God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)
The Good News of Christ is not primarily that Jesus will heal you of all your sicknesses right now, but ultimately that Jesus will forgive you of all your sins forever. The Good News of Christ is not that if you muster enough faith in Jesus, you can have physical and material reward on this earth. The Good News of Christ is that when you have childlike faith in Jesus, you will be reconciled to God for eternity.
"Man goeth forth to his work and to his labor until the eve-
ning." PSALM civ. 23.
WE all suspect, far more than we know, how the
beauty and significance of the most familiar things
is hidden from us by their familiarity. If we could
only see for the first time what we see for the ten
thousandth, it would be so different to us ! We are
sure that we should really see it then. And one of
the most significant of things, certainly, if we could
see it in such freshness, would be the constant alter-
nation of day and night in the natural world, with
its suggestion and indeed its requirement of a
corresponding alternation of work and rest, of occu-
pation and leisure, in the life of man. But age after
age, the days have gone on shining through their
golden hours, and then sinking into the coolness and
dark of the evenings ; and generation after genera-
tion of mankind has had the characters of all its men
and women shaped and colored by this perpetual
ministration of nature, this mixture of labor and re-
pose. Though men have become so possessed with
the passion of work that, if they could, they would
have had a never-setting sun, though they grudged
the hours of rest as if they were hours of waste, the
sun has had no consideration for their extravagances ;
but when the working hours were over it has shut
down its gate of darkness and turned the over-
zealous mechanic out of his workshop, and the
overzealous farmer out of his field, and has com-
pelled each of them to rest in spite of himself.
On the other hand, men have grown tired of work
and loved overmuch the dark and quiet hours in
which they could give themselves to contemplation ;
but once a day always the sunlight has broken in
upon their dreams, and the stir and current of a
world springing to work in every part of it has
dragged them to the labor that was better for them.
Nature is so healthy ! such a wise mother of us all !
With her quiet, persistent hands she is always press
ing on each man's morbidness, and urging it back
to health. Our modern civilization invents its gas-
lights and its tireless machineries and tries to turn
night, both for its pleasure and its labor, into day.
And then comes the opposition, the protest of
laboring people insisting that eight hours or ten
hours are enough to work. But, after all, however
men may fix their exact rules and regulations, it is
nature and the God of nature, it is the Maker of
light and darkness who has finally decreed the gen-
eral proportions of toil and rest that man shall go
forth to his work and to his labor until the evening,
and then come home to his repose.
Our subject, then, is Work and Rest and their
relations to each other, which are thus typified and
secured by the perpetual dispensation of the natural
world. I am sure that every thoughtful man will
have suspected at least that there is nothing that
has had a stronger influence in bringing his character
to be what it is, than the proportions and relations
which work and rest have had to each other through
the course of his life ; and as he surveys the people
about him he sees hardly any cause that has con-
tributed so much to make the differences among
men who may be considered to have started pretty
much alike, as this same thing the different pro-
portions of labor and leisure in their lives. If this
is true, then these two parts of life and their relation
to each other must be well worth our study.
And let us speak first of work, the daytime labor
of men, that by which they get their living. The
strangest thing about work is the way in which all
men praise it, and yet all men try to get away from
it. There is no subject so popular as the blessedness
of work. There is no theory so universal as that of
the wretchedness of not being compelled to work.
You may tell any audience that the worst legacy a
father can leave to his child is the opportunity of
idleness, and all your audience, rich and poor, work-
ers and idlers together, will applaud. There is no
live man who does not feel a certain excited sense
of admiration, a certain satisfaction, a certain com-
fort that things are right, when he stands where
men are working their hardest, where trade is roar
ing or the great hammers are deafening you as they
clang upon the iron. Everywhere, work and the
approval of work ! and yet everywhere the desire to
get away from work! Everywhere, what all these
men we see are toiling for, is to make such an ac-
cumulation of money that they shall not have to
toil any longer. Everywhere, while the laboring
man has his contempt for, he has also his envy of,
his brother man who owns the easy fortune and lives
the easy life. The dream of his own heart is to
reach that same privilege for himself.
