God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)
You know the common expression, “A jack of all trades.” I am sure a minister had need be such a one: a brave soldier, an alert watchman, a caring shepherd, a hardworking farmer, a skillful builder, a wise counselor, a competent physician and a loving nurse.
"Ye have heard that it hath been said, An eye for an eye and a
tooth for a tooth : But I say unto you, Resist not evil." MATTHEW
v. 38 (R. V.).
IT is not of the special injunction of Christ in
these words that I want to speak, but of the general
spirit which inspires this and a great many others of
our Lord s commandments. Christ found a host of
men who had simply accepted the standards of their
time. They found a certain type and degree of con-
scientiousness current around them. Jerusalem ex-
pected them to be as good as this standard, and
asked of them no more. Moses and David, in the
course of centuries, pressed flat by the hard, unsym-
pathetic hands of commentators, pared down and
explained away by the necessities of practical liv-
ing, had degenerated from great spiritual inspirations
into sets of rules. Everything had become formal.
The world had fixed its standard of how good a man
should be, and no man was expected to be better
than his world.
We can well imagine with what spirit Christ must
have faced that state of things. With His informal
soul, with His spontaneous freedom, with His sense
of God and man, with His firm conviction that man
was the child of God, and that there was no limit to
the degree of nearness to his Father into which
every man might come, the whole system of hard
limitations must have been odious to Him. His
soul desired the sky, and men had built a roof
against which every man just grazed his head, and
which shut the sky out from their aspiration alto-
gether. Therefore came His protests fast and warm.
Men say, "You shall not kill"; I say, "You shall
not hate." Men say, "You shall not commit
adultery " ; I say, "You shall not lust." Men say,
"You shall not swear falsely"; I say, "You shall
not swear at all." Men say, "You shall love your
friends " ; I say, "You shall love everybody."
Can we not picture to ourselves how words like
these of Jesus must have come to many a generous
young spirit in Jerusalem as the Master spoke?
"Lo, then, it is not wrong, or foolish, or conceited,
this sense of which my heart has been full that
men have got the whole thing too hard and small.
It is, then, right, this desire, this struggle to be
better than my world. Listen, my heart, and hear,
oh, hear what He is saying now: Be ye therefore
perfect, even as your Father in Heaven is perfect.
No picture of Christ is clearer in the Gospels than
that in which He is seen standing face to face with
human life, and uttering His call to men. "Be better
than your world," He cries. He opened the great
door of a completer life, and said to all His hearers,
"Go in there." Some, the few, heard and obeyed.
Many, the most, drew back. What call was there
for them to be more holy than their fellows? But
how often, to the best of them, as afterwards all
through their life they went their way, quenching
their higher impulses and drilling themselves into
conformity with the world s standards, the call
which they once heard must have come back as the
memory of the morning comes back to the hot and
dusty noon, and they must have stopped a moment,
and dreamed of how, if they had listened to that
voice, they might have lived different lives, might
have been better than their world.
I wish that I could make you hear that voice to-
day. You need to hear it ; for everywhere around
us, when a man aspires after a life in any way larger
or better than the average of the life by which he is
surrounded, there come two results ; first a misgiving
in himself, and secondly an outcry from his neigh-
bors. It is so in all departments. You are moved
to believe some richer doctrine than the special creed
which you have been taught contains. And then
your own heart rises up and you say, "Who am I
that I should find out truth which my fathers did
not know?" Or you are moved to question some-
thing which has been long and widely held for true ;
and again your heart is ready with its cry, "Has not
this dogma held mankind for generations? Why
should I stir myself? Let me quietly accept it."
Or there comes some moan into your ears out of the
mass of misery which we call poverty ; and you start
up to go out and help it; and all the selfishness
around you lifts up its voice in wonder. You set
yourself against some commonly accepted business
fraud, or blunder; and all the business world, ac-
cording as it thinks your protest dangerous or simply
silly, calls you knave or fool. You remonstrate
against the action of your political party, and your
party is only troubled to know whether you are a
hypocrite or a Pharisee. You plead for purer social
life, and society gazes at you with a stony stare.
You cannot hide so carefully the effort to make your
own soul purer and holier but that the world feels
this strange thing which is going on in it, and with
something almost like indignation wonders why you
need be so scrupulous and fine. So it is everywhere.
