God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)
God’s grace to His people is continuous and is never exhausted. Grace knows no interruption and no limit. In contrast with the Law it stresses the dynamic character of the Christian life. Law can be mastered. A man may acquire merit by conforming to it. He knows the precise requirements that are demanded of him. But grace is always an adventure. No man can say where grace will lead him.
"Woe to him that is alone when he falleth, for he hath not
another to help him up." ECCLESIASTES iv. 10.
THESE words of the preacher are capable of a low
or of a very high application. We may read them
as the words of worldly prudence, the exhortation
to every man to make to himself friends of the
mammon of unrighteousness; or they may be the
utterance of the profoundest religious philosophy,
the statement of how God Himself has bound our
lives together and made us rest on one another. Of
course we give to them their highest meaning.
And the words begin by assuming the certainty
that every man will fall sometimes. "Woe to him
that is alone when he falleth." We look forward
into our lives, and a wise prudence compels us to
recognize that there will certainly come times when
life will flag, times when the buoyancy and courage
upon which we rely will break, when over some one
of the many obstacles that lie in our way we shall
stumble. We need not be gloomy prophets. We
need not put so blankly and hopelessly before
ourselves the certainty of these times of faltering
courage and of weakened principle, that we shall be
in despair and not try to do anything for the lives
that are so sure to meet disaster. But, on the other
hand, it would be foolish in us to expect an even,
level, unbroken future, a changeless prosperity and
spiritual progress that never know a fall. Surely
our darker and despondent days will come, our days
of broken resolution and of feebler will.
And when we thus look forward to them, among
the questions which we ask ourselves ought to be
these: "What will the best way be to meet those
days? How shall I best prepare for them? How
shall I best recover myself? Will it be best for me
to be alone, or to be in company when the darkness
comes? Will a close association with my brethren
help me up, or hold me down with all their extra
weight, when I have fallen?"
It opens a wide question and a very deep one, the
whole question of the social and the solitary life.
Here are certain dispositions always drawing us to
one another. Here are certain dissatisfactions al-
ways drawing us away from one another and making
us want to live alone. Here is the sense that our
brethren make safety about us and call out our best
powers into exercise. Here is another sense that
our brethren around us make our danger, and that
our best powers and activities often spring to life
and do their work when we are separated and set
all by ourselves. Which shall we follow? The
practical answer that we mostly give is in a vacillat-
ing life which divides itself almost at random be
tween the two dispositions, yielding sometimes to
one and sometimes to the other, as the feeling
moves ; and often yielding wrongly, looking often
to society for that culture which only solitude can
give, and also often seeking in loneliness that
strength which a man ought to get out of the com-
pany of his fellow-men.
Let us look a little at this question of society and
solitude. It is not enough to give the easy answer
that society is good or bad according to whom it is
composed of; to be with good men is good for us;
to be with bad men is bad for us. That is true, of
course. But still the difficulty remains that the so-
cieties which offer themselves to us are not thus
blankly good or bad. They are all mingled and
confused. And even between the best company
and solitude the question is always an open one.
How far is it best to fight the battle of one's life
alone, and how far is it good to identify our battle
with our brethren s, and get the advantage of their
strength, even with all the disadvantage that it
brings? Surely there are few questions which we
ever meet more pressing or more puzzling than
these.
The first suggestion of an answer comes from our
own experience, from what we may freely appeal to
as the universal experience of healthy-minded men ;
which is that whatever there is of good in us has
been made possible and has been preserved by the
associations with our fellow-men which have filled
up our life. However deeply precious may seem
the things that have come to us when we were
alone; however we may know that the choicest
thoughts and truest feelings have been worked out
in solitude; everybody is certain, as he takes a
large look back, that, on the whole, if he had been
left to solitude he never could have come to so
good life as he has reached in the company of his
brethren. And the reason why he thinks so is, in
large part, that he sees that in his darkest times, in
the falling and fallen periods of his life, he could
not have arisen from the depths into which he had
been cast, he would have stayed at his worst, if it
had not been for the rescue that came to him from
his fellow-men. Perhaps there are great heights
where a man may be independent, mountain-tops
where one may walk in solitude. Perhaps there are
exalted moments in which one seems to live his
best, and not to need companions; but what we
come to thank our fellow-men most for is the way in
which they have bridged over with their company
the uncertain places of life, and brought us up again
when we were demoralized and broken down, that
we have not been alone when we have fallen, but
have had another to lift us up.