Now, this double sense, this value of work and
impatience with work as they exist together, seems
to me to be the crude expression in men's minds of
this conviction, that work is good, that men de
generate and rust without it, and yet that work is
only at its best and brings its best results, is most
honorable and most useful, when it is aiming at
something beyond itself. This is the feeling which
lies at the bottom of all men's endeavors to escape
from the labor which yet they know and will main
tain to be honorable and beautiful, the feeling that
every work ought not to be satisfied with mere con
tinuance, but ought to seek some attainment, ought
not to expect merely to go on forever, but ought
to expect to go out sometime into a rest and repose
in which its true excellence should be attested.
And everybody will bear witness that this is the
healthiest feeling about any work that we have to
do; satisfaction and pleasure in doing it, but ex-
pectation of having it done some day and gradu-
ating from it into some higher state which we think
of as rest. Take the first of these away, and work
becomes feverish and discontented. Take the second
away, and it becomes dull and deadening.
The real pleasure that legitimately belongs to the
doing of work (a pleasure which it would be sad to
think that any of us whose lot in life it is to labor
in any way did not often feel as we plod on about
our business) this pleasure is capable of being
analyzed into various elements. I will mention
three, which, though we may not have given them
our thought, must have often helped and lightened
the doing of our work. The first is the pleasure of
the mere exercise of our powers. It is a noble
thing. I do not know where there is any broad,
patent fact which makes us more realize that Love,
somewhere, in some heart, had something to do
with the putting together of this life of ours, than
the great fact that whatever a man is made to do,
he primarily does with pleasure. Other things may
come in that make him hate to do it, but he starts
out with this, that the power being in him, it is
a joy to him to send it out into action. And it
is wonderful how many mighty and exceptional
achievements there are, and how much of the even,
steady flow of action there is, of which it is really
impossible to give any other account than this, that
it is a pleasure to human nature to exercise any
power of which it feels itself possessed. There are
plenty of merchants who are working hard every
day, not to make money, for they have enough, but
because there is in them a business faculty which it
is a pleasure for them to exercise, just as it is a
pleasure for a fish to swim, or for a bird to fly, or
for a child to run with the vitality that he feels in
every limb, or for an artist to paint with the skill
that he feels in his active brain and his subtle fingers.
There are men at Washington and at our State
House whose pleasure in governing is purely in the
use of the governing capacity of which they are
conscious. In our war, as in every war, there were
soldiers who went to the field not for the cause, but
for simple joy in doing what they knew they could
do that is, to fight and perhaps command. There
is an impatience in an unused power. It is cramped
and distressed and inflamed within us. It is a joy to
exercise a power or a talent. It is not the highest
or most reasonable joy, but how deep and universal
it is! how it springs up instinctively! There is a
healthy pleasure in doing what each power that God
has given us was made by Him to do.
But this is not all. One must see or believe that
there are results of his work; or it is not in any
reasonable man to take permanent pleasure in doing
it. And there comes in the second element in the
attractiveness of work. It may seem at first as if
there were very little for us to gather up here. It
may seem that much of our work went by and mani-
fested no results, so few special and prominent things
there are to which, after we have worked for our
twenty, or thirty, or forty years, we can point con-
fidently and declare that but for us they would not
have been.
