THE PROGRAMME OF CHRISTIANITY
"WHAT does God do all day?" once asked a
little boy. One could wish that more grown-up people would ask so very real a
question. Unfortunately, most of us are not even boys in religious
intelligence, but only very unthinking children. It no more occurs to us that
God is engaged in any particular work in the world than it occurs to a little
child that its father does anything except be its father. Its father may be a
Cabinet Minister absorbed in the nation's work, or an inventor deep in schemes
for the world's good; but to this master-egoist he is father, and nothing more.
Childhood, whether in the physical or moral world, is the great self-centred
period of life; and a personal God who satisfies personal ends is all that for
a long time many a Christian understands.
But as clearly as there comes to the growing
child a knowledge of its father's part in the world, and a sense of what real
life means, there must come to every Christian whose growth is true some richer
sense of the meaning of Christianity and a larger view of Christ's purpose for
mankind. To miss this is to miss the whole splendour and glory of Christ's
religion. Next to losing the sense of a personal Christ, the worst evil that
can befall a Christian is to have no sense of anything else. To grow up in
complacent belief that God has no business in this great groaning world of
human beings except to attend to a few saved souls is the negation of all
religion. The first great epoch in a Christian's life, after the awe and wonder
of its dawn, is when there breaks into his mind some sense that Christ has a
purpose for mankind, a purpose beyond him and his needs, beyond the churches
and their creeds, beyond Heaven and its saints--a purpose which embraces every
man and woman born, every kindred and nation formed, which regards not their
spiritual good alone but their welfare in every part, their progress, their
health, their work, their wages, their happiness in this present world.
What, then, does Christ do all day? By what
further conception shall we augment the selfish view of why Christ lived and
died?
I shall mislead no one, I hope, if I say --for I
wish to put the social side of Christianity in its strongest light--that Christ
did not come into the world to give men religion. He never mentioned the word
religion. Religion was in the world before Christ came, and it lives to-day in
a million souls who have never heard His name. What God does all day is
not to sit waiting in churches for people to come and worship Him. It is true
that God is in churches and in all kinds of churches, and is found by many in
churches more immediately than anywhere else. It is also true that while Christ
did not give men religion He gave a new direction to the religious aspiration
bursting forth then and now and always from the whole world's heart. But it was
His purpose to enlist these aspirations on behalf of some definite practical
good. The religious people of those days did nothing with their religion except
attend to its observances. Even the priest, after he had been to the temple,
thought his work was done; when he met the wounded man he passed by on the
other side. Christ reversed all this--tried to reverse it, for He is only now
beginning to succeed. The tendency of the religions of all time has been to
care more for religion than for humanity; Christ cared more for humanity than
for religion--rather His care for humanity was the chief expression of His
religion. He was not indifferent to observances, but the practices of the
people bulked in His thoughts before the practices of the Church. It has been
pointed out as a blemish on the immortal allegory of Bunyan that the Pilgrim
never did anything, anything but save his soul. The remark is scarcely
fair, for the allegory is designedly the story of a soul in a single relation;
and besides, he did do a little. But the warning may well be weighed. The
Pilgrim's one thought, his work by day, his dream by night, was escape.
He took little part in the world through which he passed. He was a
Pilgrim travelling through it; his business was to get through safe.
Whatever this is, it is not Christianity. Christ's conception of Christianity
was heavens removed from that of a man setting out from the City of Destruction
to save his soul. It was rather that of a man dwelling amidst the Destructions
of the City and planning escapes for the souls of others--escapes not to the
other world, but to purity and peace and righteousness in this. In reality
Christ never said "Save your soul." It is a mistranslation which says that.
What He said was, "Save your life." And this not because the first is nothing,
but only because it is so very great a thing that only the second can
accomplish it. But the new word altruism--the translation of "love thy
neighbour as thyself"--is slowly finding its way into current Christian speech.
The People's Progress, not less than the Pilgrim's Progress, is daily becoming
a graver concern to the Church. A popular theology with unselfishness as part
at least of its root, a theology which appeals no longer to fear, but to the
generous heart in man, has already dawned, and more clearly than ever men are
beginning to see what Christ really came into this world to do.
What Christ came here for was to make a better
world. The world in which we live is an unfinished world. It is not wise, it is
not happy, it is not pure, it is not good--it is not even sanitary. Humanity is
little more than raw material. Almost everything has yet to be done to it.
Before the days of Geology people thought the earth was finished. It is by no
means finished. The work of Creation is going on. Before the spectroscope, men
thought the universe was finished. We know now it is just beginning. And this
teeming universe of men in which we live has almost all its finer colour and
beauty yet to take. Christ came to complete it. The fires of its passions were
not yet cool; their heat had to be transformed into finer energies. The ideals
for its future were all to shape, the forces to realize them were not yet born.
The poison of its sins had met no antidote, the gloom of its doubt no light,
the weight of its sorrow no rest. These the Saviour of the world, the Light of
men, would do and be. This, roughly, was His scheme.
Now this was a prodigious task--to recreate the
world. How was it to be done? God's way of making worlds is to make them make
themselves. When He made the earth He made a rough ball of matter and supplied
it with a multitude of tools to mould it into form--the rain-drop to carve it,
the glacier to smooth it, the river to nourish it, the flower to adorn it. God
works always with agents, and this is our way when we want any great thing
done, and this was Christ's way when He undertook the finishing of Humanity. He
had a vast intractable mass of matter to deal with, and He required a multitude
of tools. Christ's tools were men. Hence His first business in the world was to
make a collection of men. In other words He founded a Society.