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Maps, plates, charts, etc., may be filmed at different reduction ratios. Those too large to be entirely included in one exposure are filmed beginning in the upper left hand corner, left to right and top to bottom, as many frames as required. The following diagrams illustrate the method: Les cartes, planches, tableaux, etc., peuvent §tre film^s a des taux de reduction diff^re.its. Lorsque le document est trop grand pour dtre reproduit en un senl clichd, il est filmd d partir de Tangle supdrieur pauche, de gauche d droite, et de haut en bas, en prenant le nombre d'images n^cessaire. Les diagrammes suivants illustrent la mdthode. 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 THE CURE OF SOULS BOOKS B YJOHN WA TSON, D.L\ (IAN MACLAREN) BESIDE THE BONNIE BRIER BUSH THE DAYS OF AULD LANG SYNE A DOCTOR OF THE OLD SCHOOL With Illustrations by F. C, Gordon THE UPPER ROOM THE MIND OF THE MASTER KATE CARNEGIE V/ith Illustrations by F. C. Gordon THE CURE OF SOULS Lectures on Preaching at Yale University, 1896 ''t The Cure OF Souls Lyman Beecher Lectures on Preaching AT Yale University 1896 BY JOHN WATSON, M.A., D.D. Toronto : FLEMING H. REVELL COMPANY, 140-142 Yonge Street. Wfr--- ( Entered according to Act of the Parliament of Canada, .n the year 1896, by Hodder & Stoughton, at the Department of Agriculture. TO THE Rev. GEORGE P. FISKER, D.D., LL.D., Professor of Ecclesiastical History and Dean of the Faculty of Theology in Yale University IN RESPECT FOR HIS DISTINGUISHED ATTAINMENTS IN GRATITUDE FOR HIS THOUGHTFUL KINDNESS PREFACE. It was the excellent custom of a Theological College which from time to time has sent forth learned and brilliant scholars as well as many ordinary men, to invite ministers of age and reputation to inform the students on the practical work of their calling. Their addresses used to fill the College with admiration, be- cause of the eloquence and distinction of the speakers, but one student they reduced to de- spair. He had secretly hoped for some ac- count of the difficulties and dangers which were likely to beset the path of one who, like him- self, represented the average man. What he desired Was never given, and he was in due course ordained and entered on the work of the holy ministry. As he paid his bit- Vlll THE CURE OF SOULS tcr premiums to experience, it came to him that some clay he would write a Httle book in which he mi^rht be able to save some brother minister from humiliation and suffering, and this he has now tried to do according to the measure of his ability. Jt is not likely, however, that the writer would have had the courage of his intention had not the Faculty of Theology in Yale University done him the unmerited honour of an invitation to deliver the Lyman Bcecher lectures on Preaching, and had accepted from him simpler service than that which was fit- tingly rendered by his distinguished predeces. sors in the lectureship. CONTENTS CHAPTER I THE GENESIS OF A SERMON PAOR • • • • ^ CHAPTER H THE TECHNIQUE OF A SERMON . , ^ 37 CHAPTER HI PROBLEMS OF PREACHING .... 65 CHAPTER IV THEOLOGY THE THEORY OF RELIGION . . lOI CHAPTER V THE NEW DOGMA 13' CHAPTER VI THE MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION , . l6l THE CURE OF SOULS CHAPTER VII THE WORK OF A PASTOR • • . CHAPTER VIII THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OF GOD . . ^ CHAPTER IX THE MINISTER'S CARE OF HIMSELF PAGB 207 245 275 07 THE GENESIS OF A SERMON CHAPTER I THE GENESIS OF A SERMON It lies upon the mi.iister of Christ to care for the souls of his people from house to house ; to spare no pains that divine ser- vice be beautiful and reverent ; to afford to the young every useful means of religious culture ; to move his congregation unto such good works as lie to their hand : but it is well for him to remember that the most critical and influential event in the religious week is the sermon. History bears unanimous testimony on this point. When the Evangel ceased, or fell into contempt, the Church grew weak and cor- rupt. When the Evangel asserted its an- citent authority, the Church arose and put on her ' beautiful garments.' No power in human experience has wrought such THE CURE OF SOULS mighty works as the spoken word : it has beaten down impiety, taught righteous- ness, given freedom to the oppressed, and created nations. Before Knox, armed with this sword of God, hosts fled, and he reigned in the pulpit of St. Giles as a king upon his throne : and if you go into the roots of things, was not the American na- tion founded on brave, wholesome speech ? It is the prophet who has roused the race from ignoble sleep, has fired its imagina- tion with lofty ideals, has nerved it for costly sacrifices, has led it to victory. It is the prophet, above all, who, under Christ, has laid the foundations of the Church in every land, has restored her after periods of decay, has filled her with courage and hope. He is the teacher, comforter, fosterer, defender of his brethren, and therefore the chief office to which any man can be called is to declare the Will of God, and especially the Evan- gel of Christ. THE GENESIS OF A SERMON No one can exaggerate the opportunity given to a preacher when, on the morning of the first day of the week, he ascends the pulpit and faces a congregation who are gathered in the name of Jesus, and wait to hear what he has to say to them concerning the things w^hich are unseen and eternal. Each man carries his own burden of unbelief, sorrow, temptation, care, into the House of God, and the preacher has to hearten all ; for, indeed, the work of the pulpit in our day is not so much to teach or define as to stimulate and encourage. That minister who re- ceives a body of people more or less cast down, and wearied in the great battle of the soul, and sends them forth full of good cheer and enthusiasm, has done his work and deserved well of his people. He has shown himself a true shepherd, and he had not done this service without knowing both the Will of God and the life of man, without draining a wide watershed of ex- n . '!t THE CURE OF SOULS perience — from high hills where the soul has been alone with God, and from deep valleys where the soul has tasted the agonies of life — into the stream that shall be the motive power of many lives on the plains beneath. If the sermon be in its degree a prophet- ical utterance, then it must be in its essence a mystery. What the prophet tells forth he must first be told, but how God un- covers His servant's ear and whispers His message no one can explain. The true preacher is distinguished by a certain demonic influence — a divine passion — which breathes through the thought, the words, the very manner, which cannot be described, which is felt in the marrow of the bones. This is the only infallible sign of a prophet ; it is the baptism of the Holy Ghost, and about such secret and sacred things it becometh one to be silent and to fear. When one passes from vision to utterance, then it is possible and w ss&Esssmsmi THE GENESIS OF A SERMON useful to inquire in what way a sermon comes into existence and grows into per- fection. People will see the finished product, but as a rule they are rigidly ex- cluded from the manufactory, which no one is allowed to enter except on busi- ness. Perhaps it might be better for a minister to take hearers into his confi- dence about the production of sermons, both because they would be very much interested, and because they would have a more intelligent sympathy with the preacher. They would be delivered from various blinding and irritating errors, such as confounding an unread with an extem- pore sermon, while they ought to know that the former may have cost a week's study, and have been written word for word, and that the latter, having cost nothing, neither time nor thought, is worth nothing, and for purposes of de- scription ought to be described as 'ex- trumpery. ' Certainly it must be useful THE CURE OF SOULS : :ii U ! for practical men, whose life-work is to be preaching, to compare notes on the various methods of preparation, believing that as the blessing of the Divine Spirit will only rest on the outcome of hard, honest work, the more thorough and skil- ful that work is, the more likely is it to be crowned with prosperity. A sermon, I submit, is the result of six processes, and the first is Selection. Curious stories are afloat regarding this process, which suggest that in some quar- ters it must be very imperfectly under- stood. It is said that the preacher will sometimes spend the week seeking for a text, and be only delivered from despair on Saturday night by lighting on a verse, in some minor prophet, which has a catch- ing sound, and looks as if it would lend itself to a * memorable ' division. People remark next day that it was wonderful how much he brought out of it, but they might have more shrewdly considered how [ -1 THE GENESIS OF A SERMON w much he put into it. This is speaking by sleight of hand, and the preacher is simply a verbal juggler performing in a sacred place. Others deprecate the very idea of selecting a subject, and declare that if ministers only had faith it would be given unto them — one allowing his Bible to open at a certain place, and so obtaining his text by lot ; another waiting till Sunday morning, and even till he is in the pulpit, for guidance. An expert in sermons can recognise this type at once, partly by the preacher using a pocket Bible, from which he can eke out the time by copious refer- ences, and partly by an introduction enough to alarm even courageous hearers, explaining how the preacher had been j'ed by a special providence to his theme, but chiefly by the style, which is a series of tacks through a dead sea of pious plati- tudes in hope of catching a breeze that will bring the ship to some haven. This method is commended in theory as show- THE CURE OF SOULS ing a proper dependence on the Holy Ghost, and in public is usually discredited by the thinness of the sermon and the smallness of the congregation. In Scot- land this preacher is identified with deli- i cate and suggestive sarcasm, as a 'gude cratur,' and he is really the ghost of mys- ticism, the caricature of Evangelism. A certain practical and robust mind has no difficulty in finding texts, because, within very wide limits, it can manipulate any text in a reputable and solid fashion. As it is the duty of this artisan to furnish two sermons for next Sunday, he goes out, say on Tuesday, into the Bible as into a woodyard, and selects, with due delibera- tion, suitable material, and then, bit by bit, he constructs the discourses, measur- ing, sawing, planing, and joining in a very deft manner, and finishing with a polish composed of one part spirit, crude and fiery, and three parts thick sweet oil. This workman has lying by him a set of simple 10 ilH THE GENESIS OF A SERMON designs which suffice for anything he is likely to attempt, and, to do him justice, he is not given to fancies. If his subject be a doctrine, say Faith, then he uses No. I. : (a) The origin of Faith ; (/;) The nature of Faith ; (c) The object of Faith ; (d) The effects of Faith. And so for Hope or Love. But if his subject be a Scripture hero, say Moses, then he takes down Design II.: (a) Moses' parentage; (b) His training; (c) His work; (d) His death (this optional, according to circum- stances) ; (e) His character, with lessons. No charge of slackness can be brought against this preacher, for he alwayc turns out a piece of tradesmanlike work ; but it still remains, if one dare say it in the face of men of reputation and position in the Church, that there is surely some difference in principle between the construction of a table and a sermon. H . that can preach about anything can really preach about nothing. A sermon is more than a cun- II ii THE CURE OF SOULS ning creation ; it is an inspiration, not so much dead stuff laboriously fitted together, but a tree whose leaf is green, which yield- eth its fruit in due season. It is not the man who selects the text — that is not the inwardness of the fact — it is the text which selects the man. As the minister was busy with study, or as he sat by the bedside of the sick, or as he walked the crowded street, or as he wan- dered over the purple heather, or — such things have happened, the grace of God being sovereign — as he endured in a Church Court, the truth, clad in a text, which is the more or less perfect dress of the Spirit, suddenly appeared and claimed his acquaintance. It seemed to him that they had met in the past, as one is haunted by the idea that he has known some one before he has ever seen him ; and he will be right, for the?e is a pre- established harmony between that par- ticular truth and his soul. He is the man 12 THE GENESIS OF A SERMON to declare it to the world, and it is the truth to arouse his powers. The minister ought at once to put down this idea in a large hook, with six pages at its com- mand, for they will he needed. Some slight note may he made of this first meeting and its incidents, and then a friendship — shall I say courtship? —he- gins, which may last for years hefore the world knows anything ahout the mat- ter. Sometimes the idea immediately fas- cinates, but it does not follow that its marriage-day should be hastened ; it i'j desirable that acquaintance should first grow into knowledge. Sometimes the idea actually repels, and the minister vows he will have nothing to do with it ; but he must not be too sure, for hate is a form of love One by one those ideas that have come out from a multitude and seized the mind wiM grow into sermons, and mean- while any glimpses of them in quiet hours and any chance interview with them must 13 THE CURE OF SOULS be recorded. Such notes are all prolegom- ena to the discourse, pencil sketches from which the picture will be painted. * How long does it take to prepare a sermon ? ' is an ambiguous question. If you mean to write the manuscript, then a day may suffice ; if you mean to think a sermon, then it may be ten years. What time goes to the making of wine ? In a few months the vine springs and flourishes and bears her grapes, and in a few days they are trodden into the new wine. But a glass of Madeira — it has made voyages, and been tossed up and down in the hold of vessels, and lain in dark cool cellars for half a century, and so it has come to mellow perfection. New thought is almost sure to be crude and yeasty, and therefore wise and charitable deliverances can hardly be expected of young preachers, because their thought has not yet had time to ripen. It is enough if it be strong and rich ; fine- 14 !i THE GENESIS OF A SERMON « ness and fragrance will cornt with age. As the years go on, a preacher s success will largely depend on his accumulated resources of sermon material— not the gold which has been minted and now is in circulation, nor even what is going through the mill, but the ore in sight within the mine. When he discovers that the reserve is being exhausted, then it would be wise to close production before he has to fall back on low-grade ore, and to strike a deeper level, where new and richer veins will often be revealed. The v/orst condition for sermon-making is where the minister lives from hand to mouth, and the best where he longs to live to the age of the patriarchs, because he is certain that he will never be able in a short modern lifetime to deliver one-tenth of the living thoughts in his brain. The second process is Separation, 15 ■n I Hi I ii 11 ill THE CURE OF SOULS When the minister turns over the leaves of the book with his reserves, and settles in his mind that a certain theme is ready for preaching, he has before him a hard week's work, and if he stints his care at any point then he will simply fling away his treasure. It happens sometimes that a sermon fails because although the carving is excellent the wood is worthless, but just as often because although the wood be richly grained the artist has scamped his labour. A noble and inspiring idea is only a promise of success, and the issue hangs on skill and patience. The idea does not come alone, but is accompanied ly ninety-nine others with which it is con- nected by blood, and to which it ic nat- urally Tittached. One cannot undertake a more delicate task than to wean an idea from its relatives, but this is absolutely necessary in the interests of the sermon. It is one thing for the preacher to woo and win a single idea, and to set up house i6 '^':"^ l.rf'^J-iSl'wiT'jS THE GENESIS OF A SERMON with it in undisturbed company, and another to have all his wife's relations landed on him. Some sermons are crowded with related doctrines — the con- nection is often very slender — which brawl together and jostle one another in a very confusing and irritating fashion. If a preacher thinks it wise, he may in an hour compass the circle of Christian doctrine ; but it goes without saying that no subject will be more than touched, and that every sermon will be a repetition of the last. Surely half an hour can be fully used in showing, say, the absolute and unfettered grace of divine forgiveness without trav- elling into the doctrines either of sin or the atonement, — which in such a case ought to be implicit, — and a preacher may very well enforce the duty of trust in God, without going into all the problems that arise under the head of faith. * He's a good preacher' — a Highland gamekeeper was describing his minister, — * 17 "f'm iippium. f I I i THE CURE OF SOULS * but he scatters terribly. ' It is the differ- ence between a single rifle bullet which, if it hits, kills, and a charge of small shot which only peppers. Take one sin that happens to be mine and other men's, and let the preacher confine himself, say, to pride, and it will be strange if he does not arrest and shame me, but let him throw in a dozen other sins and I shall be unmoved. My medicine is held in too large a solu- tion. A sermon ought to be a mono- graph and not an encyclopaedia, an agency for pushing one article, not a general store where one can purchase anything from a button to a coffin. There are minds so comprehensive and agile that they can play with half a dozen ideas in one ser- mon and delight an audience — making one idea illuminate another, and using the combined force of opposite ideas to pro- duce the desired effect ; but for the aver- age man with whom we are concerned the handling of one is a sufficient strain. z8 THE GENESIS OF A SERMON [There are three degrees — the preacher below par, who can speak for an hour without a single idea ; the preacher above par, who will charm us for an hour with a coruscatio/i of ideas ; and the preacher just at par, who does his duty in something less than forty minutes by one distinct idea.] Two reasons may be suggested for cas- ual sermons — where the SDcaker saunters from door to door — and the first is smiply slackness and laziness. He has not set himself in a strenuous and persevering fashion to identify and isolate his idea. This is a forenoon's work, and four hours has not been wasted if by one o'clock the student can rise from his desk, saying, What I have been chinking about for years, and am going to preach about on Sunday, is not that, nor that, but just this — one crisp, clean-cut, complete idea. [Compensation for this long travail, with its apparently limited result, can be 19 THE CURE OF SOULS r f found In the waste products which are thrown off — all of which can be utilised at some future date. The debris in cutting out your angel from the marble may afford material for many a little Psyche.] Another reason may be the supposed necessity for safeguarding one's creed by insisting on opposite truths in one sermon. It were dangerous, it is supposed, tc msist upon Christ's humanity without a long passage on His Divinity, or to enforce works without exalting faith in the same breath. Surely the time has come for putting this policy of fear into the pillory and delivering young men from its tyr- anny. It is insulting to the preacher