For what is it that keeps a man down when he
has fallen out of goodness and self-respect? When
the spring of his life is broken and the fresh hope-
fulness of the manly struggle to be high and pure
and good is blurred and lost, when he has sinned
and the burden of his sin is lying on him, what is it
that keeps him down? What hinders him from
springing back again into the strength and purity
which he has lost? Mainly these things: first, his
self-indulgence, the dreadful indolence and force of
habit that takes possession of him ; secondly, his
loss of reputation, the feeling that nobody expects
or thinks anything of him any longer ; thirdly, his
conceit and affectation, which take his sin and dis-
grace and trick it out in some disguise of virtue or
brilliancy, and set him to boasting of it. Picture
any fallen man, a man who used to be brave and
good and sober and honest. Now he has gone.
You never see him in the paths of reputable people.
Men look to him no more for examples of upright
living. What has caused all this? He came to
some bad place. He sinned. He fell into disgrace.
And the powers that have held him down, that have
stereotyped and perpetuated his disaster, have been
these: He has grown self-indulgent in his sin, with
no enterprise or energy to rise up and cast it off;
he has ceased to care what men think about him ;
and, having lost everything else to be proud of, he
has grown proud of his disgrace, making believe to
himself that it is honorable.
Now all those are powers, as you will recognize,
which fasten themselves upon a man in solitude.
There he becomes self-indulgent, morose, and af-
fected. But now suppose that that man, when he
fell, had had a friend, one who really had been close
to him. What would that friend have done for
him? or, rather, what would a body of such friends
have done for him, surrounding him on every side,
enclosing, enshrining his tottering life? They would
have shamed and encouraged him out of self-indul-
gence. They would have let him see that they did
care for him, and so kept him from being reckless
about reputation. They would have held up before
him the truth and righteousness from which he had
departed, and made him know that his wickedness
was base and not glorious. Hope, pride, and hon-
esty, these are what they would have given him.
These are what your friendships have given you
many a time, and kept your falls from being fatal
and final, and held you to recovery.
This is the reason of it. Now, that which is
reasonable and capable of philosophic explanation
in the middle orders, in the mass of beings, appears
always as an instinct which it is hard to explain, both
in the lower beings, who seem to be below the range
of its influence, and in the highest beings, who seem
to be above its need. Man gets a clear and account-
able help out of the companionship of his fellow-
men in his darkened and weakened times; and it is
good to see how this impulse of companionship
plays freely from the bottom to the very top of all
life. The animals crowd close together when the
thunder roars, as if in company there would be
safety. And when Jesus Christ was going to his
agony in Gethsemane, He took with Him Peter and
James and John. It is the social impulse running
through all life, and making each try to appropriate
for his own the strength of all.
I want to urge on all of you, the young and old,
but specially the young, the good, nay, the neces-
sity, of social life. Do not yield to the passion for
solitude. Knit your life to your brothers lives.
Cultivate every true relation to your fellow-men.
If, when things are going wrong with you either by
misfortune or by sin, the desire springs up to live
alone, to get away from men, beware how you in-
dulge it. You will certainly grow self-indulgent
and reckless and affected. That is where the in-
dolent, cynical, headlong, and fantastic men are
made. Not more than one man in a thousand, per-
haps not so many, can live in solitude and yet be
vigorous, self-respecting, simple. It needs a man
of such wonderfully exceptional resource and truth-
fulness to be shut up to himself !
It may seem as if this were not the counsel that
men need. "Rather urge solitude," you say.
"People are social over-much. They grow thin
and superficial. Send them apart to think, and let
them dwell alone that their own selves may be de-
veloped. There is too much society." But so often
we have seen the man in his misfortune shut himself
away, and lose the fibre and recovery of life, that
there does seem need to urge the preserving and
recuperative power of a true social life.
A true social life ! remember that that does not
mean what often passes for society. The ordinary
contacts of men in business, whose knowledge of
and care for one another is limited to their mere
business interests, who never talk anything but
business ; and the frivolous meetings of what we call
fashionable life ; these are not true companionship.
Out of their very midst a man or woman falls, and
they have no power of help. The dumb company
of brute with brute in a pasture or a barnyard, their
stolid huddling to each other's sides, means more of
real association than much that we call social life.
But the true society, in which man really meets with
man, and mind with mind, and heart with heart, and
character with character that is another thing, a
thing you cannot do without. As you shun the
false, so seek the true. Draw really near your fel-
lows, and do not live alone.