And yet, I am sure, there are two convictions
that grow in the mind of every watchful man as he
gets older: first, that the amount of effect that has
been produced in the world by men's work has been
enormous, the face of nature enormously altered,
and the condition of humanity enormously changed ;
and, secondly, that this enormous effect has really
been produced not by the great efforts of a few great
toilers, but by the continuous, innumerable labors
of innumerable little workers just like himself. This
seems to me to be the source from which a common
man is really able to believe that his work does
something, and so to take pleasure in his little labor
because of its indubitable results. The coral insect
sees the great reef breasting the sea, which millions
of little creatures, with no greater gift of size than
he, have built; and so he creeps up and lays his
stiffening frame upon the pile, sure that even such
a bulk as his will not be lost. The worker in some
branch of charity sees that the great condition of
the human race has risen on the whole; whole
ledges of humanity that used to be under the water
now stand out in the sun ; and he sees that it has
not been done by one or two giants giving one or
two great lifts, but by the constant help of insignifi
cant man by insignificant man all through the cen
turies ; and so he knows that he is doing something
when he lays down his life or some part of his life
for his brethren something that will show, although
he shall not see it ; something that will tell, although
he shall not hear it. Sometimes we feel how little
men have done in the world; but oftener we feel
how much they have done, and rejoice in adding
our grain of sand to the great pile that is forever
building.
The third element of reasonable pleasure in work
is the change and advance which it brings in our
knowledge of ourselves, and in our own characters.
If there were not something of this kind, I do not
think any reasonable man could go on working day
after day and be contented. Work would grow stale
and disgusting. Merely to exercise powers that re-
mained the same after the thousandth exercise that
they were after the first ; and merely to produce re-
sults like a machine that is no more perfect when its
millionth nail is added to the heap than when it
dropped its second or its third; neither of those
could satisfy the man conscious of a character, con-
scious of himself. It is in the blessed power of work
to make a man first know himself, and then grow
beyond himself, that its great attractiveness for all
the best sort of men must lie. I go to work proud
and confident ; I find how weak I am and I grow
humble. That is itself, or ought to be, a joy. The
new joy of humility alas, for the man who never
tasted it ! It is a coming home to facts. It is a
getting rid of delusions. I have found the blessed
strong footing of humility. I have got the hard,
barren rocks away, and have got down to the soft
rich ground in which good seed can grow. It is rare
to see a really working man who is proud, and rare
to see a really idle man who is not proud. And I
am not theorizing. I am only speaking the truth of
multitudes of experiences when I say that for a real
man there is no joy in life so great as getting rid of
the false conceits, concealments, and necessities of
pride and coming down to the frank, solid, free
ground of humility.
These, then, are the legitimate sources of pleasure
in work. I do not say that these are what make all
men work, and keep them from idleness. Lower
compulsions come in. In a community like ours
the two first things that keep men at their labor are
necessity and shame. Men cannot afford to be idle
where wealth so easily changes hands, and where no
one will give them a living which they do not earn
for themselves. And men have not the face to be
idle where this universal necessity has established a
universal esteem for work. I do not despise either
of these compulsions. Better that any idle hands
among us should be set to toil by necessity or
shame than that they should lie always in the lap ;
but if your work is to be anything more than a task
to you, somewhere or other these three things must
come in to lift it : It must really call out your
powers ; you must be able really to think of it as
effective and useful, and you must see out of it some
fruit of humility and character in yourself.
I am glad to preach to a congregation of men who
work; I should not know how to preach to any
others. Every morning your house doors open to
let you out either from the luxury or from the
poverty of your home, into a day of labor. Every
morning these men refresh the old experience of
David's Psalm and with light heart or heavy, with
joy in it or hate of it, "Man goeth forth to his work
and to his labor." It makes one's heart almost
ache as he thinks back how long this has been going
on. It seems as if it were terrible that so many
hundreds of thousands of millions of men have lived
and worked ; and yet we, coming onto the earth at
this late day, have rushed in at once, with the old
instinct grown strong with hereditation and never
relaxed necessity, have scrambled among the graves
of our fathers for the tools they dropped beside them
as they stepped down wearily into them, and have
gone to work as freshly as if we were the first gen-
eration that ever discovered what a grand working
place this old world is! It is terrible to think of
all this if we remember what multitudes of those
workers hated the work they did, loathed it, and
were crushed by it, got neither pleasure nor culture
out of it, and died killed by their work in soul as
well as body. "Therefore I went about to cause
my heart to despair of all the labor which I took
under the sun," so wrote the despairing soul in the
Ecclesiastes, and many another despondent heart
has taken up his dreary words.