to suppose that because he journeyed towards the south pole to-day he denies the north pole, and exasperating to the hearers to be hurried backwards and forwards in op- posite directions lest they should rush to extremes. Preacher and hearers should give themselves to one idea with as much 20 THE GENESIS OF A SERMON concentration as if there were not another in the universe of thought. This is to focus the mind. The third process is Ilhimination. And now the student sets his bare, cold, lifeless idea in the light of all he has read, has seen, has felt, has suffered. He has mercilessly withdrawn it from its en- vironment that it may be his own ; now he restores it to the wide world that it may live, and according to the wideness and richness of the student's world will be the glow, the red blood of his sermon. He goes on a marriage tour with his bride. It is now that he garners the benefit of his intellectual, spiritual, and human culture, and has an unspeakable advantage over the ablest Philis:ine. Those mornings given to Plato, that visit to Florence where he got an insight into Italian art, that hard-won trip to Egypt the birthplace of civilisation, his sustained acquaintance with Virgil, his by-study of physical 21 '! I t i THE CURE OF SOULS science, his taste in music, the subtlest and most religious of the arts, all now rally to his aid. Greek philosophy clarifies the thinking, Andrea Del Sarto illustrates it ; a poet suggests a musical line ; Faraday points out a parallel between the worlds of nature and spirit. He is unfortunate whose thoughts are untouched by poetry and unfortified by ancient wisdom, over whose study the sky is ever grey and dull. An idea may be his, but his impression of it will be cold and colourless. On the other hand, he must have some reserve and self-denial on whose mind the sun beats strongly. It is possible to confuse and blot out an idea by excess of light, so that amid pictures, rivers, pyramids, sun- sets, science, poetry, history, and drama, the hearer does not catch the one message that the preacher had for his soul. One blind after another has to be pulled down on certain brilliant and opulent minds be- 22 ■w.'iimv9Bms«"''^v THE GENESIS OF A SERMON fore an idea, however grand and august, has its right place. [Travel must be used very skilfully and sparingly, because the Righi and the Bay of Naples are not now unknown to a con- gregation. On the whole, it may be also better for the average man not to go to the Holy Land for the sake of his people unless he has great self-control. His per- sonal experiences will make even the Mount of Olives a terror, and his interpo- lated explanation from ' what I saw ' will desecrate the noblest passages in the Gos- pels. Some congregations who sent their mmisters to the Holy Land in the kind- ness of their hearts, would now pay twice the cost cheerfully to obliterate the jour- ney from the memory of the good man and to rescue, say the fifteenth of St. Luke' from illustrative anecdotes.] The fourth process is Meditation. And now for two days this idea must 23 T I I n i "I 'i ' s THE CURE OF SOULS be removed from the light, where reason and imagination have their sphere, and be hidden away in the dark chambers of the soul. This is not an intellectual proposi- tion to be asserted and proved, or a fancy to be tracked out and exhibited. This is a spiritual truth to be commended to faith, a living principle to be enforced on conscience. It must, therefore, be first imprinted on the preacher's soul till it has become a part of his own being, before he can really understand or declare it. One reason why many masterly sermons fail is that they have never had the benefit of this process ; therefore they are clear, in- teresting, eloquent, but helpless. They do not make way, and lay hold of hearers, because they have never conquered the speaker. He has not been horrified at this sin, has not felt this trial, has not seen this Christ during the week through the sympathy of the soul. The preacher, to succeed, must be Peter as he denies his 24 THE GENESIS OF A SERMON Lord, and Mary as her brother dies, and the Syrian woman as she sees Christ yields to her irresistible importunity. This baptism into the heart of a subjcet, till the preacher and sermon be of one blood, is a secret process that can go on as the minister does his work, but is much accelerated on his quiet walks and in his lonely hours. Unfortunately for us, at the close of the nineteenth century, with its competition, sensationalism, cx- ternalism, and endless bustle, meditation is a lost art, like the making of Venetian glass and certain painters' pigments. It is not reading, nor thinking, nor praying; it is brooding, a spiritual experience, where the subject is hidden in the soul as leaven in three measures of meal till all be leavened. What we have chiefly to learn for the work of the holy ministry, in our day, is not how to criticise, nor how to read, nor how to speak, nor how to organise, but how to meditate, in order 25 I THE CURE OF SOULS that present-day sermons may add to their brlt^htncss and interest the g^reater quali- ties of the past, depth of experience, and an atmosphere of peace. It will be observed that not one sen- tence of the sermon has as yet been composed, and so on Friday morning the minister proceeds to the fifth process — Elaboration. He now sits down at his desk and places before him thirty small pieces of paper. [This is an obiter dictum, for if one should say, ' Why not two sheets of fools- cap ? ' I can only express amazement at hi- commonplace contrivance. My plan, Ls will appear, is much more ingenious, and is an invention. It is with us, as with the medical profession, a rule to patent nothing, but to offer every discovery for the use of our brethren.] Let each thought, illustration, applica- tion, that has occurred to the minister under his idea be committed to one of 26 THE GENESIS OF A SERMON those scraps. Just as one rcmcmherf thcMTi; in no sequence— a mere mob of recollections. It is, of course, taken for granted that each must be, as it were, the legitimate child of that idea. No' va- grants are to be picked up and adopted. [For these the minister has another book, a sort of Foundling Asylum for homeless and nameless thoughts, but out of which some very good children may come.] When the heap is complete, behold the raw material, selected, picked, dyed, ready now for the mill that shall weave the loose disconnected threads into pattern and cloth, or, if it please you, to revert to a former image, the print must now be taken off the negative. This heap of thought-stuff is as an alphabet, with every letter there, but ail unarranged. It is the student's business to spread the letters out on his table, and to survey them carefully till he lights on A and B and C, on to 27 ' I THE CURE OF SOULS X Y Z. For he knows that thought follows a certain order, and it is the same order in the mind of a peasant as a philosopher, only in the former case some of the letters are wanting — blank spaces — and some are dim. Educated people resent a sermon where A comes in the middle of the alpha- bet and S precedes M, and they are not appeased by the fact that they have had all the letters somehow ; and it may be worth saying that people without culture are almost as dissatisfied by a disorderly sermon. Hearers have an action of dam- ages against a preacher who rambles and comes again on his own track, because it is disheartening to follow a guide whose progress is a zigzag, and because it is plain that he has scamped his work. [Certain fertile and original minds are what gardeners call ' sports, ' that is, they do not come under ordinary laws. They are incapable of reasoned or connected thinking, and their productions ought to 28 THE GENESIS OF A SERxMON be printed in paragraphs with asterisks be- tween — each an aphorism, an observation, an illustration — flashes of brilliant light for which we are thankful.] Our average man must not claim the privilege of vagrant genius ; he must wrestle and sweat, placing, reviewing, transposing till the way stands fair and open from Alpha to Omega — a clean, straight furrow from end to end of the field, a chain of single links which when put to the test holds. Something there will be before A, especially when a man is young — an introduction which used to extend back to the creation of the world and the purposes of God, and now em- braces the latest results of criticism on the book from which the text is taken. Whether our fathers liked to approach, say the Son of God, through an under- ground passage of theological archccology may be doubtful, but it is certain their children have no wish to arrive at an 29 THE CURE OF SOULS ethical principle of prophecy through a museum of the higher criticism. This generation desires to be ushered into the subject of the day without wearisome pre- liminaries, and nothing will more certainly take the edge off the ap^ttite than a laborious preface. Very likely it must be written, or else the minister could not get further, but it ought then to be burned as having served its purpose. It is really getting up steam, and there is no use in inviting passengers on board till the ves- sel is ready to start. Something there will be after '! - a striking and eloquent peroration, ai: ' al- though this sounds cruel to a degree, t' is ought also to be suppressed. When the sermon has culminated after a natural fashion, it ought to end, leaving its effect to rest not on rhetoric but on truch. There may be times when for effect the sermon may cease suddenly some letters before Z, because the audience has sur- 30 5 I 1 ! THE GENESIS OF A SERMON rendered without terms and the sermon has served its purpose. When a speaker is pleading a great cause, and sees hard-headed men glaring before them with such ferocity that every one knows they are afraid of breaking down, let him stop in the middle of a paragraph and take the collection, and if he be declaring the Evangel, and a certain tenderness comes over the faces of the people, let him close his words to them and call them to prayer. Speech can be too lengthy, too formal, too eloquent, too grammatical. For one to lose his toil- some introduction, in which he happened to mention two Germans, with quotations, and his twice-written conclusion, in which he had that pretty fancy from Tennyson, is hard to flesh and blood. It is worse than the ' Massacre of the Innocents '—it is infanticide ; but in those sacrifices of self the preacher's strength lies, on them the blessing of God rests. Broken sen- 31 THE CURE OF SOULS tences, when the speaker could not con- tinue, unfinished sermons, when the Spirit of God was working powerfully, have wrought marvels beyond all the wisdom of the schools. If Saturday be given to the actual writ- ing of the sermon (which comes under technique) then there remains one other process, which is reserved for Sunday morning, and that is Revision. No photograph quite represents the face that was taken, or leaves the studio un- touched. Certain lines have to be modi- fied, certain blots to be removed. It will be a very gracious sermon that needs no retouching. Line by line the sermon has to be read over with the faces of his con- gregation before him, so that the minister may hear how it sounds in the living en- vironment. Many things are incisive and telling, clever and sparkling on paper, which we feel will not do face to face. They are now too telling, too clever. A 32 * THE GENESIS OF A SERMON well-turned epigram, which cost much oil : but that white-haired saint will misunder- stand it. Our St. John must not be grieved. So it must go. A very impres- sive word of the new scientific coinage : what can yon sempstress make of it? Rich people have many pleasures, she has only her church. Well, she shall have it without rebate : the big word is erased- half a line in mourning. A shrewd hit at a certain weakness: but that dear old mother, whose house is a refuge for or- phans and all kinds of miserables, it is just possible she may be hurt. The min- ister had not thought of her till he said the words with Dorcas sitting in her cor- ner. Another black line in the fair manu- script. This exposure of narrowness is at any rate justified : but the minister sees one face redden, and its owner is as true a man as God ever made. It is left out too. Somewhat strong that statement : an ad- jective shall be omitted: some people 33 THE CURE OF SOULS have a delicate sense of words. This quip may excite a laugh : better not — it may hinder the force of the next passage on Jesus. The sermon seems to be losing at every turn in harmony, vivacity, richness, ease ; it is gaining in persuasiveness, un- derstanding, sympathy, love : it is losing what is human and gaining what is divine ; and after that sermon is delivered, and has passed into men's lives, the preacher will bless God for every word he removed. He stands before his people now in the supreme moment of his life, and a sense of the solemnity of his duty overcomes him, so that they see him hesitate between the text and the sermon. Let them pray with one accord that upon this frail brother man, on whom God has laid sucii a work, the Holy Ghost may descend, and the same Spirit make tender their hearts within them. 34 i *)^swr^r«fS THE TECHNIQUE OF A SERMON 1 '■ CHAPTER II THE TECHNIQUE OF A SEKMON When a student of a certain eolle.e clear -ton, h^anp.eaehed:.acit/eL:: ■n the former time, his friends went to hear h.m and offered him the benef of - .^partial eritieism nex. mornin, at the common-room fire Fa„lf= , out with frank and , """"'^^ irank and nicisive speech but only one was considered unpLdo 'ahl If the sermon had been uninteresting. there? ^°"^'-^^^^-" ^-<^ slumbered P ahrlVr"^"P--P'-thatth 'act fied "" *'°"-^'^'^"'- -^ 'f he tec ni e,"™: "'^''"' "°*"°"= -''" many e hn,cal and unintelligible words, then one who ,„ course of time and patien 37 M THE CURE OF SOULS Elf: continuance in profundity might climb into a Professor's chair. [It is said unto this day, concerning a preacher whom con- gregations will not abide, ' He ought to be made a Professor ' ; but of late the Church has rather inclined to the policy of putting brilliant preachers into theolog- ical chairs — with doubtful results, be- cause the pulpit loses in strength, while the new Professor is apt to be described in scholarly circles as showy.] But if the misguided student gripped the people by dealing with things in their experience, and using the language of the market- place, then he was stigmatised as ' popular,' and in the case of his having stirred the people unto one of the deep human emo- tions, every right-minded man knew that he was a charlatan of the first water. Within a stone's-throw of this place of learning was a Court of Justice where educated men were daily practising the same art of public speejh, but where an- 38 THE TECHNIQUE OF A SERMON Other canon of success obtained. If any barrister, being intrusted with a case, had plunged into a historical or critical dis- sertation on a particular law, it would have been his last brief, and the curious thing is that his fellow-barristers would have given him scint praise. His busi- ness, as he took it, was to strip his case of all legal technicalities, and to lay it before the jury in such persuasive language as to win their suffrages. His aim was not to receive the approval of scientific experts, but to gain a verdict. If he descended to claptrap, or said what was not true, then he suffered loss, but within the conditions of fair reasoning he used any means that seemed likely to win the jury, and in pro- portion as he could honestly bring twelve fellow-citizens to his view he was counted successful. The preacher also addresses a jury of sa}' five hundred people, and whether his subject be sin or righteousness, doctrine 39 .,) ; fi ; * Si f\ i 1 ■ ! ! THK CURE OF SOULS or duty, he has to bring them to his way of thinking, and persuade them to believe his message. If he talks above their heads, or delivers himself of dead informa- tion, or airs his own conceits, or raises vain questions, or bores them with obso- lete doctrines, then he misses his chance, and in spite of his 1( ing or acutencss or piety he is a failure. * I once heard him I)reach,' said a man of letters, who was referring to a distinguished clergyman, *and it was an excellent sermon — about the best in my experience.' ' His text ?' * I have not the ghost of an idea, nor do I remember his argument, nor anything he said.* * How do I know that it was good ? ' * Because before we left church he convinced us that God was love. I am not sure that I believe that to-day, but I believed it that morning. — Yes,' he added, * that man deserves his name, for he knows his business.' Regarding the substance of his message, 40 THE TECHNIQUE OF A SERMON the preacher must be a propliet, declaring what he believes with all his heart ; regard- ing its form, he must be a barrister, deliv- ering what he has to say in a skilful and cunning manner. Now, the art of public speech has six canons, and the first is — Unity. If the sermon is to consist of one idea, then the style must play with this idea for thirty minutes, so that the people never escape from its sphere of in- fluence, are never wearied by it, but that with every minute the idea grows more intelligible, reasonable, winsome. Whether in such circumstances a sermon ought to be parcelled out into heads is an impor- tant question. Three detached sermon- ettes do not make one sermon ; but, on the other hand, a handful of observations tied together by a text are not an organic whole. It all depends on whether the heads ad- vance, ascend, cumulate, or are indepen- dent, disconnected, parallel. Heads are 41 I i THE CURE OF SOULS k:-i :i5 ' i -}'. , i either water-tight compartments, in which case you cannot pass from one to the other, and are exasperated by the iron door, or they are floors of a tower, in which case one will not halt till he reaches the top, because with every fresh ascent he gets a wider view. It was once the fashion to have heads, and now it is the fashion not to have heads ; but much can be said for the former way. One likes rests and points of departure. If any one desires to lodge an idea in the minds of his hearers he must learn the secret of artistic repetition, by which the same thing is said over and over again, but cast into a new dress on each reappearance. Sometimes it is an intel- lectual proposition, and the matter is argued to the great delight of the hard- headed people, who begin to think there is something in this idea. Sometimes it is an illustration which appears to simple folk, and they fall in love with the idea. 42 THE TECHNIQUE OF A SERMON Sometimes it is an application, and prac- tical people are taken by storm. Now this Pretean shape arrests the conscience, now it convinces the reason, now it captivates the imagination, and now it reinforces the will. People to whom it was a stranger become accustomed to its face and receive it in the end as a friend. It is by this ingenious and elaborate reiteration that popular speak- ers influence the average man and move him at their will. The citadel has to be carried at the point of the bayonet, and yields only at the sixth assault. The speaker, we shall suppose, feels bound to enforce the ever fresh and needful com- monplace, 'That what we sow we shall reap. ' [It is a sign of weakness to shrink from the commonplace and to take refuge in a fantastic originality. Any one can have an entirely new and very striking view of familiar scenery by standing on his head.] The statement is made to the 43 '•m ii n 1 ,1 y 1 E fl if t| 1 41 THE CURE OF SOULS audience clearly and decidedly, that reap- ing will follow sowing, and a hearer awakes to the fact that some one is speak- ing ; which is something gained, for it will prevent him conducting his business in church. But the ambition of the preacher is not exhausted. He now in- sists that no one can break the connection between sowing and reaping, and the hearer has identified him as a man with some kind of message. So far good : the two are now face to face. Wheat produces wheat, tares produce tares. It is evident the preacher has got Lold of some truth about consequences in life, and the hearer is resolved that he will have it out of him. It would be wis- dom for every man to examine his sow-, ing, since the reaping is beyond his changing. The hearer is inclined to believe that the preacher is asserting the possibility of changing tares into wheat, and he is prepared to deny the statement. 