I would not seem to think that this is the only
feeling which the effort of any man to be better than
his world excites. I do not ignore, I am sure,
either that enthusiastic hope which springs up in
the struggling soul itself, or that instinctive homage
and respect which, under all contempt and opposi-
tion, still exists to greet the man who is not satis-
fied to live merely in the average of his brethren.
Those are real things. But also real is that dislike,
that disposition to recall and repress his endeavor,
which welcomes the adventurous man. Partly it is
because he rebukes the self-satisfied lethargy of
other men. That is not all the reason. But, be
the reason what it may, the fact exists. Each brave
man meets and has to face it. And so I ask you to
study it with me a little while.
The first thing which we wish to understand, if
we can, is what is the meaning of the fact we have
to deal with, and whence it comes. What is this
general standard of morality and life, below which
a man cannot fall without disgrace, but above which
it is not wholly safe for a man to try to rise? It is
a strange phenomenon. It is not uniform. It
varies most unaccountably in different times and
places. It is, no doubt, in a rude way, the expres-
sion of the height which the average virtue, in any
given place or time, has attained, the tide-mark of
the morality of this especial time and place.
But there is more account than that to give of it.
The public standard is very apt to bear the mark of
three causes which are very temporary and local,
but which must make themselves felt where they
exist. The first of these is the especial need of
the especial time. Certain virtues are particularly
valued, and certain vices are made light of, because
of the peculiar condition which society has reached.
The vices which seem most dangerous are most con-
demned and hated. Thus, in our newer Western
communities, theft is punished with summary se-
verity, while baser crimes are made but little of.
To steal a horse has sometimes been thought worse
than to kill a man. The second of these influences
is the power of reaction. Some long-neglected
virtue by and by gets its chance, and wins for itself
an excessive prominence. Thus, after a long period
of bigotry, toleration for a time appears to be the
one excellence worth cultivating. Thirdly, there is
the power of some dominant character, or some
great public teacher, who for the time makes the
form of goodness which he most admires shine be-
fore the eyes of the community which has its eyes
fixed on him. So Dr. Channing once in Boston, so
Thomas Carlyle in England, gave utterance to types
of character which, both in their excellencies and
their limitations, became almost the fixed laws of
their people and their times.
The peculiar need of a special place in a special
stage of development, the reaction from some pre-
vious standard, and the force of some strong char-
acter, these, I think, are the elements which unite
to make that strange thing which we call the standard
of the time. When it is once made, how strange
and strong it is ! It is tyrannical. For the time it
seems to have embodied the absolute and eternal
goodness. It is intangible, but very real. The
strongest and the weakest feel it. He who suggests
that there is much about it which is temporary, and
which the next generation will see altered, is counted
an enemy of goodness, a traitor to morality. This,
which, underneath the immediate and superficial ex-
planations of it, is really the stage in the great on-
ward movement of human life that has been reached
at any point of time, is the phenomenon which
every man encounters in the present life in which
he lives ; and it is the sight which every student of
history sets himself to study as he looks back into
the past. Just as, when you look across a stretch
of ocean, you see the different colors in the water
which show how various are the degrees of depth;
so, as you look across the centuries, you see how
every age has its own hue, which reveals to you what
virtues it most valued and what vices it most dreaded,
and whether the standard of its public and its private
life were deep or shallow, high or low.
And now the question is : what ought to be the
relation of any one man, living in a particular age,
to this moral standard of his age? He evidently
cannot be independent of it. He cannot live in a
base age just as he would have lived in one of those
finer and more spiritual ages which certainly occur,
and in which it often seems as if it would be so very
easy to be good and brave and pure. On the other
hand, he certainly cannot be the slave and puppet
of his time, losing his responsibility in its responsi-
bility, and counting it either hopeless or disloyal to
think of being better than the world he lives in.
What then? What shall he do?
In the first place, he who considers the explana-
tions which we gave of the origin of the general
standard of any time must be struck by their tem-
porariness. They certainly are not absolute and
eternal. They do not pretend to be. The special
need of a particular time, the power of reaction
from something which has already been, the acci-
dental presence of some powerful man, all these
concurring do not have any necessary coincidence
with the eternal standards which are in the mind of
God. The man who most accepts them as his
present rule must certainly be ready to say, "They
are not final. They may all disappear. Another
age may come, must come, with different, it may
be with better, loftier exactions."