But yet, if we are right, if work has in it these
sources of joy, real, pure, untainted with anything
of evil, then the terror of it is gone for any worker
that can truly find these fountains. Then we are
not entering into an entailed curse of our fathers
when we come out and find work waiting for us just
as soon as our hands are big enough to hold the in-
struments of labor; we are rather coming into a
garden of blessing, broad, open, rich, which was
stocked with all culture for them, and is now offering
its pleasures freely to us their children. The sky
with tireless benevolence, and the ground with pa-
tient welcome, see us coming so late with the same
old monotonous demands, and are as cordial in
their greeting and as kindly in their care for us as
they were to Adam and Seth and Enoch, and the
others who came to them when they were fresh and
young.
I wish that I could make the young men whose
lot it is to be workers know and believe that work
is not necessarily pleasant nor necessarily drudgery.
Your work has in it great, deep, inexhaustible sources
of delight, if it is capable of giving broad play to
your good human powers, and of leading to some
true solid results, and of making you humble. Dis-
trust no work because men call it "low " ; but dis-
trust any work, however high men call it, that will
not do these three things for you. Distrust and
dread any work which cramps instead of letting out
your faculties, or which brings out your meanest
faculties and leaves your noblest ones untouched,
or any work which you are sure can add nothing to
the sum of good in the world. It is not the size but
the solidity of the contribution that you must look
to ; a single grain of sand is as solid as a mountain.
Distrust also any work the doing of which makes
you proud, and so, blinding you to yourself, makes
you weak. A pleasure in using our powers, a belief
in results, and a growing humility, these are the
sanctifications and salvations of work, and may make
the life of the hod-carrier or the street-sweeper bright
and elevating.
These are our thoughts of work and of its privi-
leges. And now, as we look around upon the world
we live in, we see how all of nature is built to co-
operate with these great purposes of labor, and to
bring out the pleasure which legitimately belongs
to every act of faithful work. The delight in the
sheer exercise of powers finds sympathy in every
attempt of nature, by her resistances and discourage-
ments, to bring those powers out to their fullest.
The desire to produce results is helped by a ready
nature always ready to submit to and be acted upon
by man. And the self-culture of work is aided by
every rebuke with which nature convinces the work-
ing man of his limitations and his littleness. This
outer world, with all its helps and hindrances, is
saying to man, "Work, for there is happiness and
growth in working. It is good. It is what you are
here for. I will help you. For this the daily sun-
light rises in the east and shines through all its
course."
But now we come to the other part of our subject.
If we look to the arrangements of Nature for indi-
cations of what man's life is meant to be, we see at
once that, bravely as she has provided for his work,
she has not thought of him only as a working being.
She has set her morning sun in the sky to tempt
nay, to summon him forth to his work and to his
labor, to make him ashamed of himself if he loiters
and shirks at home ; but she has limited her daylight,
she has given her sun only his appointed hours, and
the labor and work are always to be only "until the
evening." Rest as truly as work is written in her
constitution. Rest, then, as much as work is an
element of life. By his rest as well as by his work
every man may be estimated and judged. Indeed,
it seems as if a man could be judged better by his
resting than by his working hours. He is less arti-
ficial and more spontaneous then, and his character
has freer play. Who of us does not feel that he
would know more of a man's real character, of the
true personal qualities that are in him, if he knew
how he spent his evenings than even if he knew
wholly how he was occupied during his days?
If we pass, then, from talking about work to speak
of the Divinely appointed, the naturally recurring
periods of rest in a man's life, we must try to esti-
mate their value not to the body but to the mind
and soul. We want to think not of night as the
time of sleep, but of evening as the time of leisure.