44 T THE TECHNIQUE OF A SERMON Full of hope, the preacher makes a sally into life to support his principle : the hearer sees at last what he is after, and takes the new position Into judgment. Now the preacher throws off his coat for a final effort, and accomplishes his end. The hearer is finally convinced that the harvest in autumn hangs on the seed-time in spring, and mentions the discovery freely next day as one he made some years ago. The preacher may then con- gratulate himself, for no teacher is satis- fied till he has so lodged an idea in the mind that his people claim it as his own. He has an ample reward for his pains, when his people some day turn upon him and threaten to rend him for criticising an idea which he himself taught them in the agony of his soul, and which they guard jealously as their personal property. The second canon is L^icidity, which lays people under a debt of gratitude. When a willincf and intelliGfent hearer can 45 Hi a %} fi:, THE CURE OF SOULS follow a speaker from his first sentence to his last without effort, he is almost pre- pared to agree with everything he says, even although he should assert that the earth is square. If a distinguished preacher be conspicuously lucid we may be for a moment disappointed, judging the trans- parent water, where the delicate seaweed is seen on the rock below, to be shallow ; but in the next we are charmed, because water so deep has been so clear and revealing, like unto St. John's Gospel. Lucidity is never to be confounded with simplicity : the former is a quality of style, the latter of thought, and it sometimes happens that what is childish in idea may be unintelligible in expression, while what is profound in idea may be plain to a child. Too much can be made of simplicity, and one is moved to protest against that patron- ising phrase, 'the simple Gospel.' The Gospel is everlasting : it is mighty ; it is divine : it is glorious ; — it is not simple. 40 - i (ii! '^-■i lip THE TECHNIQUE OF A SERMON It could not be, for the Gospel declares the nature of God, the sin of man, the way of life, and the wonders of the unseen world. Nor must the Gospel be degraded by childish arguments, ignoble illustra- tions, and base appeals. But the Gospel is lucid in the mouth of the apostles, most of all from the lips of Jesus, and it is fair to demand that it be always preached as in the fifteenth of St. Luke or the last chap- ters of St. John. Lucid speaking is dependent on clear thinking, and no one can expect to put any subject clearly before his fellows till he has seen it himself from beginning to end. It is a pleasant occupation to watch the clouds wreathing themselves around a mountain, and one catches lovely glimpses when the sun shines through the mist. But billowy masses of words, with an oc- casional exquisite revelation, is not profit- able preaching, and, at its best, it can never hold the people who are not espe- 47 T lift- It Fi t' THE CURE OF SOULS cially poetical, but have a passionate desire to know what the speaker means. Poetry is not by any means a good discipline for clarifying the mind, but it would be a good rule that every minister should have a thorough training in mental philosophy, and continue his reading in that develop- ment until he has reached middle age. He must be very careful, however, to keep philosophy out of his sermons, where it is an alien and an offence. [A course of sermons on the meta- physics of faith, followed by another on the philosophy of pray r, will go far to make infidels of a congregation. One wants his drinking-water taken through a filter-bed, but greatly objects to gravel in his glass.] The third canon is Beauty ; and there is no audience which does not expect a certain elevation of style in religious speech, and which does not resent what is vulgar or technical. A preacher does not 48 W THE TECMNTQUE OF A SERMON conciliate an uneducated audience by the use of slang or lapses into buffoonery, nor does he please cultured people by scholastic terms. People have an instinct about what they like to hear from the pul- pit, and their desire is the language of the home and the market-place, raised to its highest power and glorified. Every strong and clean word used of the people as they buy and sell, joy and sorrow, labour and suffer, should be in the preacher's store, but he should add thereto splendid and gracious words from Milton and Spenser, from Goldsmith and Addison, and other masters of the English tongue. The ground may be a homely and serviceable grey, but through it should run a thread of gold. People have a just satisfac- tion in seeing their best words serving in great affairs, and receive a shock of delight when now and again a word of royal car- riage mingles with the throng. Certain preachers enrich their sermons 49 THE CURE OF SOULS with quotations, and a stately line has often fitly crowned an argument. But this habit calls for delicacy and reticence. When the sentence of some loved writer occurs to one as he is thinking out his dis- course, and he uses it as the expression of his own mind, then it becomes a part of the pattern, and is more than justified. When he stops at intervals, and goes in search of such passages, the quotation is then foreign to his thinking, it is a tag of embroidery stitched on the garment. It is said that there are ingenious books which contain extracts — very familiar, as a rule — on every religious subject, so that the minister, having finished his sermon on Faith or Hope, has only to take down this pepper-cister and flavour his some- what bare sentences with literature. If this ignominious tale ^e founded on fact, and be not a scandal of the enemy, then the Protestant Church ought also to have an Index Expurgatorius, and its central 50 THE TECHNIQUE OF A SERMON authorities insert therein books which it is inexpedient for ministers to possess. In this class should be included * The Gar- land of Quotations ' and ' The Reservoir of Illustrations,' and it might be well if the chief of this important department should also give notice at fixed times that such and such anecdotes, having been worn threadbare, are now withdrawn from cir- culation. The cost of this office would be cheerfully defrayed by the laity. Illustrations are of the last value to a sermon, because they both give colour to the style and interest to the thought, and the preacher ought to practise the art with diligence. One man will carry a subject for a week and never once detect an analogy in the life around him, be- cause his mind is hermetically sealed. Another man will be overwhelmed by the wealth of analogy thrust on him from the books he reads, from scenes on the way- side, from the country during an hour's 51 f , I THE CURE OF SOULS ij P 1 i'3 i visit, from five minutes in a manufactory, from the sight of a vessel unloading, from a conversation overheard in a public con- veyance ; nature, life, commerce, litera- ture, conspire to interpret his theme, till amid this embarrassment of riches he hardens his heart and grows fastidious. He is fortunate who can take his choice among competing illustrations till he finds one which brings out the exact point with felicity. It is for the preacher to de- .cide how far he win labour his figure, which can be given either in a sentence or a page, and he will be guided by the com- position of his congregation. One may lay it down as a rule that the details of an illustration should be in inverse propor- tion to the culture of the hearers. With uneducated people illustration has to be expanded into description, with educated it may be condensed into allusion. Upon alert and sensitive minds the speaker sim- ply plays, as one touches the keys of a 52 THE TECHNIQUE OF A SERMON •n n- a piano, when the note sounds without fail ; but sluggish and callous minds he must galvanise by repeated shocks of electricity. Illustration is either panoramic or minia- ture painting, but, on the whole, must be on the larger rather than on the smaller scale. Whether it be description or allu- sion, the illustration is never to be used as a mere opportunity of displaying the speaker's eloquence or learning. It is not a pyrotechnic display before which a crowd stands in admiration, but a lamp by whose light the traveller finds his way along the dark street. The fourth canon is Humanity. One has heard able and pious sermons which might as well have been preached in Mars, for any relation they had to our life and environment. They suggested the address a disembodied spirit might give to his brethren in the intermediate state, where it is alleged we shall exist without phys- ical correspondence. This detached ser- 53 m I lij ' THE CURE OF SOULS mon is the only credible evidence for such an unimaginable state, but otherwise it does not appear effective. While the preacher should be very sparing with /, it ought to be possible for an expert to com- pose a biography of him from a year's sermons. [If the minister desires to give a per- sonal experience he can say ' one,' or ' a man, ' and if his people suspect the iden- tity it is no matter. They have been de- livered from the perpetual 'I' which devastates some men's utterances, and from whose monotonous boom you never escape.] If one live in the country he ought to master ploughing, and sowing, and har- vesting ; if he reside in o ?;eaport, he ought to know the docks, with their strange cargoes and foreign vessels ; if his work be in a manufacturing city, he ought to have learned the processes ; and if his lot be cast in a fishing village, then 54 ^: THE TECHNIQUE OF A SERMON it is a reflection on him should he not understand the sailing of a boat. Tiie minister ought to be soaked in life; not that his sermons may never escape from local details, but rather that, being in contact with the life nearest him, he may state his gospel in terms of human experience. No doctrine of the Christian Faith is worth preserving which cannot be verified in daily life, and no doctrine will need to be defended when stated in human terms— above all, in the language of Home. The principle of vicarious sacri- fice, for instance— that one person should get good from another's sufferings,— may be proved to be true by texts of Holy Scripture, and it may also be shown to be absurd by argument, but it may be placed beyond criticism by reference to a mother, through whose sufferings and self-denial the child lives and comes to strength. It was Jesus' felicitous manner to remove His Evangel from the sphere of abstract 55 ■^* THE CURE OF SOULS discussion, and to assert its reasonableness in the sphere of life. ' What man among you ? ' was His favourite plea. God does exactly what a man does or wants to do when he is at his best. The divinity of a sermon is in proportion to its humanity. Our fifth canon is Charity, for surely if any form of human speech should be free from anger and bitterness it is a sermon. We may not deny that there is a time and use for invective, since we have all read the stern raillery with which the Prophets pursued idolaters. Perhaps the most per- fect passage of sarcasm in literature is the forty-fourth chapter of Isaiah, and of denunciation the twenty-third chapter of St. Matthew's Gospel. There comes a time when carnal and ill-doing people must be punished; and the tongue is a fiery lash. Jesus had done PI is best to conciliate and win the Pharisees from their crooked ways, and now, in despair of their reformation, He lets loose His in- 56 iS! THE TECHNIQUE OF A SERMON a e a :o dignation. Doubtless, in His angev ps in His love, Jesus is our perfect ( va/' Die, but it is well for His disciples to remem- ber that anger is much more risky than love. He is a poor creature who cannot be angry, and who is not ready to chal- lenge wanton evil-doers. The thunder- storm has its function, but let it be brief, and be followed by the clear shining after rain. Sarcasm serves so little pur- pose, and does so much mischief, that it had better be left out of the preacher's medicine-chest. People cannot be turned from sin by gibes, nor scourged into the Kingdom of God by sneers. It seemeth to us, when we are still young, both clever and profitable to make a hearer ashamed of his sin by putting him in the pillory and pelting him with epithets. Such is the incurable perversity of human nature, that the man grows worse under the discipline, and even conceives an un- conscionable dislike to the officer of 57 w THE CURE OF SOULS *;H ^1; It 1:1 I J ,11 .; '•■ It kf justice. As we grow older and see more of life it seems easier to put a man out of conceit with his sin by showing him the winsome and perfect form of good- ness. So full of surprises is human nature that he will loathe himself and be drawn to the preacher, and, best of all, love righteousness. He that scolds in the pulpit, or rails, only irritates ; he that appreciates and persuades wins the day. No man is more heartily detested than a sarcastic minister. And let it not be thought that the rasping preacher is the alone faithful voice. Gentleness can be very severe, and he that has tact may say what he pleases. What people want, of every class and in ever/ land, is com- fort, and he that deals kindly then will have their hearts and their lives. For our sixth canon we take Delivery^ and here we touch on the vexed question of spoken verszcs read sermons. If it be fairly stated it is at once decided. It is 58 THE TECHNIQUE OF A SERMON not whether a sermon ought to be pre- pared with the utmost abihty of the minis- ter, or whether he should say anything that occurs to him on the spur of the moment. Nor is it whether he had better write his sermon, or think it out carefully, and clothe his thought with words in the pulpit. And it is not whether some few men are not able to do both themselves and their thinking greater justice by read- ing what they have prepared to their people. The exact question is, whether, after the average man has studied his sermon, and done his best by it, he ought to read the result or say what is in him to his hearers face to face. The pew is unanimous in favour of delivery, and the pew is right, [Here and there one meets a person who wishes that all ministers would read, but the explanation most likely is that his nervous system had been shat- tered by sitting under a minister who 59 f |!i If Hi :( Ill ifl THE CURE OF SOULS Stammered, or collapsed at critical pas- sages.] No one outside the pulpit ever attempts to influence a popular audience from a paper, and he who makes the attempt from the pulpit suffers gratuitous loss. He does not gather the encouragement of the people's faces, and they miss the appeal of his eyes. He is not able to utilise every puff of wind in the sensitive atmosphere, as one can who holds the rope of his sail in one hand and has his other hand on the helm — alert and watchful. He can catch no happy inspiration : he can avoid no un- expected disaster : he can turn aside to no pleasant bay, but must go straight ahead. An audience creates an atmosphere which, after a little experience, one can feel with such accuracy that he knows when they are with him or against him. Audience and speaker act and react on one another, so that a supercilious and frigid people can chill the most fiery soul, 60 THE TECHNIQUE OF A SERMON while a hundred warm-hearted folk can make a plain man eloquent. The reader has his own advantages, for he could preach his sermon to fifty people in a church holding fifteen hundred, or even address his peroration to a deaf and dumb asylum : the speaker has his disad- vantages, for he must reckon upon an occasional break-down, and he cannot hope to preserve such finish of style as might be found in his manuscript. It may indeed be admitted that speaking is an act of sacrifice in which the preacher gains nothing for himself and may lose much, but in that self-mortification, by which the message gains and he loses, his strength may be found. The last and greatest canon of speaking is Intensity, and it will be freely granted that the want of present-day preaching is spiritual passion. Of intellectual and social passion there is enough in the pulpit, and one has even been amazed at the most 6x THE CURE OF SOULS .rf strange of all enthusiasms, critical passion, when a preacher has become quite hot over the authorship of the Pentateuch. What is wanting, and what cannot be wanted, is the sense of the unseen and eternal — of the everlasting love of God, the atoning sacrifice of our Lord Jesus Christ, the un- speakable value of a single soul, the infi- nite pathos of human life, the tenderness of the Holy Ghost, and the graciousness of the Evangel. Bathed in such springs of profound emotion, no man will be able to preach without tears, which will be all the more affecting if they be in the heart rather than in the eyes. He will need no tricks of acting, for through his broken accents will be heard the voice of God, and he himself will slip out of sight and be forgotten, like the unknown monk who in a European cathedral drops the curtain from a sacred picture and leaves his charge face to face with the Crucified. 