Let me refer in a few words to some of the con-
ditions in which the tendency to solitude is apt to
assert itself most strongly, and ask you to observe
how bad it is. It often becomes strong in periods
of doubt. When truth appears unsettled to a man,
and he is all adrift, how apt he is to let his life float
away into some solitary creek, and there to moor
it and let it toss on the waves till it decays. He
draws off from the crowd of busy and believing
men, and spends his days in moody uselessness,
brooding upon himself. Would we were not so
familiar with the sad consequences ! First, a dull
and hopeless indolence, which tells itself over and
over that it is not worth while to seek for truth ;
then a definite disregard whether men think that it
is good to believe or not ; and then an affected ec-
centricity which wears its skepticism like a plume.
Now set that same doubter in the midst of men and
keep him there. I do not say, let him take their
faith for his, but let him see that faith, and faith
alone, is doing work and making men brave and
happy everywhere; and he must lose at least the
wretchedest part of unbelief, and come to know
that truth is good, and to be sure that men can find
it, and to set himself with new courage to the
generous and glorious search.
And so, when a man undertakes to think. Is it
not true that all solitary thinking has a tendency to
grow hopeless and defiant and fantastic? The best
and truest Christian thoughts, the sweetest, the
healthiest, the best balanced, have come not from the
hermits or the monks, but from the heart of Chris
tian society and work ; where men and women living
Christian lives held up the thinker in his feebler
moods, and made him earnest, simple, practical.
No man by nature thinks so truly and so surely that
you could send him off alone, and let him come
back after years, and not be sure that his thoughts
would have grown self-indulgent, conceited, and
distorted.
Or, take the great emotional epochs of one's life.
In times of strong emotion there comes the strong
impulse to break away from and have no more to do
with a world whose ordinary doings seem to be so
far below the high condition to which we have been
brought. It may be hard for you to recollect it
now, but you have seen such times. In great and
overwhelming joy it comes. What can this dull
earth, living its placid life of averages, know about
this leaping delight which has transfigured every-
thing for you? How coldly it answers to your
ecstasies ! These people take your hand and say to
you, "I am glad for you"; but what has their
sober, indifferent gladness to respond to these full
veins and eager hopes of yours?
Or, here comes sorrow, and the impulse then is
stronger still. This ache about the heart, this sense
of want which does not relieve itself in any effort to
restore that dear thing which must be forever want-
ing, this desolation which is as personal and all your
own as was the love which made it possible, why
should this stay here in the crowd, where the kindest
hands touch it only to make it ache a little more?
Why should it listen to a sympathy which only
brushes and wounds its surface? Why should not
such a sorrow creep away and hide where none can
gaze upon it, nor try to comfort it ; where it can live
on its own luxury of woe?
O my dear friends, I know how natural are both
desires ; but indeed it is not good to yield to either
of them. Your joy and sorrow will be strong and
healthy only as you keep them among your brethren.
Do not try to carry them away. It is no superficial
impulse which sometimes drives the very happy or
the very sorrowful into the presence and the com-
pany of men. There, their happiness and sorrow
are held in place, held firm and upright, so that the
new life which grows about them grows straight and
true. Both into the Mountain of Transfiguration
and into the Garden of Agony Christ took with him
Peter and James and John; and surely He took
them not for their sake alone but also for His own.
So everywhere dread and escape a lonely life.
Even the frivolous companionships of men have a
humanity about them which is preservative, and are
better than solitude. The worst, certainly the most
persistent and ineradicable, of vices, are those which
men conceive and execute alone. It is the social
life that holds the soul in its true place. I know
you will not think that I have pleaded in behalf of
social life just as it is, in behalf of what you call
Society, with all its follies and its falsenesses, but
in behalf of something far deeper and far higher.
And now we want, if we can, to separate these
two the ideal and the real society and see if we
can tell at all how the man who must live with his
fellow-men may find the way of living with them
that shall be most unmixed with harm. If, then,
we try to estimate the tendencies of social life, I
think that the one which would strike us all most
generally would be its disposition to produce uni-
formity, to keep at once the bad from sinking as
low, and the good from rising to as lofty a height,
as would be the case if their lives were wholly by
themselves and wholly free. Social life is some-
thing like a sheet of ice upon the surface of a pond.
It holds up the stones which are frozen in it so that
they shall not sink, and it holds down the light, am-
bitious particles so that they shall not start up and
soar away into the clouds. As we look round upon
the actual life of society, can we not all see both of
these powers at work? We shall see some men of
whom we feel sure that, if the restraints and decen-
cies of social life were broken up, they would drop
like lead. They are held out of wickedness by the
standards and habits of the times and places where
they live. And then there are other men who, you
fear, are held back from any great and venturesome
enterprise, from any exceptional characteristic vir-
tue, by these same restraints. If they were living
alone, you feel certain that they would break out
into lofty thoughts and blaze into original and
splendid works, which are impossible here in this
average of life.