And here, too, let me make three suggestions of the
value of rest as I did of the value of work. And,
first, this daily drawing of the curtain between man
and his active labors represents and continually re-
minds us of the need of the internal as well as the
external in our lives. It brings up to us our need,
by bringing up to us our opportunity, of meditation,
of contemplation. For active life is always tending
to get shallow. It is always forgetting its motives,
forgetting its principles, forgetting what it is so
busy for, and settling itself into superficial habits.
Do we not know that, every one of us? No work
is so sacred that it can escape the danger. Buying
and selling, legislating, doctoring, preaching, teach-
ing, they are all occupations which are capable of
being done only from the muscles outward. And
just as God was always taking those Hebrews of
His, after they had been tossed and beaten about in
a great war, full of wild, absorbing activity, and put
ting His hand upon them as it were, and hushing
their history into one of those calm evening periods
of which we read in the frequently recurring phrase,
"the land had rest forty years"; just as He took
his chief saints, Moses, Elijah, Paul nay, just as
Jesus Christ went out of activity into silence and
quiet and retirement ; so God shuts us out from our
work and bids us daily think what the heart of our
work is, what we are doing it for. If this is the
meaning of the evening and no man sees the day-
light sink away and the shadows gather without
sensitively feeling some such meaning in it then
surely we need it.
It sometimes seems as if, if the whole world could
stop one hour, and sit still and think what it is
about, it could start off again so much more wisely.
There is so much unreasonable work doing. There
are so few of us who ever do really meditate, who
ever contemplate the spiritual reasons and conse-
quences of the things that we are doing ! We put
that off until we get to heaven, which we idly picture
to ourselves as a place of endless leisure. We will
not use the calm and peace, the daily heaven, which
God has scattered into all our days. We light the
gas and kill the evening by making believe that it is
daylight still.
This we do far too much, and yet we all do medi-
tate a little ; and it is hard to see how we could ever
do it at all if life were one broad glare of sunlight,
never sinking into the dusk where one can not see
to work and must gather himself together, "recol
lect," as we say, his scattered life, and look with his
spirit at the hearts and souls of those things whose
putsides his hands have been handling all the day.
The value of the evening comes, of course, from its
relation to the daylight. The worth of meditation
depends upon its connection with activity. A world
all evening would be bad and morbid. The life that
tries to be all contemplative grows feeble and shal-
low in its own way. Nature has taught us our true
culture when she has bound the periods of action
and the periods of contemplation close to each
other, and bidden us complete our life out of the
two together. And the man surely suffers who de-
spises either.
And then again, the presence of the evening, or
the element of leisure in our lives, not merely off-
sets our working time with a time of thought and
contemplation, but it also mitigates, even in our
working hours, the absoluteness with which our
work tries to rule us. I am sure you business men
will own that there is danger of a man's being too
much and too purely a business man. I am sure
that here, in our city, where we have been and are
still blessed with the example and influence of so
many merchants, who, while they have been "not
slothful in business," have been "fervent in spirit";
who have had, that is, burning in their own bosoms
and have lighted in the lives of others, ardent and
glowing interest in spiritual things in art, in educa
tion, in literature, in philanthropy, and in religion
I am sure that here I may claim and you will
allow that, for every active business man's best good
it is desirable, it is necessary, that he should have
some intellectual or spiritual sympathy outside of
bis business, which shall be the resource of his life,
where he can go for the water of refreshment and
life that will keep him from stiffening into a machine.