62 PROBLEMS OF PREACHING MiPPPPMHIlM ;■' i i itii* It 3{i ■i. iWIPPMHIlM imm CHAPTER III PROBLEMS OF PREACHING It is useful to devote a section of one's working library to Christian Biography, both ancient and modern, and to reinforce it carefully from time to time. We may not gain much inspiration in thinking, or much guidance in working, because the conditions of thought and service are so different ; but this reading acts as a fly- wheel in our feverish religious life, in checking hasty impulses and saving us from fits of depression. There are mo- ments, however, when the calmness and regularity of the worthies of last genera- tion drive us to despair, as when one reads from the diary of the Rev. Joseph Tomlin- son, in the memorial volume issued after 65 i'l ' li It' THE CURE OF SOULS his death, and much valued by his congre- gation : — * December lo {Afonday). — Rose at 5.30, although tempted to remain in bed owing to the darkness and cold. Completed the first head of my sev- enth sermon in the course on Sanctification before breakfast. Have now sermons prepared for the next three months, and note with thank- fulness that I can produce three sheets hourly without fail.' The good man died in the fifties, at the age of eighty-six, having preached till ten days before his death, and never having been once out of his pulpit through sick- ness ; and one has a distinct vision of him moving about with great authority and dignity among his people, and a vague recollection of his thundering in a sermon against those who denied creation in six literal days, — ' whicii showed to what a height of insolent audacity infidelity was rising in those days.' This early rising, which is a marked 66 PROBLEMS OF PREACHING feature in such biographies, and a needless irritation unto the generations follow- ing—this turning out of sermons by machinery, in longhand-writing without an erasure, and sometimes on pink paper this immunity from perplexing questions — this infallibility in doctrine, as well as the fixed, smooth, untroubled face at the be- ginning of the book, suggest an atmos- phere very different from that in which we think and labour. There is a sense in which preaching must be the same in all ages, dealing as it does with the everlasting Evangel of the Divine Love. There is a sense in which preaching must differ with every age, ad- dressed as it ought to be to the changing conditions of life and thought. Christ is not one, but many ; and therein He has proved Himself the Son of Man and the Saviour of the world. There is the Eternal Spirit, which is the Spirit of God, and there is the Time spirit, which is the spirit 67 T (: ilj THE CURE OF SOULS of man. He who feels the breath of the human spirit only is a secularist — there are such, although they know it not, in the Christian pulpit, — and he who feels the breath of ihe Divine Spirit only is an ascetic. It is best when the soul lies open to both inlluences, for so the preacher is in touch with God and man, a go-between and mediator. It ought to be frankly recognised that preaching is a much harder task for us than it was for our fathers. The critical spirit was not then abroad, but was con- fined to students' rooms. Neither accept- ed rules of Christian living nor funda- mental doctrines of Christian faith were questioned. Controversy had only to do with ecclesiastical affairs or conflicting theories of orthodoxy. Preaching moved in an atmosphere of social conventionality and religious authority, when people knew what to expect and the minister said what was expected. The channel was well 68 PROBLEMS OF PREACHING buoyed and lit, and the vessel never went beyond the bar, so that the river-trips were quite safe and uneventful. To-day a re- ligious teacher makes for the open sea, and people feel in every sermon the swell of the Atlantic. It is an exhilarating and invigorating experience, but has its hazards for hearers and its anxieties for the preacher. Never could there have been any time when he required to be so fear- less and honest, and at the same time so reverent and careful. When a man carries his own life and the lives of others in his hand, he may well pray for humility and the mind of Christ. One very practical question is, how far the preacher is to for- get his own individicality, or how far he must subordinate it to the general claims of truth. It may be contended, with some show of reason, that a teacher of Chris- tianity is bound, in the discharge of his duty, to expound every doctrine of the faith in order, and to explain the various 69 IF THE CURE OF SOULS ihi 1^ U experiences of the soul — as a professor of physics must take his students through statics and dyna nics, although his own preference may be for heat or light. On the other hand, it is ever to be remembered that the atmospheric conditions of science and religion are different, and that a minister cannot teach doctrines with which he has no affinity, or moods through which he has never passed. What may be called the universal theory of preaching used to obtain, and still lies as a burden on many ministers. None can tell, except those who have gone through the purgatory, what it was for one man to hammer out, bit by bit, a sermon on Justification by Faith, while he longed to be in the Sermon on the Mount ; or for another to struggle with a Beatitude which was ever eluding the doctrinal net, while he would fain have been revelling in the early chapters of the Roman Epistle. Ministers are still living, and 70 PROBLEMS OF PREACHING not yet on the retired list, who can recall the time when the following was the pre- scription for a sermon : — Rec I Tmct. Hodgii . . oz. j ^quae ad . . . oz. vj Misce et signetur. One table-spoonful morning and afternoon. The colouring material might vary with the communion, but ^he principle of the compositioi. would be the same. Any variation on this formula was regarded with suspicion as theological quackery, and condemned by authorities. One re- sult of this regime was to utterly dis- hearten some young ministers, and move them to abandon their life-work in despair. What happened in one case must have happened in many, but it is hoped will soon be incredible. A lad goes from a theological college, who h s nor yet found his metier, and has never preached a sermon. What his, message may be 71 THE CURE OF SOULS \U Is I p 5) r -i ; ! neither he nor any man can tell, but he is quivering with ideas and dreams. He is appointed assistant in a city church, and counts himself fortunate because the minister is distinguished for personal piety and devoted service in the Evnngei. From time to time he has to preach, and under tuo direction and example of his chief he takes in turn the cluM'ilcal texts of the evangelical fiJth, to find that they do not hold him, and that he does not hold the people. He has searchings of heart and gloomy forebodings. Is any man fit to be a messenger of Christ who can be dull, commonplace, 'feckless,' on 'Behold the Lamb of God, Who taketh away the sin of the world ' ? One week he goes afield, and comes on the raising of the widow's son, and in- stantly catches fire. He creates the situ- ation in his heart, and cannot rest till he has committed to paper the emotions that possess and master him. A year ago he 72 ii Hi !!H PROBLEMS OF PREACHING had lost his mother. On Sunday he enters the pulpit charged with power, and with his first sentence the people are welded to him in a common sympathy. His subject is an incident which cleanses, sweetens, in- spires humanity, and he knows what it is to preach. Next morning he receives six letters— to the end of his life he well re- members that budget: one is from a mother whose son has been spared through a dangerous illness, to say he had ex- pressed her thankfulness; one is from a mother whose son died, to tell him that he has convinced her of the sympathy of Jesus — both women want to see him ; one is from a son whose mother is dead, and who counts her life the means of his sal- vation—he thought she was in church with him ; one is from a son who has sinned against his mother, and he is going home to see her that day— both men will drop in to see him if he doesn't mind. All four will have a question to ask— How did 73 SKSsa THE CURE OF SOULS It -■ ^, ,i h. H ^1 lit i»->4_ lie know ? The two other letters are anonymous. One from * a well-wisher,' anxious to know how any minister can reconcile it with his conscience to offer hungry souls empty sentiment instead of bread ; and the other from ' a simple Christian,' complaining that no reference has been • jje to conversion, which the writer points out is the vital point in the story of the widow's son. Both letters state that the sermon has given much dis- satisfaction to the congregation. Had he been ten years older he would have put the two letters in the fire without a thought, and the four in his desk, to cheer him when he was weary. Four letters were positive — testifying to good received : they value 250 marks each ; two letters were negative — testifying to no good re- ceived : they value o. If so many pjople have been curr:d. it i;: oi. no importance that so m?ny ma*<: pe< pit criticise the medicine. The tcblh'jony of one man, PROBLEMS OF PREACHING that he was blind and now saw, obliterates the opposition of the Pharisees who insist on a priori grounds that Jesus could not have opened the man's eyes. But this lad, more impressed than he will be later in life by ' well-wishers ' and 'simple Christians,' consults his chief; and he, being of the old conventional school, and having possibly missed the appeal to two classes, is shaken, and thinks there was a ' want' He advises that, whatever may be the subject, the Gospel should be brought in at some point, and by the Gospel he means the ' plan of salvation.' Nor is the good man requiring what he does not practise, for it was his glory to have found the doctrine of the Holy Trinity in the Book of Esther and the Atonement in Ecclesiastes, and it ought to be added that the people were edified by both dis- coveries. The beginner now understands that he is at liberty to deal with any subject— 75 Vi 1 r THE CURE OF SOULS I f ■! II I: If a lilt II i 1 ii :l-i 1^ ■ character, intellect, or duty — if he has an evanofelical conclusion. His next sermon is on David and Jonathan, and his eulo- gium on an unselfish and heroic friendship moves the congregation visibly ; but when, in fidelity to his instructions, he explains at the close that David is Christ and Jon- athan the sinner, he feels his power depart from him instantly, and even the spiritual do not sustain him with any enthusiasm. An audience has a sensitive ear, and de- tects the transition from reality to un- reality without fail. He therefore has to decide between preaching what he ought or what he desires, and in such circum- stances he had better preach according to his bent, without fear or reserve. Because a man must fulfil himself, and if God has made him St. James he must not nullify himself by attempting to be St. F^aul. Wings suggest the air and fins the water, and although there be amphib- ious animals, yet one prefers to see a swan 76 PROBLEMS OF PREACHING on a lake rather than on the dry land. We are bound to credit Providence with some intelligence of design, and if the Bible has an immense variety of truths, and the human mind an immense variety of gifts, then it is reasonable to conclude that there may be some correspondence between the message and the messenger. For soiiie time the m ' THE CURE OF SOULS 1 * U i\n h M ! m P if li ! ^1 i 1i home. The clay luis eonie when the hear- ers estimate the preacher as if he were a singer, declaring him to he ' in good form,' or * a little flat' The one indispensable quality of the former sermon was sound- ness — of the contemporary sermon that it be interesting. If the speaker has a light touch and a graceful manner, if he be bright and vivacious, above all, if he be never tiresome, then he will be approved. The age works and lives at high pressure for six days, and on the seventh reposes to be wearied afresh ; and just as it has the * new ' journalism with its paragraphs, and the * new ' magazines with their short piquant stories, for leisure moments of the week, the age requires the ' new ' sermon for Sunday. One does not of course blame the a ore because it insists on a living sermon, but one does blame the preacher v/ho dis- credits the noblest themes by dulness. There are two men who astonish us : one 80 III 1 PROBLEMS OF PREACHING who has ahnost nothing to give, yet serves up his morsel so daintily, and another who, having so much, offers it so coarsely. Perhaps the hearer nowadays has ^-rown into an intellectual bon vivant ; but good cooking is very appetising, and the cook has earned some reward. Perhaps one ought, as we were told in childhood, to be able to eat anything, but it requires a very strong stomach to face half-raw meat. Some strong men, ])oth in learninp- and piety, really do al] that is possible to alienate an audience by their style and manner, and they can have no complaint because they are passed by and left alone. It need not be because they are solid : it may be because they are uncouth. For there are certain concessions, besides an easy style that even the most scholarly and rigid preacher may make to this gen- eration without any loss of self-respect. One is to choose an attractive title for his sermon, and announce it before the text. 8i ^> .^a. %i '^- ^ ,0. o V^%.^,^^ IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) I // «,*\ ■> j*-,^ L^ :A f/i A 1.0 I.I 2.2 i4£ 1^ 2,0 1^ IM 1^ "tv v^ Am / ■a '3 > / / yS« Photographic Sciences Corporation 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER NY. 14580 (716) 872-4503 "Q :\ \ W^ ' '■ ii f !'f ' .; ,..} THE CURE OF SOULS A title Is a happy device, for it lets the people know th; subject, and saves them from weary guessing through a historical introduction, and it gives them a measure by which to check the speaker's relevancy. Another is to acquire the art of elocution, which really is not born with us, but takes much learning. When a person says that he likes a speaker, he as often simply means that he has heard him, and it is not amazing the finest passages lose their force when every third word is inaudible. And a third quite pardonable expedient is to arrange related sermons in sets or * courses,' because the development and sequence of the subject sustains the inter- est and gives a fillip to appetite. [Four, or at most six, sermons are suf- ficient for one set : the people lose heart at the prospect of twelve on * St. Paul's Idea of Faith,' or sixteen on 'Job.' Dis- cretion has to be used in the title. I could not personally recommend one mentioned 8a • '! PROBLEMS OF PREACHING to me by a pious minister, ' The Limbs of the Almighty,' although he assured me that it had enabled him to include some strange texts, and that it had been much blest] Above all must the speaker of to-day be clear, terse, forcible ; in a word, real, with- out cant or superfluity— a good leader- wnter on religion. Certain expedients are, however, to be deprecated, and ought to be shunned like sin. One is wilful eccentricity, wherein a preacher v/ithout wit or genius, or force or earnestness, outrages every canon of good manners in the pulpit in order to tickle the groundlings and secure a crowd. Another is vulgar anecdotage about him- self or his family or his experiences,— en- forced by gross personalities. Another is sensationalism of subject, wherein a teach- er, leaving the Evangel of Christ, lives upon the crimes of the week, hunting the columns of the evening papers for some heading which will gather a mob and a col- 83 ^ .rq v"i m Ij; ; I ; I J v^J 11 f: ^^ I' ! % )i ;l :!! i ;i ' THE CURE OF SOULS lection. The excuse which such charla- tans offer for this travesty of preaching is the number of people gathered within hearing of the Gospel, but they ought to know perfectly well that no Gospel is heard and no good done. A congrega- tion fed on this highly spiced food will relish nothing good or wholesome, but will ever demand hotter and fiercer condi- ments, till at last the preacher can no longer stimulate the debauched palate, and is deserted. Against religious sensation- alism, :?u^r^ sayings, startling advertise- ments, profane words and irreverent pray- ers, the younger ministry must make an unflinching stand, for the sake of the Church and the world, for the sake of our profession and ourselves. Another problem is Secularity, and on it there may be considerable difference of opinion among equally honest and relig- ious men. Ought a preacher, as a rule, to keep within the subjects which were 84 PROBLEMS OF PREACHING the burden of Christ, or ought he to take ling wil considerable latitude in sffaiis of the day ? It is a very practical question, and since it embraces a wide range of instances, politics may be taken as a test case. Suppose it be assumed that every minister is also a patriot, and devoted to the commonwealth, is it his part to discuss politics in the pulpit, or, while retaining his personal convictions, and giving them effect by his own vote, is it for him to be absolutely neutral in pub- lic speech ? On the one side it can be urged with much force that when a man becomes a minister he ought not to forego one privilege or fail in one duty of citizen- ship ; that, as a leader of men, he ought to guide his people in this high affair; that politics, of all departments, needs the presence and influence of clean-handed, single-hearted men ; and that, whatever be the case with the Church, the Kingdom of God has to do with the whole life of the 85 11 r II i THE CURE OF SOULS ^i it f community. The conclusion therefore is that a minister ought to be in the very thick of politics. On the other side it may be pleaded that it is hardly possible for a minister to take any share in politics without being involved in the doubtful compromises and manoeuvres to which all parties are in- clined ; that his habits of thought and lines of study to a large extent incapaci- tate him for practical politics ; that, while there are exceptions, most ministers who have become politicians have lost in spirituality and failed in their own work ; that the abstention of one class from active government, for certain good reasons, may be a strength, and cannot be any ap- preciable weakness, to the State ; and that Jesus, although devoted to His nation, and living in very trying circumstances, kept Himself markedly aloof from the politics of His day. And now one rea- sons that the ministers had better follow 86 PROBLEMS OF PREACHING the example of the Lord and the Apos- tles. If he be himself led to this idea of his duty he will reap one singular advantage. It will be allowed him, as one secluded from the strife of parties, and as one against whom no charge of partiality can be brought, to inspire his people from time to time with the principles of righteousness which lie behind all measures, with the glorious traditions of the past, in which the whole nation shares, with the passion for the country's good which ought to stir every one of her children, with that feel- ing of brotherhood which welds all classes into unity. He will stand between jealous interests and contending parties as a mediator making peace, as a prophet lead- ing into the paths of righteousness. Our next problem touches the modern outlook upon human history which has been given to the Church in our day, and may be called Solidarity. In our boy- 87 RSB iii i! THE CURE OF SOULS hood the Gospel was understood to deal with the individual, now it addresses itself to the mass. Religion once consisted in saving one's self, now it stands in sav- ing your neighbour. Christianity once was satisfied with a healthy soul, it has begun to demand healthy houses. Preach- ing concerned itself with the spiritual ex- periences of penitence, faith, forgiveness, holiness ; it has travelled to-day into ques- tions of capital and wages, international arbitration, reorganisation of society, and the improvement of living. It is not now the individual but the race who is before the preacher. Two absolutely different sermons, with not one point of contact save Christ, could be preached to-day by an individualist of the old school and a solidarist of the new, from the text, * Come unto Me, all ye who labour and are heavy laden.' One would treat of a person's weary conscience, the other of the multitude's weary life. The 88 PROBLEMS OF PREACHING criticism on the former would be, * Is he living in the present world ? ' on the latter, ' Does he believe that there is a world to come ? ' When tides meet there is broken water, and many are tossed in their minds as to whether the pulpit ought to give its strength to the regeneration of the in- dividual or of society. Certainly it were a departure from the method of our Lord to ignore the soul, with its awful respon- sibilities and immense possibilities, to starve the inner life, which is the spring of all good thinking and working, to be silent regarding the things unseen and eternal. Suppose by the insistence of the Church it could be brought to pass — which is a vain expectation — that every man should, in any measurable period of time, be well fed and dressed and housed, should be free from disease, idleness, weariness, should have equal rights, privileges, op- portunities with his neighbour, then this 89 IF THE CURE OF SOULS u i Hi m ^ !. ;l r t; pi •« THE CURE OF SOULS reflection that all this railing and girding at doctrine is simply one of the innumer- able forms of modern cant, and that the- ology is an absolute intellectual necessity. Whenever any student has collected a number of facts in his own department, whether his science be physical or meta- physical, he \\^ill be compelled by the laws of his mind to arrange his facts and dis- cover their principle. Theology has ex- actly the same reason to exist as physics or psychology, with the additional advan- tage of an intense human interest. What is the genesis of a doctrine ? Any doc- trine of the first order is the answer to an imperative demand of reason ; it is the best attainable explanation of a spiritual fact, historical or experimental. Why not rest in the fact without formulating any- thing ? Because we are reasonable beings, and desire to give reason full play in the higher reaches of knowledp-e. Whenever the mind