ecclesiastical powers, referred to in the Scriptures
as the powers of the heavens (the nominal spiritual
powers), are approaching each other, and truly, "the heavens
shall be rolled together as a scroll"; but "while they be
folden together as thorns [for there can be no peaceful and
comfortable affiliation of liberty-loving Protestants and the
tyrannical spirit of Papacy], and while they are drunken as
drunkards [intoxicated with the spirit of the world, the
wine of Babylon], they shall be devoured as stubble fully
dry" (Nahum 1:10), in the great cataclysm of trouble and
anarchy predicted in the Word of God as the introduction
of the Millennial Kingdom.
* * *
We would not be understood as including all Christians
as "Babylonians." Quite to the contrary. As the Lord recognizes
some in Babylon as true to him and addresses them
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now, saying--"Come out of her, my people" (Rev. 18:4), so do
we; and we rejoice to believe that there are today thousands
who have not bowed the knee to the Baal of our day--
Mammon, Pride and Ambition. Some of these have already
obediently "Come out of her," and the remainder are
now being tested on this point, before the plagues are
poured out upon Babylon. Those who love self, popularity,
worldly prosperity, honor of men more than they love the
Lord, and who reverence human theories and systems more
than the Word of the Lord, will not come out until Babylon
falls and they come through the "great tribulation." (Rev. 7:9,14)
But such shall not be accounted worthy to share the
Kingdom. Compare Rev. 2:26; 3:21; Matt. 10:37;
Mark 8:34,35;
Luke 14:26,27
* * *
"The time of trouble nears, 'It hasteth greatly';
E'en now its ripples span the world-wide sea;
O when its waves are swollen to mountains stately,
Will the resistless billows sweep o'er me?
"Or, terror-stricken, will I then discover
A wondrous presence standing in glory by,
Treading the waters! Immanuel--Life-giver,
With words of cheer--'Be not afraid--'tis I.'
"Yes, a hand, strong, yet tender as a mother's,
Will from the surging billows lift me out.
With soft rebuke, more loving than a brother's:
'Of little faith! O, wherefore didst thou doubt?'"
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