I am sure that we can all see the difference be-
tween the men who have and the men who have
not such an interest to resort to ; we feel it the
moment that we touch their different lives. The
one life is hard and hollow ; the other is soft, elastic,
and full. The old Jews used to have (and I do not
know but they have still) a rule that, however in-
tellectual or spiritual a child's life might be destined
to become, he should be taught some self-support
ing trade, so that, however it fared with the soul,
the body might not starve. It was a good rule cer-
tainly. But the other rule would be good, too, if it
could be observed, that, however material a child's
life was to be, it should be inspired with some defi-
nite spiritual or intellectual interest, so that, how-
ever it might fare with the body, the spirit should
not starve. There is nothing one would want to
urge more strongly on young men just being swept
into the intense absorption of mercantile life than
the necessity of winning and keeping some resource,
some place of mental resort, some interest or study
or liberal occupation of some sort, to which his tired
life may always resort to find refreshment and re-
cruit its spring. This is the evening element in life.
There are multitudes of merchants who have turned
to drudges, and drudged along in a work that was a
slavery to them, just for the lack of some such re-
sort, some interest outside of their business, to
which they could retire.
To multitudes of people Religion has been just
this haven of retreat, where the soul put in out of
the storms of life for shelter and repair. Nobody
can begin to estimate how much, to our New Eng-
land ancestors, hard-worked, poor, forced down to
continual contact with the most prosaic and hard
details, has been the religion which has always
filled their lives with softer influence, and renewed
their courage, and kept the better part of them
alive. Think of the village and farm life of our
bleak coast and hills what would it have been with-
out the softening and elevating and recruiting, the
letting up of work and letting-in of visions, that
came from the meeting-house upon the hill, and the
Bible reading and the prayer and the psalm-singing
beside the cottage hearth? We may forget much
that was in their creed, we may learn more broad
and genial ways of worshipping and thinking, but
woe to us if we shut up and forget that door which
they kept open from the life of man into the life of
God ! Woe to us if we let our work lose the in-
spiration that comes from knowing that we do it for
our Heavenly Father, and not for ourselves! We
stand in danger of letting that knowledge go, be-
cause work so absorbs us and enchains us by its own
sheer power; but yet we know that that slavery to
work, which we are aware is growing in ourselves,
is not the highest or most noble type of life as we
behold it in other men. We know that the man to
whom work is really sanctifying and helpful, is the
man who has God behind his work; who is able to
retire out of the fret and hurry of his work into the
calmness and peace of Deity, and come out again
into his labor full of the exalted certainties of the
Redemption of Christ and the Love of God ; to make
work sweet and fresh and interesting and spirit-
ual by doing it not for himself, nor for itself, but
for the Saviour in whom he lives. This is the
work that "drinks of the brook in the way," and
lifts up its head under any heat and against any
wind.
There is one other recollection which it is most
necessary for men to keep in mind, but which it is
hard to see how men could keep except under some
sort of arrangement like that in which we live. It
is hard to see how, were it not for the continually
repeated, daily stoppages of work, we could remem-
ber, as we need to remember, the great close of
work which is coming to every one of us, and may
be very near. I picture to myself a world without
an evening, a world with an unsetting daylight, a
sun with a lidless eye, and with men who never tired
at their tasks ; and it seems as if death in a world
like that, the snatching of this man or that man out
of the ranks of the unintermitted labor, would be so
much more terrible and mysterious than it is now ;
when once a day, for many years, we have learned
that work was not meant to last always, and have
had to drop our tools as if in practice and rehearsal
for the great darkness when we are to let them go
forever. How constant this suggestion has been
everybody knows. We are sure that it would have
come into our own minds, if no one had ever hinted
it, if we had never sung the hymn in which it is
embodied :
The day is past and gone ;
The evening shades appear ;
Oh, may we all remember well,
The night of death draws near.
So once a day our hold on work is loosened, and
the great setting-free which is to come is prophesied,
and its power is anticipated to us.
Some may wonder whether that is a good thing
for us. I think a great many people honestly doubt
whether it is a good thing for men, while they are
alive, to remember that they have got to die. And
with the cruel, dark, false thoughts of death which
are so plentiful, which many minds cling to as the
most religious thoughts, certainly it would be better
for men not to think of death at all. Such thoughts
must paralyze them. Better, far better, that they
should go on and do their work bravely, as if they
never were to die, than to be so frightened with the
inevitableness of dying that work should seem to be
waste, and the hands should drop idle.