is awake, one asks questions Jo8 THE THEORY OF RELIGION concerning the why and the how of this fact. One examines the circumstances, and collects evidence, and sums up the results, and states the conclusion in a formula. Your formula is theology, and is the homage reason does to truth. No one can hope to teach religion, in even its simplest form, with permanent success, without a competent knowledge of theology, any more than a physician can practise medicine without a knowl- edge of physiology, or an engineer build a bridge who has not learned mathematics. Without a system in the background of his mind, a preacher's ideas will have no intellectual connection or artistic propor- tion. Without a system underlying his sermons he cannot grip and impress his hearers. His own creed, instead of being a microcosm, will be a chaos, and his sermons between January and December will not be a picture growing to perfection of perspective and form, but a k deido- 109 rt THE CURE OF SOULS I ^ scope of whirling and amazing colours. This type of preacher may have an auc'*- ence enthusiastic and admiring, but he has no pupils on whom he stamps the lines of truth. You cannot trace him in the children of his teaching, because the likeness is so variable, just as the fash- ion of his own countenance was never two weeks the same. To-day he contradicts what he said yesterday : — but he is not in- consistent, he is only incoherent. Hav- ing no compass of thought he is carried away by fancies and speculations in all directions, making many stormy voyages, and sometimes, without doubt, coming home with good merchandise. [One must distinguish between the teacher who affirms and denies the same thing, like an equation where the plus and minus signs are equal, and the result is :r=o, and a teacher who gives in turn opposite poles of the same truth, and xio THE THEORY OF RELIGION whose world of thought is rounded and solid.] From the unsystematic thinker people may get inspiration — which is a great gain ; they cannot hope for exposition. Of course a system^ in its bare outlines is unsightly and repulsive, and people have complained, with fair reason, of the dry bones of doctrine. An uncovered skele- ton is certainly a very unlovely object, and defies the art of speech, but it lies behind the rounded grace of Venus de Medici, and alone sustains the weight of language. How far the closely knit and symmetrical form ought to appear through the flesh and blood may be matter of taste, there being, so to say, masculine and feminine contours of thought, but luxuriance and winsomeness must rest on strength. When people congratulate themselves because a sermon has been clear, it really means that it has been the- III mIIwmMIui mss I ^! H THE CURE OF SOULS V :\ i A !i i hi ological ; and this may be true, although there be not one word of theology in it from beginning to end. The vine hid the trellis-work. Theology has had wild speculations and many eccentricities, like every other sci- ence, but her master efforts, by which she must be judged, are strenuous attempts of reason to grasp the principles which are behind the phenomena of religion. It is open to urge that doctrines have grown antiquated and need to be recast : it is ab- surd to deny the necessity or uti'^ty of theology, as it is most unfair to ignore or disparo'^e the remarkable ability which has gone to the creation of this science, and which was, in the catastrophe of the Roman Empire, the salvation of letters. They are unworthy of their profession who join in the Philistine outcry against theology, and allow it to be spoken of as something not worthy of serious study. If it be praiseworthy to classify beetles, 112 % " ii i liiii| H -(1 i iiiiiiii r m il iiii nfiBTtWMi i l ii^jiiiiijil THE THEORY OF RELIGION and specialists among the coleoptera speak solemnly of their subject, it may be allowed for one science to reason regard- ing God and the soul. One can hardly imagine a greater sin against light within the Church than any indifference or enmity towards theology, or a more fla- grant outrage against the idea of a Univer- sity than the omission or exclusion of one science alone, and that the queen of all, and the one in which all others coheie and are crowned. We are all apt, as preachers, to be brow- beaten and reduced to silence by the im- pudent assertion that an average audience has no interest in theology, and will only listen to us upon the astounding condition that we do not give them the one thing we are supposed to have thoroughly learned. They expect from a historian history, from a geologist geology, but from a teacher of i;heology — and we are the only teachers of theology for the public— 113 ^^■.MiiwinWijiaiiii**"" ■i j >fc4^.,.ii, ^ www fc V . r ^ « *N *«- ,>wfc -^ < il THE CURE OF SOULS anything, however remote from the sub- ject, provided it be neither very solid nor thoughtful. May I suggest that the dumb public is often libelled by blatant spokes- men, and means to say something different. Examine the literature which finds favour with the people, and it would not occur to you that the people dislike theology. Within the last few years, for instance, four works of fiction have excited great attention, and been read on every hand. One is Johi Ingle saiit, which contains a better account of Quietism than you will find anywhere outside Alfred Vaughan's Mystics. The second is the Story of an African Farm, throwing a strange light on the wooden and unlovely theology of the Dutch Boers. The third is John Ward, Preacher, which is a powerful in- dictment of an extreme type of Calvinism which has in the past often paralysed the life and energy of the Presbyterian com- munion. The fourth is that remarkable "4 ^C3^ajr;;~yg:;:..^. -,> , 3jyiya ^- THE THEORY OF RELIGION and over-estimated book, Robert Elsrncre, and every one knows that Mrs. Hum- phry Ward has been simply discussing, under the guise of fiction, the problem of historical Christianity, which is weighing heavily on many minds to-day. This school of fiction is a phenomenon, and, so far as one knows, is a new thing in letters. It is impossible to mistake its significance or to deny the desire it meets in the pub- lic mind. One may have his own opinion about the merits of the books. One may be doubtful about their taste. One may also view with apprehension the habit of popularising theology to the point of vul- garity, and wince when the resurrection of our Lord is discussed in drawing-rooms, and the miraculous decided between the soup and the fish. This is from the cloister to the market-place with a venge- ance, and thoughtful people must have anxieties. Both Agnostics and Christians may desiderate the former reserve, and "5 *i.-M)mimmmtiiimimmm ^ 'I ^i' Irl if . THE CURE OF SOULS neither would like to have the veil ut- terly torn from the Holy of Holies in the soul. One may also be haunted by the con- viction that the combination of fiction and theology may result in the decay of an art and the travesty of a science. But the trend of the graver intelligence among the public is evident, and it is distinctly towards those great questions which form the substance of the Christian faith, and lie at the foundation of religion. People will lie becalmed in morals, and even in physical science, weary unto death, but if any one dares to deal with questions of faith after an understanding fashion, he has the wind with him. But my evidence on this point is not con- fined to a few phenomenal novels, which are now giving place to other works of pseudo fiction on the second burning ques- tion of the race — for there are only two — Love and Religion. Four books have lately appealed more or less powerfully to ii6 THE THEORY OF RELIGION the more serious public intelligence, and each has had a collateral connection with the problems of theology. One is Mr. Balfour's Foundations of Belief ; another Mr. Pearson's National Life and Charac- ter, the prophecy of pessimism ; the third, Mr. Kidd's Social Evolution, which is the first recognition, on scientific grounds, of religion as a factor in the development of society ; and Professor Drummond's Ascent of Man, an attempt to evangelise Evolu- tion. No leading review is considered complete without an unvarnished theo- logical article, and its editor is happy if he can organise a controversy on the future state or a miracle of Jesus, enlisting as delighted contributors all kinds of people, from retired scientists to Ministers of the Crown. Draper's History of the Conflict between Religion and Science has rone through more editions than any other book of the International Science Series, and it would be interesting to know how 117 THE CURE OF SOULS m \ Lux Mtmcii compares in sale with any book on politics of the last ten years. If the pulpit be afraid of theology, the editors are not, and they are an infallible barome- ter of popular taste. The air is as theo- logical to-day as in those early centuries when men settled the niceties of the Nicene Creed with their fists, and the religious world was divided into two camps by a diphthong. Any one desiring to preach theology has an audience as large as that which waits on the physicists, but he can only hold it by fulfilling two conditions. The first is very reasonable — it is that he has mastered, or has at least a competent knowledge of, his science. Preachers have not always this qualification, and intelligent hearers have discovered that their teachers knew little more than themselves, and only led in dogmatism and declamation. We must recognise the fact that intellectual culture is being more widely diffused every year, Ii8 THE THEORY OF RELIGION and that a considerable proportion of the younger generation read theology. They are curious about the latest theory on the Song of Solomon ; they are perfectly ac- quainted with the dual authorship of Isaiah; they have their doubts regarding the authenticity of Second Peter ; they have tried to trace the documents of the Hexateuch. It may be a clerk in a town who has access to a library, or a school- master in some college who has spent his spare cash in books. One must not presume on the ignorance of the most rustic people ; there may be one reader in the little church, and there will be six soon. Others may wish to go into the question of orders, or the doctriiie of the Sacraments, or the history of creeds, or the theory of the 'higher life.' It is the Renaissance of theology, with all the hope- fulness and restlessness of a new move- ment. These amateur students will turn to us, and they have a right to expect our 119 i THE CURE OF SOULS w-m'M I 1; t" lit help. If it appears that after a careful training, and with a life consecrated to such study, we know less than the inquirers, they will not trouble us farther, but we shall be despised like a doctor who needs to be taught by his own patient. If, on the other hand, we are so far left to ourselves as to frown on such study and label it dangerous, then we shall be suspected of dishonesty. We must accept the age into which Providence has cast us, and enter into its spirit. One can hardly imagine any more honourable task than to meet its wants and to guide its inquiries. There are ages whijh have been saved from sin by evangelism ; this is an age which must be saved from scepticism by knowledge. One of course remembers the enormous extent of theology, and I am not suggest- ing that each minister be an original worker. The day was when one man would write a commentary on the whole Bible and ail subjects therein, from its 120 THE THEORY OF RELIGION prophecies to its geography, but this were now a labour of Hercules. Theology, like every other science, has been divided into departments, and each has its own specialist. One takes Old Testament His- tory, another Prophecy, a third the Gos- pels, a fourth the Epistles. There is dogma, exegesis, Church history, ethics, palaeography. To-morrow there may be farther subdivision, until each book in the Bible, and each period in the history of the Church, and each doctrine of the faith has its master. We must accept the dis- tinction between a professed scholar and a working minister, as we do between a con- sulting physician and a general practitioner. We are the general practitioners, who owe a debt of gratitude to the experts, and can best discharge it by using their work. Our sphere is that of theological middle- men, who will distribute among the public the selected and assorted produce of the schools. We must not only overtake the 121 THE CURE OF SOULS i5s '111 'irM ^^1 S'i." is »Tjf past, but also keep abreast of the present, using every spare moment to read and digest the latest and best theology, that our people may have the full benefit of that great revival of thought which is making the Bible to blossom like the rose. It would be a happy enterprise for the Church to supplement the efforts of her working clergy by sending experts to lec- ture in the larger towns and, so far as pos- sible, in country centres, on the chief themes of theology. This expedient would confer a double benefit, for it would rear a race of believing scholars and would convey the latest results of theological science to our people, untainted by that spirit of speculation which revels in base- less theories, and that insidious unbelief which quietly eliminates the supernatural. One would also like to see a series of theological handbooks, written by compe- tent men and in a vigorous style, so that 122 ^ THE THEORY OF RELIGION any man, learned or simple, in our land could secure as reliable and interesting in- formation on theology as on physics or physiology. If men are now awaking to the claims of the queen of sciences, the credit can hardly be given to the Church, but if her children have to go to unbeliev- ing scholars for satisfaction, the sin of such a disaster will lie at the Church's door. The second condition of success is that we place our science before a cultured generation in a becoming dress. It is a shame when theology is more poorly clothed than comparative anatomy cr political economy, and her savants cannot be acquitted of carelessness. They have been so anxious to secure light that they have beer, indifferent to sweetness. Any- thing more barbarous than the jargon of the Puritan theologians, with a few excep- tions, can hardly be imagined. Owen is their most representative divine, and the 123 ■^ THE CURE OF SOULS w, h ■ !i > fi most tedious and uncouth writer upon one's shelf. Yet the Puritans lived at the close of the Augustan period of English letters, when Shakespeare was just dead and Milton was writing Paradise Lo^t. It is one of the reproaches of Pari;uai thought, both former and latter, that while it has added enormously to the- ology, it has contributed only one book. The Pilgrims Progress, and possibly Howe's Living Temple, to literature. The explanation certainly does not lie in any necessary divorce between culture and the- ology. Erasmus, the pioneer of modern theology, and that beautiful spirit. Sir Thomas More, both lovers of lef^rning and children of faith, attempted an eireni- con. But almost immediately the the- ologians and the Humanists parted com- pany, and since then the theologians, with some fine exceptions, have contemned letters, and the Humanists have had their merry jest at theology. But that is no 124 I ■••: »■. ■ THE THEORY OF RELIGION reason why words should not wait on the theologian like nimble servitors as readily as on the poet. He cannot indeed be a theologian unless he be also, in spirit, a poet ; for poetry and Christianity live and move and have their being in the same region. Theology, after all, has had her stylists, and it is a liberal education to read her masters. The majesty of Hook- er, the brilliance of Jeremy Taylor, the sweetness of Leighton, the purity of Newman, the incisive vigour of South, the aptness of Bushnell, and the force of . that untrained theologian John Bunyan, are a delight and a model. Theology which has not been in the main current of letters is invariably stranded in some creek and forgotten ; the men who added culture to science live and flourish. [Samuel Rutherford and Archbishop Leighton were of the same period — both fine scholars and finer saints. Ruther- ford's theology is unread, while Leighton's 135 ' f |! i I. h t ) ! 'i f *i Iti rf m iris. v. ) - i THE CURE OF SOULS 6'/. Pe^er is on every theologian's shelf, be- cause the one is literature and the other is not] People will decline to taste the- ology barbarously served when Professor Huxley has been making natural science as fascinating as a romance. Letters take a swift revenge on the arrogant theologian by denying him their aid in his hour of need, and teaching him the useful lesson that there must be no separation between culture and religion. It remains for each minister to decide how far he will give distinct instruction in theology to his people, but he has no alternative about leavening his preaching with theology. Just as the great masters in art used to paint the nude figure com- plete in every line and muscle before they draped it with garments for some Christ, so must the most accurate theology under- lie every sermon, to secure it with intellect- ual consistency and to invest it with spirit- 126 1 THE THEORY OF RELIGION ual force. But when one has said his last word for the study of theology, there still remains for the Christian teacher another qualification, without which his theology will be vain, and, indeed, he cannot be a theologian. Between our science and every other there is this difference, that in other departments of knowledge one must know to love, in Christian theology one must love to know. In vain will be every place of learning, however thoroughly equipped, and any masters, however schol- arly ; in vain will be all books and f«tudy, if the soul have no spiritual vision. 'What availeth it to know the doctrine of the Holy Trinity,' says an ancient Father, * if we have not humility?' He can under- stand truth whose mind has been illu- minated by the Spirit of God and his heart cleansed by the Cross of Christ. It is good to use all the means of learning with diligence, but best to live in fellowship 127 SQiLtUibiiiJ ]im: iM INSTITUTE. 'i 'I'-il THE CURE OF SOULS with Jesus, for he only who comes forth from the secret place of God will carry with him the Living Word and the Divine Unction. 't- ii J28 THE NEW DOGMA ^Wf Pt 1 ll . *' BffTi* l!''"' i ij i |- ' \ II t CHAPTER V THE NEW DOGMA Every student of Church history is aware that theological science has not de\ loped along a straight line, but in a course of progressive and sometimes intersecting circles. Those circles differ in character, some completing themselves in a shorter period than others, or embracing a smaller province of the Church ; but, as a rule, each has four segments, and by taking an observation one can tell where his age is in this evolution of thought. There is the pre-doctrinal period, when truth is held in solution and has not yet crystallised. The Church has no doctrine regarding the Person of Christ, or His Sacrifice, or the Holy Trinity, or the his- 131 Ilhi :i ^.i If ii .1, I li I ; I*- ■ F THE CURE OF SOULS tory of man. The Christian simply be- lieves in Christ, and lives with Him, and learns from Him, and follows Him unto death, because Christ has loosed the power of his sin, or comforted his sore heart, or fulfilled his spiritual aspirations, or cast light on the darkness of the grave. The Church is not yet self-conscious, nor has she realised her faith. Her position is, with St. Peter, ' Lord, unto Whom can we go but unto Thee? Thou hast the words of everlasting life.' This is the age of Mysticism. Then comes the doctrinal period, when the truth is precipitated and takes its first visible form. Under the pressure of speculation, or on the attack of unbe- lief, the Church pauses in the current of her emotions and inquires what she believes. [Whom she believes, she knows, and Him through every change of creed she ever believes, returning from her furthest 132 THE NEW DOGMA journeys of theological science to His side.] There is ample liberty of discussion, smce there are no precedents for refer- ence, no standards of authority. The traveller has no map of guidance, for the land has never been surveyed, although people have lived and rejoiced in its fatness. Slowly and painfully, with fierce intellectual tumult, and often with dis- graceful commotions, the Church discovers her mind. [One may never know what is in his mind till some one expresses it for him, hence our gratitude to a poet who makes us articulate.] Consider how the most elaborate and complete doctrine of the Catholic Faith, the doctrine of our Lord's Person, was evolved from the consciousness of the Church. An acute and pious scholar denied the Deity of Christ, and the Church received a shock of surprise. 