There is freedom in a consciousness like that.
He who is aware of the temporariness of the stand-
ards under which he lives, is at liberty to look above
those standards. He may accept the unborn future,
as well as the already embodied present, for his
home. He belongs not merely to the temporary
which already is, and lies upon the surface, but also
to the eternal, which is underneath now, and shall
come forth visibly in some completer day.
Again, we must remember that our public standard
is an average ; and the very idea of average involves
the absence of uniformity. To make an average you
must have some parts lower and some other parts
higher than the level at which you finally settle.
The common public standards of any age, therefore,
are the result of the upward and the downward forces
pulling upon one another. As there are multitudes
of degraded lives, lives always dragging downward
the standard of their time, lives worse than their
world ; so there must be other lives better than their
world, always drawing the standard upward against
this base resistance. There must be men better than
their time, or the time could not be as good as it is.
Let us remember this when the exceptional and
shining lives seem to be wasted in a hopeless world.
Some man who dares believe in the absolute truth,
and to anticipate the judgment seat of God ; some
woman like a sunbeam in her purity and unworldli-
ness, what shall we say of them? They do not
make the world to be like themselves ; but there is
not one of them whose life does not tell upon the
world, to keep it from being completely what it
would be if only the brutal and false and foul men
and women had their way in it. Not one of their
lives is wasted, though it may end upon a scaffold
or a cross. Was the life of Jesus Christ wasted?
Here too is freedom. If in the very substance of
this average itself are mingled purer forces ; if these
common standards, unaspiring as they appear, can-
not be maintained unless there be some souls better
than these standards, some uncontent, aspiring
souls forever tugging at the current standards to
draw them up, or at least to keep them from falling
lower; then why should I not be among these
souls? Here there is surely room for aspiration.
That the world may not be worse than it is, I will
be better than my world.
And yet, once more, we always ought to remem-
ber, when we talk about the standards of the world,
that we are of necessity talking very loosely. There
are many worlds of many standards, all lying close
together in this one, great, strange world of ours.
The world is not one evenly kneaded uniformity of
moral judgment. Close by the side of the little
world in which your birth or business places you,
there is, very likely, another world of different stand-
ards, of higher hopes and aspirations, into which
world perhaps your life may be tranf erred, by the
very knowledge of which world s existence your life
may be rebuked and purified. That other world
may or may not be at once distinguishable, but it
exists. And the very knowledge of that world gives
freedom.
Here is the Christian Church, the never-dying
testimony of the higher possibility in man. I know
how ready we are to say that the Church shares the
moral fortunes of the world. I know that there is
truth in what we say, when we declare that in a base
age the Christian Church grows base. But all the
time there is in man a deeper consciousness about
the Church than that. The world hungers after,
and is not satisfied unless it finds, a Church that is
better than the times it lives in, a Church which is a
power of God, forever protesting against the evil by
which it is surrounded, forever insisting on the lofty
moral standards which a base age calls hopeless.
What is a holy Church, unless she awes
The times down from their sins ? Did Christ select
Such amiable times to come and teach
Love to, and mercy ?
It is this ideal of the Church, always demanded,
never lost wholly out of the hearts of men, some-
times beheld in more or less worthy realization in
this poor, blundering, struggling, hoping Church of
history, an ideal that is sure, men believe, to come
and reveal itself, at last, this it is which has stood
for courage and freedom to multitudes of souls
which, without her testimony, would have despaired
of rising up above the standards of their age. For
the sake of such souls everywhere, in all the ages
which are yet to come, may Christ make His Church
more and more what she ought to be! may He
make us who are in His Church more earnest to
maintain her holiness !
Thus I have mentioned, one by one, some of the
helps and provocations which offer themselves to
every man who grows discontented with just accept-
ing the standards of his time, to every man who
wants to be better than his world. But I know full
well that I have not yet touched that which must
be, sooner or later, the real strength and freedom of
all aspiring men. These things of which I have
spoken are but the opening of the prison doors.
The real liberty, the real going-forth of the prisoner
into freedom, can only come by an intensifying of
personal life. That is the great, necessary thing.