Very often this equalizing, levelling power of
social life vexes and burdens us. It gives an unreal
look to people's virtues. Who knows whether
they are essentially, intrinsically good? Who knows
whether they be not stones which, if the ice were
melted, would fall and sink? And it leaves us al-
ways in doubt how much we may be losing in the
remarkable men or actions which society is stifling.
We have this same feeling about ourselves. We are
not doing our worst ; and though our best may not
be much we are not doing even that. We are living
a level decency, a tame monotony and uniformity.
Society seems to be pressed flat and thin between
two great hands ; one pressing up from beneath and
keeping the failures of society from falling very low ;
the other pressing down from above, and keeping the
saints and heroes of society from rising very high.
Do you recognize the description? And what
shall save us from the evil influence without losing
for us the good? What shall set us free to be our
best, and yet preserve the power which keeps us
from being our worst? Not a moody retirement, a
selfish isolation, but a higher consecration ; not
solitude, but some companionship higher and larger
than our companionship with fellow-man, and yet
including it, not inconsistent with it. And that
must be a consecration to and a companionship with
God. Sometimes, unless our lives have been ex-
ceptionally unhappy, we have seen a man or woman
who seemed to us to almost realize an ideal of living;
some one who lived in the world and yet was not its
slave, who seemed to get out of society all the good
it had to give, and leave its harm behind. While
other men said, " This is all worthless and rotten,"
and went off to crunch the crust of their own soli-
tude, he staid where they had fled and ate the food
which they called poison and throve upon it. It
seemed as if for him the upward pressure on society
was kept, so that it was a constant safeguard to him ;
and the downward pressure was removed, so that he
could always freely go forth and be his best.
You who know it most thoroughly will bear me
witness that there are not many such men or women
in our social life. But there are some ; and what is
their secret? How does it come that they move
free and erect where we go slavishly crouching? Is
it not simply this : that over and above, surround-
ing and including all their life with fellow-men, there
is a life with God? That consecration overrules
every devotion to society. All social relations
come as His helps and ordinances; and so, just as
the business man, doing his business for a purpose
beyond his business, gets from his business its rich
cultures, and goes unpoisoned by its lower influ-
ences ; so the man or woman of society, living a life
with God above and round the life with fellow-men,
finds in this last a steady support and help, and yet
never a restraint to bind the soul from any most
ambitious and characteristic flight to which God
beckons it.
This is the secret. This was what made the social
life of Jesus Christ the absolutely perfect type of a
man s living with his fellow-men. He came as close
to them as possible; but always He was closer to
His Father. He loved them, but He loved God
more, and them in God. He loved the places where
they gathered, but when He sat among them in the
very centre of their densest crowds, through the
people who pressed around Him there came like an
unseen ether the subtler spiritual presence of God.
It was not that He sat there touching them but not
thinking about them, present in body but absent in
the spirit. He was close to them ; closer than man
ever came to men. But through them came to Him
the farther and deeper companionship of God. And
so the result was that, while they helped His life,
they never hampered it; while from them and His
work for them He drew the stimulus that kept Him
from discouragement, He constantly outwent them.
All was free, upon the upper side, for Him to pass
out into the company of God.
I think that this should be the picture of all social
life. I have said that you ought not to live alone.
Indeed you ought not. You ought to live with your
brethren, as close to them, as clearly in the midst, as
you can get. But to live with them rightly, you
must have the secret which Christ had, the secret of a
companionship with God surrounding and pervading
all your companying with your brethren. Unless
you have that, you will be bound by the society
that saves you ; and while your social life preserves
you from flagrant wickedness, it will also imprison
you from active and enterprising goodness.
And here comes in a word upon the other side, a
word to those who make as well as to those who re-
ceive the influences of social life. It is the object
of true social life to keep men from sin, and to help
them to their best development. It is a question
for you all to ask how far social life, as it exists
among us, is doing both these things. That it is
doing the first to some good extent, I freely grant.
It is setting the weak wills and unstable passions of
many young people into the stability of its fixed
standards, and saving them from flagrant vice by its
prescriptive decencies. Is it doing the other thing
as well? Is it helping every character to its own
best development? Is it so free upon the upper side
that any man or woman fired by some new impulse
to do a work for God that is new, fresh, sincere, and
personal may do it with the cordial encouragement
of a society that delights to see any man lead the
way to some goodness better than its own? As
society stamps some vices as disgraceful, has it no
tendency to stamp some virtues as quixotic? As
one young person after another comes into it, is he
met at its door by the spirit of the society which he
is entering, saying to him: "You must not do foul
and dishonest things here, for they are disgraceful ;
but you may be just as good, as pure, as truthful,
as Christlike as you will, and we will like you all the
better." Is it not rather a spirit saying something
like this: "You must not lie or steal or be wantonly
foul here, for it is vulgar ; but, just as much, you must
not be overgood, nor say too much of Christ, nor
think too much of God, nor strike any new or origi
nal note of manliness and truth, for it is troublesome.