133 THE CURE OF SOULS I 1 !•/ k ,f After keen discussion tlie Church, in Council assembled, declared that Christ was very God. But the question of our Lord's Person had now been made matter of debate, and reason must work it out to the end. Another ecclesiastic, as might be expected, now denied Christ's ' man- ity, and the Church affirmed that . was true Man as well as true God. It almost followed, as reason sounded her way through this sublime mystery, that some one would in that case assert that Jesus must be two persons, and after delibera- tion the Church asserted the one person of Jesus. So it came to pass that a fourth theologian assumed one nature in Jesus, and once more the Church gathered and laid down the two natures of the Lord. After this fashion was the doctrine of Christ's person wrought out by valid and repeated processes of reason — an inevita- ble and orderly evolution — and the work of the four Councils remains unto this 134 THE NEW DOGMA day. Instead of the individual Christian saying, 'I helieve,' the Chureh meets and repeats tlie Nieene Creed. This is the age of Dogmatis77i. Next follows the post-doctrinal period, which is not capable of exciting human interest, and is afflicted with an insuf- ferable weariness. The doctrine which flowed molten from hearts fired with divine love has now run down into a mould and settled into a cast-iron shape. During this period scholars give them- selves to the application of the doctrine in directions which were never intended by its author, and to the battle of details, most of which are of quite minor impor- tance. The doctrine ceases to be a living reality, and becomes a mere intellectual proposition, which, if a man hold, he shall be saved, even though he be an open sinner; which, if he deny, he shall be damned, even though he be a radiant saint. This is the age of Scholasticism, 135 J 1 1 I il; 1 it' i * :! '1 if:i i- rr- I ^ I i ; I ! THE CURE OF SOULS [It is good to remember that, however cold and detached from life any doctrine may seem to us in our day, it must once have expressed the profound conviction of believing Christians, and that the kernel contained in its husk is eternal. There is no doctrine of the first order which does not enshrine a living idea of religion.] Lastly comes a time when earnest men, growing weary, not of the principles, but of their forms, propose to make a clean sweep of dogma. They raze the building to the ground, and then proceed to closely examine the foundations. The Church goes back again to the elementary facts of revelation and experience, to test their authenticity and reality, and to see what use can be made of them for the good of the individual soul and the common spir- itual life. This spirit is not of necessity arbitrary or disloyal ; it may be most pious and humble. Nor need it be iconoclastic: 136 THE NEW DOGMA doctrine may be tried only to be approved. This is the age of Criiicis7n. There is first the age of St. John, then the age of Athanasius, then the age of the schoolmen, then comes the age of Eras- mus. After which another circle com- mences. [Each period is to be found incarnate in contemporaneous Christians, and any large congregation can afford a mystic, a dogmatist, a schoolman, and a critic. Be- tween one whose dogma is a living part of his soul, and another who carries his dogma like a pocket-game he can show on occasion, there is an enormous difference. If you attack the former, you wound him ; if you attack the latter, he gets angry. One ought never to desp. k of a critic and count him hopelessly cold ; he is conscious himself that he is in the arctic zone, and may set off for the tropics any day. When a critic changes he always becomes a mystic] 137 THE CURE OF SOULS It is not difficult to identify the age of our fathers, whose teachers we remember with veneration, but whose teaching is respon- sible for a revulsion in their children, which has often gone to dangerous and foolish extremes. They did not create dogma, throwing no new light on the supreme subjects of our creed ; they were not critics, adding nothing to the sources of dogma. They received what had been created, and defended the deposit rigidly to its jots and tittles. They pursued doc- trines into all their recesses and minutiae, and cast saints out of the Church for dif- fering from them on some sub-theory of a doctrine. Great and fruitful conceptions, like the Holy Trinity and the Incarnation, were isolated from life, and their ethical context never even suspected ; and one recalls with a shudder how the one was treated like a problem of Euclid, and the other as a clever expedient. The idea of Inspiration was reduced to a mechanical 138 THE NEW DOGMA theory, which made the divine origin of the Bible incredible, and the Church, in dearth of any great intellectual interest, gave herself to futile discussions regarding the lawfulness of hymns and organs in public worship. The night is darkest just before the dawn, and one knows when such things come to pass that scholasti- cism has reached its height in any Church, and that the day of criticism is at hand. When in certain quarters of the Church intelligent Christians were in keen debate as to whether Christ died for all men or only for some, and whether He suffered our exact punishment or its equivalent, the spirit of criticism, which in Germany had long been dealing with classical litera- ture, began to work on Holy Scripture. It was some time before the English- speaking Churches felt the effects of this new movement, but it is worth recalling that in 1841 Frederic Myers, the curate of St. John's Church, Keswick, published a 139 rm ifr \i w. i Ki .i ' li - THE CURE OF SOULS volume entitled CatJiolic Thoughts on the Bible and Theology, in which he stated, in a very lucid and persuasive manner, the modern idea of the form of the Bible, and which is a veritable seed-plot of reasonable thought. For a quarter of a century at least, the intellectual resources of the Church have been withdrawn from the study of dogma (with, of course, some brilliant exceptions) and devoted to criti- cism, with the grateful result of adding a new and opulent district to theology, whose waters, fresh and overflowing, have irrigated and revived neighbouring prov- inces. The ministers of to-day have been trained in this age and baptized into its spirit. We have shared the hopes and endeavours, we have felt the doubts and anxieties of our time, and we can now frankly tell our people its faults and fruits. Criticism has offended the Church by its pretentiousness, for its preachers were 140 ' THE NEW DOGMA apt to speak as if they had a new Gospel. Of course they had nothing, and could have nothing, of the kind. They have given a large amount of information and they have removed some traditions, but a message for the soul criticism can never offer. The Gospel is a certain voice of God, which sounds from the first book of the Bible to the last, and any science which handles the body of the books does not come near the soul. The critic has established a debt of gratitude at the hands of the Church, but when he con- founds himself with the evangelist he has forgotten his place. Criticism has also sinned through un- charitableness ; for some of the pioneers of the new school have forgotten good manners, and have not carried themselves respectfully to the past. While a dis- coverer in physics is ever grateful for the work done by his predecessors, and corrects their mistakes with humility, recognising 141 Mi M%lB i" ■r if i4r I !t?? THE CURE OF SOULS that he stands on their shoulders, and that his results will also one day be revised, the biblical critic has been inclined to treat the old scholarship with unconcealed con- tempt, and to expose its errors with ma- lignant satisfaction. Criticism has been misunderstood and slandered, it has been persecuted and martyred, and in this treat- ment of her honest and faithful servants the Church has sinned ; but in her justifica- tion it may be freely urged that criticism has often had little regard Tor the feelings and beliefs of the older generation, vvhich may have been obscurantist, but was also reverent and saintly. [If a minister feels it his duty to advance any new view, his style of speech ought to be especially cautious and considerate, because he must give a shock to many good people, and is in danger of shaking the faith of some. When a liberal in theology is bitter and intolerant, it is a satire on his position, and any disaster 148 THE NEW DOGMA which follows has been earned. One has the strong conviction that the advocacy of advanced opinions ought to be entrusted to men of large build and robust constitu- tion. People will take from a big, good- natured man what would goad them into frenzy from a little man with a shrill voice.] Criticism has, however, rendered two great services to the working ministry, and one is apologetical. Almost all the moral attacks upon the Bible, which may have been cheap, but which were very embarrass- ing, fall to the ground as soon as the Bible is seen to be a progressive and gradual revelation. When the massacre of the Canaanites, and certain proceedings of David are flung in the face of Christians, it is no longer necessary to fall back on evasions or special pleading. It can now be frankly admitted that, from our stand- point in this year of grace, such deeds were atrocious and that they could never 143 immmm mmm mm •V It ,. If IS |-{ 'lir , \ w 1,1. ^ffetg B 'i- w? 1 ! ¥ >i«g I ¥ ' ' i ll • ! m.^ m\ ^w. ■ '. V ' f i ri;r - : ,' 1 R ' if Ih , THE CURE' OF SOULS be according to the mind of God, but that they must be judged by their date, and considered the defects of elementary moral processes. The Bible is vindicated be- cause it is, on the whole, a steady ascent, and because it culminates in Christ. Criticism has also handed the Bible to the working minister, re-arranged, re-ed- ited, re-bound, and so in this way made it for his purpose a more intelligible and in- teresting book. When a prophet and his environment are adjusted, his speeches are re-issued with illustrations which have a very practical application to our day : when the Book of Ecclesiastes is referred to the days of the third century b. c. then its note is caught, and any man who has been wronged and embittered by political tyranny and social corruption has his bit- ter cry included in the Book of God. The Bible as it comes from the critics is more real, because it is more human ; not a book dropped down from heaven, un- 144 THE NEW DOGMA touchcH with a feeling of our infirmities, but a book wrought out through the struggles, hopes, trials, victories of the soul of man in his quest after God. One thing the minister must lay to his heart and impress on his people, and that is the perfect harmony between faith and criticism. Without any exception, the most reliable and brilliant scholars of our Eng- lish-speaking communions have been, or are, believing and devout men, who rejoice to turn from the study of the literature to declare the Gospel of the Bible. It ought also to be pointed out, that the total re- sults of criticism, when they converge upon a point, have been, not to obscure or belittle Christ, but rather to throw Him into supreme relief Whom all the prophets anticipated, Whom the apostles declared. The most fearful or most unlearned Christian ought to be comforted and gladdened with the assurance that after criticism has practically finished her work, 145 r M THE CURE OF SOULS the faith of the Church is more firmly and reasonably established. It is the min- istry who must explain this to the people, because the people have learned to accept their word, and because the critics have done so much for the ministry. It is, however, evident that the force of criticism is nearly exhausted, and the signs are on every hand that we have already entered on an age of mysticism. The great devotional writers, A'Kempis, Tauler, Boehme, Law, and Andrews, have ob- tained a new hold on the religious mind : poets like Herbert and Keble share their popularity : and William Blake, the poet- painter, is now a cult. Pious people meet together in country places for conference on spiritual things, and while such confer- ences were once the repetition of Sunday sermons, they are now devoted to esoteric religion, where three classes are recog- nised, the unregenerate, the regenerate, and the perfect, who have received a 146 THE NEW DOGMA baptism of the Holy Ghost and entered into the deeper secrets of the religious life. [Conferences for the deepening of the spiritual life prove that many earnest Christians are dissatisfied with both dogma and criticism, and arc longing for the inner light and direct communion. For religion has three places of abode — in the reason, which is Theology ; in the conscience, which is Ethics ; and in the heart, which is Quietism. One is bound to welcome such gatherings of the ' Friends of God * and wish them prosperity, but, at the same time, one cannot but feel regret that the Church has not supplied every want of her children ; and one is sometimes a little disappointed that the new Ouietists are so bound by the letter of Holy Scriptures, playing with words in a way that cometh near absurdity, and that they do not claim kindred with their lineal ancestors both of the days before and after the Reformation. 147 I n THE CURE OF SOULS OurOuietists seem to be wan derinn: round their home, but some day they will find the door, and enter in to possess their family inheritance. The minister ought to have a very tender care of such choice and tender souls in his congrega- tion, holding private converse with them, and from time to time feeding them with food convenient from their favourite pastures of the Psalms and St. John's Gospel.] The con( isive proof that we are al- ready in the midst of a true and sane mys- ticism is the instinctive return to Christ, where on every side and from all schools Christian souls are making for their place of birth, as fish find again their native stream. Many traditions have been swept away, and many theciles laid aside; but above the dust of controversy rises the face of Christ. Surely there has been no age since that early morn, when the echo of His footsteps was still on earth, and His 148 THE NEW DOGMA very appearance in the flesh was remem- bered, wherein Christians have been so anxious to understand what Jesus was and what He taught. Nor has there been any age since the days of the Roman Martyrs where there has been such devotion to His person, whether you gather the evi- dence from the Salvation Army, which, with all its apparent extravagances, is touched with a noble and simple hero- ism ; or the Missions, whose martyrs are taking possession of Africa for the Lord. When a minister leads his people in the return to Christ, it is well for him to avoid two extremes. He must neither go to the Gospels alone, for there he is deal- ing with an earthly Christ, nor to the heavens alone, for then i^ he dealing with an unknown Christ, but to Him Who is alive for evermore, and Whom we have in the Gospels. Criticism gives us the historical Christ, and mysticism gives us the spirit- 149 n r i! "i llh 1 ) 1 1 1 i' ■ THE CURE OF SOULS ual Christ, and both united give us the real Christ. We ought to pray that the mystical spirit may long continue and make tender our hearts, but it is almost certain that the Church will scon begin the reconstruction of dogma, and that men are living who will have their share m the enterprise. Dogmatic theologians are still very rare, but the material is rapidly accumulating for their work, and the Church will soon demand that the results of the New Criti- cism and the new exegesis be gathered and stated in the form of doctrine. A few swallows herald the spring, and Dr. Fairbairn's Christ in Modern Theology and Canon Gore's Incarnation are the be- ginning of a time — a time for which many are praying. If, however, the Christian Church of next century is to have beautiful and acceptable doctrine, then it can only be under two conditions that were not known 150 THE NEW DOGMA in the past. One is, that theology be allowed the same liberty as any other sci- ence, mental or physical. Why is it dogma has excited so fierce a dislike that the mere suggestion of a revival of dogma fills many intelligent and liberal minds with dismay ? It is not because they could deny to theology the same right to formulate her conclusions as physics, or that ihcy could close their eyes to the immense progress theology has made within recent years. They remember that the Church was not content in the past to state her mind as to dogma, but insisted on making that dogma final, and binding it for ever on the faith of the members, and they are haunted by the fear that this sad tragedy may be repeated. Why is it that the physicist has no grudge at his predecessors and never girds at them, while the modern theologian is inclined to rend his fathers? The physicist has not been confined to the limits of the fourth 151 THE CURE OF SOULS ' 1 -^ i:! ;H ( 11^ ^(1 or sixteenth centuries, while the dead hand of Councils and Confessions rest on the theologian. It is to be hoped that every branch of the Christian Church will soon exact no other pledge of her teachers than a declaration of faith in Jesus as the Son of God and the Saviour of the world, and a promise to keep His com- mandments, and otherwise grant to them the fullest freedom of thought and expo- sition. The other condition is that the obvious distinction between religion and dogma be frankly recognised. One may walk in the light and know nothing of astronomy, as did St. Thomas, who was practically a slave of Jesus and doctrinally a sceptic concerning Christ. One may have studied astronomy and walk in darkness, as did the Pharisees, who were accomplished in doctrine and sent Jesus to the Cross. It is rather discreditable that a Christian should not think out the theory of his faith, and 152 THE NEW DOGMA he should be exhorted and encouraged by his minister to take up theology, but to the end of the chapter there will be sound thinkers who are poor livers and erroneous thinkers who are splendid livers. Under such favouring circumstances the- ology will at last obtain her opportunity, and come into her kingdom. When this age begins, w*'j may hope to witness a remarkable revival of forgotten thought ; and it will not, some dare to imagine, be so much a new theology as an old theology, which came before its time, that will at last be acclimatised in Christian faith. It is well known that there were two schools among the Fathers, the School of St. Augustine and the School of Clement of Alexandria. The one school rested all theology (speaking in a general but sufficiently exact sense) upon the conception of the Eternal which made Him a Law Giver and a Sovereign. The other school, that of Clement, rested the 153 if M f #'''IB Hi II Hi W.4 iP ''I I 1 I M m 1! Si if; 1 ! % t t I i| t K CI THE CURE OF SOULS conception of the Eternal upon the idea of His Fatherhood. Many have been filled with wistful regret that Clement of Alex- andria had not his due effect upon the, thought of the Christian Church. But let us not reflect upon the Divine