You may convince a man that the elements which
make up the average standards of the world he lives
in are local and temporary, and so have no right to
hold him in submission. You may make him know
that some men are all the time outgoing their gen-
eration, and that there is no reason why he should
not be one of those men. You may point him to
the worlds of higher life, the Church and all its
meanings, which lie close beside his lower world all
the time. And when you have done this there he
sits ! With his prison doors wide open, there he sits
still! What can make him rise up upon his feet,
and go forth in enterprising goodness to be better
than his world? Nothing except a personal call, a
personal responsibility, a sense of himself which
makes him for the time forget his brethren and all
their standards, and, just as if he were the one soul
to whom such a call ever came, follow the voice
which summons him wherever it may lead.
Is there a voice which can speak to the souls of
men like that? "I, if I be lifted up, will draw all
men unto me," said Jesus Christ. The whole soul
of the Christian Gospel is the enforcement of per-
sonal responsibility, of personal accountability.
"You are God s child," it says to every soul.
"God loves you. He has given you your own life
to live. He has prepared a judgment seat for you.
And then there comes in that wonderful personal
appropriation of redemption, which has filled all the
history of Christianity and made countless souls feel
that they had the right to say, as they looked upon
the Cross of Calvary, "The Saviour who is dying
there is my Saviour and is dying for me."
Here we get at the heart and soul of the whole
matter. The power of Christ is thoroughly per-
sonal. He fills the single soul with its own inspira-
tions, its own hopes, its own consciousness of
responsibility and opportunity. He lifts a world
or an age by lifting the individuals of which it is
composed. Every power of Christ on the masses
is but the consequence and aggregate of His power
on individuals. Some forces might try to lift the
world as a derrick lifts a rock, with a strong, stiff
chain bound fast about the whole, so that no par-
ticle must lag behind, and no particle must outstrip
another particle. But the power of Christ lifts the
world, lifts society, as the spirit of flight lifts a flock
of birds which fly together towards the sun. They
rise together, but only because the same upward
impulse tells on each. No doubt they fly the better
because they fly in company ; but any bird that can
outstrip the others may do it. There is a certain
general speed with which they fly ; but no aspiring
wing is bound to fly no faster. The general stand-
ard of speed, which is, no doubt, an inspiration to
the slower, is no restraint upon the bravest and the
strongest as he presses onward towards the sun.
Is not that what we want? I look at Christ Him-
self, and is not that just what I see? He felt His
age and race about Him. He was a Jew in the time
of Herod. And yet how freely He outwent His age !
And why? Because He had to do directly and most
intimately with God. He was the Son of God ; and
whatever may be the closeness with which the chil-
dren of a family are bound to one another, the first
relation of each is to the father of them all. That
is what keeps the freedom and openness of family
life. So Christ was free to outgo Judaism, because
He knew Himself the child of God.
What Christ was, He tried to make His disciples
be, free by the direct personal relation of each to
Himself and to the Father. There was, no doubt, a
general average of life and character and knowledge
in the twelve apostles; but John or Philip was per-
fectly at liberty to rise to higher knowledge of the
Master, to enter deeper into His Spirit, to win com-
pleter consecration to His work. And the charter
and assurance of their liberty was their Master s
perpetual exhortation to them to follow Him, and
to be perfect even as their Father in Heaven was
perfect.
In that same injunction must be the charter and
assurance of our liberty to reach forth after the
highest, and to be better than our world. We live
here in the midst of a certain average of faith. The
men about us believe so much, and no more. Won-
derful is the quickness and the positiveness with
which the least belief beyond the average is hailed
as superstition over-belief, as the word seems to
mean. And yet the soul of every man is claimed
by God s own revelations to that soul. The reser-
voirs of truth God s world, God s Word, the hu-
man soul, the human history, the life and light of
Christ, they are open like the sky above the head
of every man. Not unhelped by his brethren s
faith, yet making every article of faith his own and
following it out as God shall lead him by a special
guidance; so every man must press forward into
more and more belief.
My dear friends, be sure that you let no man, nor
all the tone of all the age you live in which is
nothing but the colossal man of this especial time
dominate over your right and power of believing.