But if a man can think rightly, can think like a
Christian about death, can think about it as the go-
ing home of the scholar who has been off at school,
as the setting free of the partial activity into some
intense and extensive exercise which it is glorious
while it is bewildering to think of; then the more a
man thinks about death the better. He will do his
work all the more faithfully for every look that he
takes through that gate which is iron on the outer
side and golden on the inner. Let me merely point
out, before I close, two or three of the ways in
which it will make a man more faithful in his work
to remember that he is going to die, if he can
remember it like a Christian.
In the first place, it will help him to anticipate
already the judgments of death and eternity. I
know, you know, that we are all thinking things
about our fellow-men, which we never can think of
them when the mere disguises of this life have
passed away. We are slighting poor men for their
poverty ; we are honoring rich men for their wealth ;
we are praising bad men for their smartness ; we are
holding back our applause from men we know are
good, because they are unpopular; we are valuing
men for little useful knacks and tricks that they
possess, and not for the honesty, the truthfulness,
the purity of their hearts. We know that these
judgments of ours are temporary and false ; we know
that, when we come to die, we shall see the beauty
that is in some rough shell which we slight now, and
the baseness that is in some pleasant form to which
we cringe and fawn. If we saw death coming, it
would change our judgments. I am sure that, if we
really felt now that we were going to die, we should
be braver and more independent. There is a sub-
lime freedom in death. What does the dying man
care for the tyrannies of gossip and conventionality
that have ruled him for his threescore years? Their
chains drop off him the moment he hears the great
call. And if we really could live in the anticipation
of that time of freedom, we might be freer and
braver now. To some people it seems as if it must
be dreadful to think much of death, because death is
such a mournful thing. But there have been deaths
that have been as triumphant and jubilant as the
blowing of trumpets, and other deaths that have
been serene as the opening of a flower ; and if it will
help to make our death like either of these to look
at it and remember that it is coming, then the more
every evening, which is a day's death, can bring it
up to us, the better.
And again, the remembrance that we are to die
some day, by and by, must help us to keep the
spiritual part of our occupation real and valuable
before us always. Our occupation, whatever it is,
is like ourselves, inward and outward. It has its
body and its soul. Now, to remember that the
time is coming (and may come to-morrow) when
the soul in us is to be everything, to see as it comes
up towards us the day that is to break the power of
the form over the spirit, the day when, not the
form, but the purpose and the power of our work,
is to go with us into Eternity, that must weaken a
little the bondage that the visible has over us, must
let us know something of the sublime spirituality
with which St. Paul said, I look not at the things
which are seen, but at the things which are not
seen ; for the things which are seen are temporal,
but the things which are not seen are eternal."
And yet, finally, the very fact that the form of
our work is so shortly to be left behind has, strangely
enough, another effect upon us, to make us all the
more earnest to deal with it faithfully while it re-
mains. We value the spirit of our occupation be-
cause that is to go on with us forever; we value its
form because our time to work on it is short. This
last is the meaning of those golden words of Christ.
"I must work the works of Him that sent me while
it is called to-day ; for the night cometh in which no
man can work." An earnest faithfulness to our
tasks, and a complete superiority to our tasks,
these two seem to me to blend only in the character
of the man who lives in the sight of death and of
eternity, the man who works all the day, knowing
that the evening is coming.
We want to work every day so that we can rest ;
for work and rest belong together. We want to
gather, out of every active service of God, deep
thoughts of Him for our hours of contemplation.
We want to come to self-knowledge by well-propor-
tioned labor and retirement. And then, as the day
of life grows dark, and the light fades in the east
and gathers in the west, we want to go from time
into eternity without a fear or a regret; but with
hearts full of memories and hopes, full of expecta-
tion of the new service which our Lord has for us
to do on the other side of the darkness, where we
shall see Him face to face.