Spirit, nor come to rash conclusions on the develop- ment of doctrine. One can see very clearly that there is a relation between the moral state of the human race and its con- ception of the Deity. There is a growth in the idea of God in the experience of the individual, and in the experience of the race ; and the full idea of God comes slowly to its height. No one can deny that the first thing that has to be lodged in the mind of the human race, especially when in a spiritually low and uneducated condition, is the idea of the Divine power and of the Divine holiness. That was especially necessary when the world was crumbling into pieces through corruption, and one can understand how the Christian 154 THE NEW DOGMA an theology stepped into the throne of a dead Roman Empire and ruled the consciences of men unto salvation, when one remem- bers that the doctrine of Augustine was bound upon the moral consciousness. The doctrine of Clement would have been premature and would have failed of ethical success. But his evangelical theology was not in vain ; and now when we have got into our blood for ever the conception of God which crowns Him the King, Holy and Almighty, we are prepared upon a sound moral basis to receive Him as the loving and merciful Father. One there- fore anticipates that the new doctrine will be based on the conception of the Divine Fatherhood — not the Fatherhood which throws away the Judgeship and the Right- eousness of God, but the Fatherhood that gathers these up into a nobler and final unity ; and that the Incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ, as the revelation of the Father and the Head of the human race, 155 wwgi i ft f I I f * ■*: ;: W I. .VI I r. I I !s* ?: 1 1 il « ia>! THE CURE OF SOULS will yield more blessed and practical fruit in the life of the race from year to year. It must have been a great joy to breathe the air in the periods of Renaissance, whether in Physics or in Letters — to live in the days that preceded the Reforma- tion, when classical scholarship was revived and placed again before the world : to live in the days of Elizabethan Letters and to feel the inspiration of Spenser and Shake- speare ! Some of us know what it is to have seen the immense discoveries and bright hopefulness of physical science in the century ; but there has been nothing in all these periods so glorious as the day when the theology of the Christian Church shall rise again, having lost nothing that was good and true in the past, and be re- constructed on the double foundation of the Divine Fatherhood and the Incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ. We shall then see, I believe, an inspiring reconciliation, the 156 THE NEW DOGMA greatest that can be made. We have often hoped for reconciliation between science and religion, where none is needed ; often hoped for reconciliation between reason and faith, where none is needed, since each works in a different department of human life ; but there is a reconciliation needed for which all devout and reverent men yearn, and it is the reconciliation between dogma and religion. They are not an- tagonistic, and if they have ever been forced into lamentable rivalry, they will make a covenant of peace in the love of the Father and of Jesus Christ His son. One of the most suggestive pictures of Italian Art represents the meeting of St. Dominic and St. Francis. St. Dominic belonged to that order which was charged with the development and conservation^ of doctrine and who, on account of their theological bitterness and often unreason- ing persecution, were called the 'hounds of the Lord; St. Francis, as a great 157 ■h 'i "' I 'it m n 111 i If;!'- THE CURE OF SOULS French critic declared, was the most beautiful Christian character since the days of Jesus, and it was he who revived religion. In this picture St. Dominic, the author and defender of dogma, and St. Francis, the humble disciple and exem- plifier of Jesus Christ, have met, and, fling- ing their arms round one another's necks, they kiss each other, so uniting what God had joined and no man ought to put asunder — the joyful religion of the soul and the reverent dogma of the intellect ; a felicitous prophecy of the day when Mind and soul, according well, May make one music as before, But vaster. c I W'l I C5i} THE MACHINERY OF A CON- GREGATION «; * CHAPTER VI THE MACHINERY OK A CONGREGATION Persons living, and who may live for many years, can remember when the con- gregation was a very simple organism-a mere Bathybius of the ecclesiastical world People attended two services on Sunday • tne children went to Sunday-school • the' mmister had a class to prepare young peo- ple for their first sacrament. Congrega- t.ons of the lighter kind indulged in a social meeting once a year, and those of a sterner cast adventured with a mission. The buildings, besides the church, con- sisted of a vestry, and, in some advanced cases, a hall under the church, low-roofed and dark, with, it might be, a couple of cellar rooms, where the l6i young folk, re- i f' ''I Mk# n. I :.* i ki U If I THE CURE OF SOULS turning to the primitive state of Christian- ity, met in dens and eaves of the earth. Neither did the congregation involve itself in any public efforts for the regen- eration of society, and would have been amazed had they been asked to take steps for the reduction of public-houses in the town, or to open an institute for the social and intellectu:>l culture of the neighbour- ing district. Some enthusiastic people, pioneers of a coming day, carried on little enterprises of their own on week-days in the under ground premises — a Band of Hope or a sewing party ; but such efforts were a mere by-play, and never passed into the main current of the congregational life. The duty of the minister was to pre- pare his sermons for Sunday, and to visit the people from house to house ; the duty of the people was to attend church twice on Sunday and to hear the sermons. The congregation in those days was a quiet old-fashioned business, with a monopoly 162 vt MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION of its district, and an unquestioned hold upon its people, and was conducted with- out excitement or bustle. Life, within a generation, has been elec- trified in every department ; it has become keen, intense, inventive, an endless race, in which the most far-seeing, ingenious, adaptable outruns his neighbour and wins. One has sometimes wished that the Church of Christ had been untouched by this feverish spirit, and in the midst of a surrounding unrest had afforded a haven of peace. One, however, recognises the fact that the Church cannot live isolated and detached in the world, but that the tides of the outside world must also be felt in her life. For weal or woe — more for weal than woe — the congregation has awaked and kept pace with the times The yearly report, with its departments of work, its various offices, its elaborate finance, rivals that of any company in commerce. 163 Church buildings now have iW^ m tl'.a r-n PZ • 'a ®; ■ 4 1^ 'i I r m M 1; THE CURE OF SOULS every kind of accommodation, from libra- ries and class-rooms to workshops and de- veloping-rooms : they are lit uy electricity, and the organ is played and driven by electricity ; and one fearfully anticipates the day when the phonograph will be used in the pulpit, and the eloquence of famous men, living and deceased, be laid on at will. The minister is a man of affairs, issuing a yearly programme, like a busi- ness circular with its striking features and new items, supervising the most various agercies, loaded with correspondence, and carrying a diary in which he hastily books engagements like a man on the exchange. Church-work has become a science which young ministers have to learn, and the congregation is perhaps the most highly devcioped institution in human society. Let us review and estimate its parts. And we shall begin with — The Home of the congregation, and one may lay down those principles about a 164 MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION church, that whatever be the style of archi- tecture it must be (a) beattti/ul, because this is the House / God, and people are to meet here for ' - ^ worship. The church should excel the houses of the worshippers in fineness and honesty of workmanship. Whether it be intended to hold one hun- dred or two thousand, whether it stand in a rich district or a poor, whether it be built of stone or brick or wood- -those are matters of circumstance, — the material must be ^he best of its kind, and every inch of the work must be done in the sight of God, Who desireth truth and hateth iniquity. Rotten stuff, haif-done work, tricky expedients, deceptive appear- ances, gaudy decorations, are to be con- demned everywhere, but most of all where people meet in the name of Christ and pray to be created in His likeness. Better rough stone walls than gay colours hiding a lie, better bare white deal than wood stained after the likeness of mahog-^ny, 165 i' \h THE CURE OF SOULS Rf. t , . ■ '.'1 ',: y fi *J» > where the colour cannot hide the unwor- thiness of the substance. It is sufficient that a church should be nothing more at first than four strong walls and a sound roof, and that from year to year the people that have been blessed therein should give, one a paintc^ window, another a piece of oak carving, a third a Holy Table, a fourth a font, till the church house be filled and beautified with the gifts of her children, and it is for the minister to insist on that morality which is the foundation of true beauty, and to move his people to bestow those gifts which form its crown. (d) The church ought also to be com- fortable, not in the way of softness and luxury — a place where people can lounge through divine worship, or a place fitted up with every convenience of a theatre, for it is well that people should under- stand that they come here on an august service, not to a social party, — but it is i66 w MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION fitting that the church should have the best atmosphere — air cool in summer and warm in wmter, and always pure. There are churches so conservative that they not only retain the former habits of thought, but the very air of the past, so that one entering after a long absence recognises the fragrance, since nothing refreshes memory like smell, and is again with his mother in the family pew, while the old minister, after preaching an hour, is giving out his third head. Were the air of one of the hermetically sealed churches bottled and analysed by some of those awful scientific inventions that are making darkness as light, it might be pos- sible to write the history of the congrega- tion with a likeness of the minister. The material lies in the building. Bad air is an auxiliary of Satan, and accounts for one man sleeping, for another fidgeting, for another detecting a personal attack in the sermon, for some one smelling heresy. 167 >i.! .--*-. !•» i 'P|! n 4- ' , t ^ !f All THE CURE OF SOULS It was carbonic acid gas he really sniffed. And indeed the analogy is complete. Fresh air and orthodoxy go together as well as good temper and charity. [We touch at this point the inexhaust- ible question of draughts, and must leave it alone, with the foJ^"' vAg observations for the comfort of tne ministry : — That there never has been any church yet with- out a draught : that it is the only reason why certain people do not attend with reg- ularity : that a draught of ten-horse power would not keep them from the theatre or a reception : that the officers of the church will receive fifty suggestions a year how to cure the draught, but that the genuine, church draught cannot be cured by phys- ical expedients : that, in short, it is a de- vice of the Prince of the power of the air, as any man with Celtic bloof; in hi- veins knows.] (c) And the church ,ught i ■ bf conve- nient^ by which one means suitabu for its 168 \s \ MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION purpose, a place in which every one can see and hear the preacher. There are per- sons who listen better with their eyes closed, and who would be content behind a Norman arch — sight distracts their men- tal processes, — but the majority under- stand with their eyes, — finding a running commentary on the preacher's words in the changing expression of his mobile face. [Nothing is trivial which concerns the success of the minister's work, and it is a grave question whether he ought not to be clean shaven, that the play of his lips, as he pleads, may further his words.] Architecture is a noble art, and archi- tects are doubtless of the salt of the earth, but nothing will convince me that, as a body, they ever think of the acoustic per- fection of a church or of anything else, ex- cept that It be a monument to their genius. If it should happen that the people are able to hear the sermon on the day of dedication, then their gratitude 169 i i 4 1, i — ^I lir m ill' alii THE CURE OF SOULS is almost slavish, and it is boasted that St. Bede's is ' a good church for hearing ' — they might as well have blessed the archi- tect for giving them a roof, — while, in ten cases out of twenty, the office-bearers spei.d a certain proportion of their time in shifting people from pews where they cannot hear, or considering whether the minister will be able to convey his mes- sage best by a sounding-board or wires stretched across the church. It is mad- dening to think that in the Church of Christ a minister has to be estimated in certain places by his vocal apparatus, so that one with a voice and little else ob- tains a large sphere of work, and one with everything except a throat of brass is con- lined to a small church ; but such anom- alies will continue till it be legal that a church, which is useless for its purpose, be returned to the architect as a ship which, not constructed to float, would be refused by a shipowner. 170 MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION %fc With regard to auxiliary accommoda- tion, it must vary with circumstances, but a minister, as the responsible head of the work, should insist on this minimum for a city church. (a) A large hall, built on the same floor as the church, and on an ecclesiastical plan, so that when a person enters it he may have a feeling mat he is in church. This is a matter of oof, windows, and reader's desk, with a general severity of treatment. All week day services, except Christmas and Good Friday, and New Years Day, when kept, should be ht Id here. It does not matter for eftect upon the wor hippers oi preacher how many are present, but only that the place be full. Jl crowd in the hall would only be a handful in the church, and handfuls scat- tered about a large building can neither warm the heart for prayer nor cheer the minister for speech. The place can also be used as a gathering-place for the Sun- 171 i,r THE CURE OF SOULS day-school and for philanthropic meetings by reversing the chair and having a plat- form at the opposite end from the desk. (b) A business-room fitted up with a round table, somewhat imposing chairs and chairman's seat, a safe, and case for books. Flere let all the committees of the church meet, and the finance be man- aged. If you cru^h a dozen men, accus- tomed to other things, into a small mean room, till one has to sit on the end of a sofa and two share a chair, then, owing to the infirmity of human nature, even men of light and leading will get slipshod, and neglect not only rules of order, but also of speech. (c) A ladies' room, which the women of the congregation can furnish and decorate to their hearts' content, and which shall be the centre of all their special work. (d) A young people's room, almost as large as the hall, but not so ecclesiastical, where the various societies of the church 172 **^ MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION will make their home, and where social meetings can be held. There ought to be bookcases for the various libraries of the church, and a collection of sacred art on the walls, as well as a case of maps. This room should be enriched as time goes on with nice pieces of furniture, till it be- come a drawing-room, a library, an art gallery, and a museum, besides a lecture- room on occasion. Q') As many unappropriated rooms as can be got, each approaching twenty feet square, and furnished with a table, chairs, and a blackboard, for classes of any kind, fellowship meetings, and miscellaneous purposes. [One room should be allotted to the choir, and placed under the author- ity of the organist.] (/) The minister's vestry, which should be a large, airy, well lit, and well furnished room. This is the minister's sanctum, and he gives it the last touches of habitation himself — keeping here a few favourite J 73 i:* I i a THE CURE OF SOULS books, a Gcorc^c Herbert in the facsimile edition, the Fiorctti of St. Francis, Ruth- erford's Letters, Whitticr's poems, some- thing of Christina Rossetti, that he may be in good company before he goes into his awful work : and hanging here a Perugino and an Angelico, that he may look on the Crucified and see the holy angels before he faces his fellow-men. The vestry must be regarded as the absolute property of the minister, where he can be alone and have fellowship with God before he speaks in His name, and where he can receive those who must see him alone. When a church abounds in rooms extempore meetings are not to be held in the vestry, and desultory conversations on the weather can be conducted more profitably in the lobby. Finally, if it be possible, there should be greenery and flowers round the church and in the minist r's vestry accord- ing to their season, snowdrops and lilies 174 MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION and roses, for his own good and thai of the people. Wc come now to the Government of the congregation, and shall escape the most wearisome and futile of all contro- versies by conceding at once and without reserve the divine right of all systems — first, because they have each one been proved from the Acts of the Apostles and the Epistles of St. Paul, to say nothing of the Fathers and early centuries ; and, secondly, because each of the three great systems which found themselves on Holy Scripture — the Episcopal, Congregational, and Presbyterian (the Methodists frankly admit that theirs is an invention) — has been blessed of God, and so has been sanctioned. With regard to a congrega- tion, the first point is that there be some government, so that it be a regiment, not a mob, and the next point that the rule be in the hands of one man. Gov- 175 > 11 i! ! IX k :i S IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) V// / . "^ J%^ 1^^ li< 1.0 Jfia I l.i M i?.5 1^1 122 1.8 1-25 jU 11 1.6 ^ 6" t. VI /}. ^c> ^l "T .'V' '^W O^M '/ W Hiotographic Sciences Corporation 23 >wV6ST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, NY. 14580 (716) 872-4503 ■SB "4^ i THE CURE OF SOULS einment cannot be placed in commission and twelve men divide authority. Whether the ruler be called Tzar or President, he is a necessity, and in the congregation he ought to be the minister. Who fitter than the man who has to lead, guide, represent the congregation ? Who is most con- cerned in its success, most hurt by its failure ? If not, then who is it to be ? The noisiest, the wealthiest, the most ob- stinate ? If a congregation wishes to be saved from patronage and tyranny let it support the legitimate ruler and put down any usurper. If a private member be- comes lord of a congregation, then no man of self-respect will consent to be minister, and people of self-respect will refuse to take any share in the work. One of the worst calamities that can befall a congre- gation is such an usurpation, all the more if it has been gained by wealth, and one of the happiest events is the deposition of the usurper. Since some one must rule, 176 MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION the reign of the minister is the best guar- antee for the freedom and harmony of the congregation, since he takes the throne in virtue of his office, and does not seize it through ambition or the giving of money. [The minister must rule In the spirit of Jesus — with sympathy, tact, generosity, and impartiality. Ministerial government is too often discredited by coarse men, who, being raised suddenly to power, lose their heads and outrage congregations, or undisciplined natures who, by eccentrici- ties of temper or habit, play the fool in face of the people.] If the minister is to be responsible and actual ruler it is on that account the more necessary that he be assisted by a Council, such as is provided in the Presbyterian polity by the Court of Elders, and in the Congregational by the Court of Deacons, and which, if his system afford none, he were wise to create for himself. It should 177 i;f M : if \ i i f: THE CURE OF SOULS Iff I mil 1 1 ii I consist of the heads of departments in the congregational work, such as the superin- tendents of Sunday-schools, treasurers of finance, chairman of guilds, representative of the mission church, a member of the choir committee, the officer who allocates sittings [who must be an incarnation of wisdom, patience, courtesy, and selfless- ness], with some venerable men of long experience, who shall sit without portfolios. This is the Minister's Cabinet, which holds all the reins in its hand, and in which every interest is represented. It is dangerous to allow bodies to rise in the Church who have no voice in the Cabinet, and over which it has doubtful control. rin some places the Sunday-school and the Young Men's Society are simply con- federated powers with the congregation, not an integral part, and the government negotiates with them.] Colonies without share In the Imperial Government are certain, sooner or later, 178 n I- ■■ MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION to start a disastrous war of indepen- dence. When this council meets in its court- room, with the minister presiding, it should be the brain of the congregation gathering unto itself every nerve, sensitive to the faintest feeling in the body, guiding the furthest member. Such a council at once commands the confidence and audience of the people, and the minister, sitting in council like the Pope, is in administration, so far as may be good for him and the people, infallible and absolute. This Cabinet ought to take an unspoken oath of secrecy in order that their work may be done in freedom, and the minister ought to treat his Cabinet with unreserved confidence, not only laying before them his definite proposals, but giving them an idea of his plans, allowing his faithful councillors a share of his joys and sorrows, and taking their advice on many details of his private life. They ought to know 179 ■i; 'i !' 