Here are our iron plates, indicating the greatest
virtue and the greatest vice allowable. Lay yourself
here between them, and the softer you are the
sooner we will press you into shape." It becomes
those who have influence and leadership in our
society, to ask which of these is the greeting with
which the newcomer is welcomed to the coveted
and crowded halls.
All that I have said about life in general has its
peculiar application to the Christian life. There,
too, there is a solitary and a social way of living;
and there, too, the social life is necessary for the
fullest health and steadiness. A man becomes a
Christian. The Bible calls that, as you know, his
being "born again." His life begins the life with
Christ, the life in God. How shall he live that life
alone, as if there were no soul but his attempting it ;
drawing its strength and its supply only out of its
own personal relations with its great Supplier?
Sometimes such solitude is forced upon the Chris
tian. Sometimes the world of fellow-believers seems
to fall away and leave him travelling alone a road
that seems to stretch itself on and on as if no feet
had ever trod that path before him. But the Chris
tian life was not meant to live in such a solitude for-
ever, nor is it suited to it. It is a social life. All its
movements suggest and prophesy a brotherhood.
That Brotherhood of Believers is the Christian
Church.
Now, the Christian Church is to the single disciple
what all society is to the solitary man, only upon a
higher plane. We have said that society keeps men
from indolent self-indulgence, from defiant reckless-
ness, and from affectation ; and that, the more I
watch it, seems to me just what the Church does for
the Christian. You are a servant of Christ. I may
believe it, though you never said it, though your faith
never took any of those great sacramental utterances
which would send it in to swell the chorus of all the
Christian faith in all the ages. You say, "Why
should I take any place in the visible Church?
W T hat have I to do with Baptism, Confirmation,
Communion?" It ought to make you solemn when
you remember how earnestly, how impressively,
how lovingly, in the very last precious moments of
His precious life, your Lord commanded nay,
begged you to do what you have never done. It
ought to stir your conscience when you see this
world, which needs your Christian influence, robbed
of it by your silence. But I put all that aside. I
speak to you only of yourself. If this unuttered
faith of yours is always growing sluggish, losing its
manly courage, making excuses for itself; if it is
self-asserting, scornful of the judgments and holy
standards of the world s long Christian experience;
if it loves eccentricity and affects singularity; be
sure here is what you need, to set that feeble, flut
tering, fantastic faith of yours into the Body of the
Faith which is historic, old as the Lord s own words,
and yet forever new as the experience of the last
young believer, to put your solitude into the safety
of a society, to enshrine your Christianity in the
Church.
The Church, like all true society, is strength, but
it is not restraint. If she becomes restraint, she
loses her true character. The ideal Church is one
that shall hold her children strongly on the lower
side, and set them free as heaven on the upper side ;
keep them that they do not fall into sin, but hold
her doors wide open, nay, cast her roof away that
they may rise to any unexpected goodness or truth
to which their Lord, for whom she holds them, may
summon them. For the strength and safety of the
faith you have, for the hope and promise of the
higher faith that you might have, the higher life that
you might live, I stand, as it were, at the door of
that Church, and in the name of your Master and
mine, I invite you to enter in.
We look around, and all the world is full of fel-
lowship. Solitude is everywhere unnatural and bad.
All things seek their companionships. The atoms
gravitate to masses everywhere. And so men seek
each other. The impulse is so superficial often ; but
it might be so profound ! Let us not trifle with so
vast and universal a desire as this which brings us
into constant fellowship. Not for mere pastime or
amusement, not by vague instinct, but by reason-
able purpose, let us have to do with each other's life.
Living in society, yet always keeping clear our own
personality within all, and the higher companionship
of God around all ; helping and being helped ; steady-
ing ourselves on others, and helping up others as
they fall, while all together we are going on to Christ ;
if that should come, all the old questions between
society and the Church would be settled forever.
Such a society as that would be the Christian Church.
We could not be too deeply in the very centre of a
society like that. Its light would be the present
glory, its music the present voice, of God ; and al-
ready in this city of the earth we should be living in
the New Jerusalem.