The only hope of escape from the contagion and
tyranny of unbelief lies in this claiming of the rights
and privileges of the individual soul, the right and
privilege of the individual soul to seek after truth
and to hold immediate converse with God. It is
not by going back to borrow the faith of the twelfth
century, or of the second, that you can resist the un-
belief of the nineteenth. Every true man, while he
lives in his century, must live free from his century,
must try, at least, to live the timeless and eternal
life with Truth, and so to be open to his own unin-
terrupted, undistorted voice of God speaking di-
rectly to him. This is the only hope of escape either
from narrow skepticism or from narrow superstition.
And as of faith, so too of life and conduct. How
shall you and I, rowing up and down this little
land-locked harbor of our class or party standards,
gather strength and courage to run up our sails and
put out into the broad sea which lies beyond? We
cannot do it unless some voice comes out of that
sea, distinctly calling us to sail upon a course that
leads to some special harbor which we are meant
to reach, which the God who built our natures built
us for. To undertake a life more self-sacrificing
than your friends think it best to live, so that you
can aid the poor ; to take deliberately on your back
the burden of some brother s life which men think
worthless, and only fit just to be left to die ; to de
clare, without uncharitable judgment of your fellow-
men, that some well-recognized indulgence of society
is hurtful to your purity or conscientiousness, and
so you will have no part in it ; to set yourself against
some popular iniquity or in favor of some unpopular
reform ; all of these are acts which can be done
quietly, firmly, humbly, only as there comes to your
soul a certain sense that you were made by God to
do them ; that, however it may be for other men,
for you God s word is clear, and there is nothing
for you to do but obey it. That was the conviction
which came into the hearts of the first apostles when
the fiery tongues of the Pentecost were still burning
over their heads. "Whether it be right in the sight
of God to hearken unto you more than unto God,
judge ye! " said Peter and John to the Council in
Jerusalem. They turned, you see, and appealed
directly to their world, and said, "Behold we cannot
live in your standards, for God is calling us." And
even the hard-souled Council must have felt in its
heart the power of the appeal.
Only in this truth, that the escape from the
tyranny of local and temporary standards must lie
in personal obedience to a call of God, only here is
found the safeguard of humility. I know full well
that in what I have said there must have seemed to
lurk the peril of the Pharisee. "We know him," I
have almost seemed to hear you say; "we know the
man who sets out to be better than his world. We
know him and we hate him ! We have had enough
of his self-righteous ways. May we be saved from
ever being men like him ! " The only way in which
you can be saved from being men like him, and yet
not sink back into the slavery of average life, is by
daring to believe that God meant something when
He made you ; and that the true humility and the
true progress will be found in struggling with all
your soul after that Divine design. That is the
glorious liberty of the children of God.
And so this is our truth ! You must go out of the
merely temporary and local to meet the absolute
and the eternal. To him who sits indoors it may
often seem as if the sun were gone out and the
winds no longer blew. To him who listens only to
what is said by the men about him, or to the men
of old time, it must often seem as if there were no
absolute righteousness, no voice of God. Arise!
Go forth under the open sky ; God is still there, and
the soul that really listens must hear His voice, and
the soul that hears His voice must know that He is
King.
I would not have you think that this truth is only
for great men, with remarkable things to do in the
world. It is for all men. It is for the schoolboy in
his school, tempted to swear or cheat because the
other boys do. It is for the young man or woman
in the boarding-house, crowded upon by the low
atmosphere of gossip and frivolity which is hot and
heavy there. It is for the shopkeeper shut in by
the bad tricks and habits of his trade. It is for the
politician, forever encountering the sneers of those
who say that politics must be corrupt. It is for the
men and women of society; for the students and
the lawyers and the ministers; for the mechanics
and the laborers ; for every human creature who is
tempted to slight his work and not to do and be his
best. To all such comes the call, " Be better than
your world ! Break through the slavery of your
class and time and set. Enjoy the glorious liberty
of the children of God."
And then, what more? Nothing but this: Of
Christ the Saviour and the Master it is written that
"To as many as received Him, to them gave He
power to become the sons of God." And no won-
der, then, that He said of Himself, "If the Son shall
make you free, ye shall be free indeed." That is
the whole history. Christ makes us know that we
are, and so makes us be the sons of God. Being
God s sons, we strike directly for God and for His
standards. So we are set at liberty to use, but not
to be bound by, the standards of our class and time.
In the great phrase of the apostle, we "live unto the
Lord." This is the real redemption of the Lord
Jesus Christ. Into the very richest heart of that
redemption may all of us enter, and there may we
find liberty and life.