1 - - s r ■1 ■ ii IP ! f"^ m THE CURE OF SOULS when he goes from home, where he is, and how it fares with him, and all the changes in his life at least twenty-four hours bciore the public. If the Council be opposed to any of his proposals the minister had better pause, but if they approve, then he can go forward with boldness. This may be monarchy, but it is constitutional mon- archy. It goes without saying, that with so much partially sanctified human nature, there will be some insubordinate members in a congregation, who are dissatisfied with the doctrine of the pulpit or the methods of work, and feel bound to create disturbance. If they be at the bottom reasonable and pious people, then the minister will show them every con- sideration, explaining and conciliating as becometh a servant of Christ. If they be Pharisaical or quarrelsome, then the min- ister had better not waste time on confer- ences, which will only feed such people's i8o MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION vanity, but insist with courtesy on their departure to some other church where they will feel themselves more at home. And if they should refuse, then the minis- ter ought to consult his council and com- pel the mutineers to leave the ship, for a ship may weather many storms from with- out, but mutiny among the crew is de- struction. A congregation will be stronger by the loss of a dozen people who are carping at everything, and proclaiming aloud their dissatisfaction to a district. If, on the other hand, a person with a mutinous record should arrive, and desire to be received, he ought to be firmly refused. It is neither wise nor kindly to give welcome or have anything to do with one who has done his best to wreck a neighbouring congregation, and to embit- ter a brother minister's life. There is a comity of nations, and there ought to be a comity of congregations (and denomina- tions), so that every door should be closed i8i i.l ! 'd H^ pi' Uii THE CURE OF SOULS \ m n.f Ml 1^ S' ! f |i i\ rn against the ecclesiastical anarchist. If any one inquire what is to become of him, why not have in every large city a chapel where this class could worship together, and be kept in quarantine till they show signs of penitence, when they could be absolved, and be again admitted among healthy people ? And to the pastorate of this chapel of correction a minister who had wrecked two churches by bad temper and overbearing conduct might be ap- pointed. Under such a mutual discipline both minister and people would have a good chance of being cured. Ministers might very well copy the etiquette of the medical profession, which is distinguished by the respect its mem- bers show to one another. No minister should criticise another minister in public, nor should he allow any person to discuss his minister with him, nor should he visit the people of another minister, nor in any way, direct or indirect, try to attract them 182 MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION from his brother. Every minister should at all times stand by his brethren, and should do his brother's work for him in any time of trouble. After a wise government, which is the brain, the welfare of the congregation de- pends on fellowship, which is the heart of the congregation. Like a college or a regiment, the congregation ought to have a just and proper csp7'it de corps which is born of high traditions, is fed by unselfish ends, is fruitful of costly services. The richest heritage of an old congregation is not her endowments, but her history, the names of saints which can be read on her faded rolls, and the record of their works. The ambition of a new congregation ought to be the attainment of a w^orthy model in its first plastic years. For char- acter is transmitted in ecclesiastical as surely as in family life, so that men have the hereditary features of their congrega- tion — a certain accent in doctrine, a cer- 183 III h'l 'W THE CURE OF SOULS tain manner in work, a certain attitude of faith. [Certain churches, owing to high posi- tion and ancient descent, may think too mightily of themselves, and this came to my mind once when the beadle of a church in my own communion inquired of me where I was settled, and whether I was actually ordained, preparing me for a thin audience, as the Doctor was known to be from home, but cheering me before next service with the information that a fair number of people had returned — a circum- stance at which he could not conceal his astonishment. If a man be not humbled after that discipline, and reduced to his low estate, then he is incorrigible. It also came home to me with much conviction that another church, also of my own com- munion, thought too little of itself when the office-bearers explained to me in the vestry that their minister was so learned and accomplished that he ought to be pro- 184 MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION motcd, as they expected he soon would he, to a West-end church, and that the hest minister for them was a phi in man wilii- out too much education, ' in fact, just Hke yourself.' Both extremes are to be avoided.] Congregational patriotism demands that, whatever differences of opinion the minis- ter may have with his people, or whatever fatherly rebukes he may feel it his duty to give them, he should neither say one word against them outside, nor allow any reflec- tion to be made upon them by a stranger. No man exposes his wife's faults, and no one dares criticise a wife to her husband ; and people and minister are united in a sacred bond, sharing a common love and reputation. And the same Church feeling should keep the people true to their minis- ter. If he has failings, or makes mistakes, they are to be covered ; if he has ex( el- lencies, and does good work, that is to be told. I8S i He ought to be to his own the ^!:' ' n; K THE CURE OF SOULS ablest preacher they ever heard, and the most eloquent. People of other churches, with eminent divines, are amazed and smile at t!iis fond imagination, for the last time the worthy man was in their pulpit he was particularly dull. To them — yes, because he was not their minister ; they judged him by his poor commonplace dis- course (an ambitious effort he had made for this famous pulpit ! better have taken one of his simple addresses), but his peo- ple read in between the lines — his visits in sickness, his sympathy in trial, his endless kindnesses to them and theirs. They edit his sermon sitting in their pews, with foot- notes that by-and-by eclipse the original till the humble building of grey stone is covered with roses and clematis, and be- comes a very picture of beautiful colour. The people are fairly overcome by his lovel)' illustrations, his deep arguments, his moving appeals ; but he did not write • i86 MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION them last week, they are deeds — ten, twenty, thirty years old. The very church has a hold on the pious mind, that e^rows with the years and lasts till death removes the man to the upper sanctuary. People with prosaic minds see him on Sunday morning passing a dozen fashionable suburban churches, "nd trudg- ing down to a dingy place in the city, and they refer it to his old-fashioned ways and that cat-spirit which clings to a building. They do him less than justice ; they have too little imagination. He has his own reasons, this unsentimental, matter-of-fact man. [The hardest man has a tender, poetical, romantic side, and he expects it to be touched from the pulpit. He brings out his few pet flowers on Sunday morning and gives them a good exposure, in hope that their dusty leaves may be refreshed by a shower, and a bud or two open in the kindlv sunshine.] *87 \\ ! • f " mmm 111' • ,j lip ! THE CURE OF SOULS Our friend has his reasons for his city pilgrimage, and they do him credit. When he came up from the country he stumbled into that church one morning, and it seemed as if he had been expected. An elder shook him by the hand and took him to his pew ; afterwards he asked him to dinner, and told him that there would be a place for him every Sunday. There is a pew in that church he could find in the dark, for there, just below that win- dow, under the gallery twenty from the door, Christ and he met face to face. He was married in that church, and there he offered his children to God. During his great trial it was the word he heard in that church which sustained him, and down its aisles he has carried the holy vessels of the Sacrament for thirty years. He is poor who has no sacred places on earth, and this is to the man as th^ gate of heaven. A congregation made up of such men is like one of those ancient i88 MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION buildings wherein the stones have grown into a soHd mass. It may be human for the suburban minister to regard this man with desire as he passes his door, for who would not wish to have so loyal a spirit? But that mi^iiister is unworthy of the name of Christ if he approves not his constancy, and thanks God his brother down town has got such a strength at his right hand. [The opposite of this true soul is the religious nomad who changes his church every three years, who assures each minis- ter on arrival that in his poor judgment he is the most brilliant preacher in the city, who begins by attending every ser- vice in the week, and can hardly be kept out of the mothers' meeting, who regrets that he cannot give to the funds as his means have long been consecrated in a special direction— whose wife calls tow- ards the end of the three years to explain that she feels it her duty to go with her Z89 ' ' UBB lip III Eiiia n Ml pt ::! ' If THE CURE OF SOULS husband, who is receiving much benefit from a course of lectures on the Vials of the Revelation, given by the nevv^ minister of a neighbouring church. A young minis- ter is much lifted by this enthusiastic gen- tleman's arrival, and somewhat cast down by his departure : an older man regards his arrival with equanimity, and suggests that he be placed in a seat which is devas- tated by the draught.] We come now to the mmd of the con- gregation, and it must be felt by every one that at present an enormous responsibility lies on the Church with regard to the in- struction of the young (and others) in the Christian faith. Whatever may be done in State schools, — and one rejoices to know that much is done, — it is evident that the Church will have to educate her people after a thorough manner in her creed. For this purpose there ought to be an ed- ucational ladder constructed in every con- gregation, which will receive the young 190 MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION child into the infant-class of the Sunday- school at the foot, and as a man, give him the latest results of Biblical research at the top. A fully equipped congrega- tion will have its elementary department in the Sunday-school, its secondary, or Grammar-school, in the Bible-classes for young men and women, and its Univer- sity in the Bible-guild for the class who wish to pursue their studies in sacred lit- erature. V What is needed, above all things, for the Sunday-school, is capable and trained teachers. It is worse than a mistake to hand over children to the care of some ignorant young woman (or man) who has been appointed because her mother thought she would be steadied by relig- ious work, or because she thought it was correct to take some such task, who comes when she has no other engagement, and who does not know the bare facts of Bible history. igi f ■ n t ^rn 'i V. |ii Ijlllii iiii THE CURE OF SOULS [One quite delightful young woman in- formed me, in a viva voce examination, that ' Herod did not get our Lord in the Massacre of 'he Innocents because His mother hid Him among the bulrushes.' She was a Sunday-school teacher, and just the person for whom the little mischiefs in a class would lay traps with an inno- cent face.] It lies upon the minister, with the su- perintendent of the school, to see that no one ever obtains a class without giving some evidence of fitness, both in knowl- edge and teaching faculty, that the teach- ers attend a class where they may be drilled in the week's lesson, and that the embryo teacher be reared in the Guilds with a view to this work. When a school is staffed with well-educated teachers, then the minister can use all his influence to secure the attendance of the children of the congregation, because he can give pledges that the teaching of Scripture on 192 MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION Sunday will be on a par with the teaching of languages on the week days. If the congregation be organised on the Guild system, then there ought to be one for young men from sixteen to thirty — no one being allowed to enter after twenty-five, or to remain after thirty (it may come to pass otherwise that the Guild consists of middle-aged men whose very appearance scares a young fellow from the door), and another for young women of a corresponding age : — age must not be looked at too curiously in this Guild, but marriage must entail re- tirement, since an unmarried girl and a married woman look at life from quite different standpoints. Those two Guilds may have four departments : a religious, in the Bible class which is to be thoroughly taught and examined, with occasional de- votional meetings ; a literary, in which good books and subjects of social interest can be discussed ; a practical, which will 193 I. THE CURE OF SOULS il '1- 4. undertake some charitable work ; and (if thought desirable) a physical, for gymnas- tics and excursions. There had better be a Guild for the children, called by a tak- ing name, and holding half a dozen bright meetings every winter, in a prettily dec- orated room, and with liberal use of a good lantern, to interest the children in missions, temperance, and charity. When there is any considerable number of domestic servants in the church, they ought to be formed into a Guild — which will be mainly social, because they are apt to be isolated and to have little share in the church life, and because there is no class in a congregation more loyal, liberal, kindly. The Bible Guild will crown and com- plete the system, and is strongly to be recommended in this day. The minister here will be president, and the members having come to years of discretion, and being, as is presumed, the most intelligent 194 MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION people in the congregation, will form a fellowship of students. The subscriptions will go to form a library, to which every new book with good reputation will be added, till the congregation possesses through this Guild a fairly complete col- lection of contemporaneous Bible litera- ture. If the winter be divided into two terms, then, at each, one book of the Old or New Testament Scriptures is laid out for study — a careful syllabus being pre- pared by the committee. Papers are read by members on the authorship, history, form, ideas of the book, which will open discussion. It is remarkable what work will be put into such papers, and how grand and luminous the Bible grows under this examination. The Society of Christian Endeavour is an alternative to the junior Guilds on the religious and practical side, but it does not embrace so wide a field, nor afford such a complete culture. Il has friends and 195 1 f , i\ i'.'J. 'i •>; THE CURE OF SOULS critics, but the general consensus of opinion seems to be that the movement has done much spiritual good and is likely to be an auxiliary to the Church. This is the final test of all societies in the machinery of the congregation — do they help or weaken the Church ? Are they branches springing out of the trunk and gathering into their leaves the air and light of heaven — a beauty and strength? Then let them be fostered. Or are they suckers drawing away so much of the sap from the tree itself ? a luxuriant, unprofit- able, mutinous undergrowth — then let them be cut down and done away with, for they are in any case only human in- ventions, but the Church is of Christ and the home of the soul. When we come to the wor/c in the Church, it will be agreed that every large congregation should have an outlet for its energy and liberality, and I wish to urge that this, wherever possible, should be a 196 >ii (.' MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION church in some poor district. What is called a Mission Hall is an unfortunate form of Christian enterprise, and it is hoped will soon be obsolete. First, be- cause it means waste of labour and worse, the hall gathering but a handful of re- ligious paupers who come to it as to a soup-kitchen for what they hope to get, and being converted anew with every fresh distribution of alms : who almost never rise to the independence and life of a con- gregation, and who seem to constitute a servile body on which the philanthropy of the wealthy mother church can experiment and expend itself. If the money lavished on such unhealthy plants had been devoted to Foreign Missions or night schools, it had done ten times more good and as much less evil. Also because such squalid places, with their half-educated agents and starved services, are an insult to working men. Why should a man not have a good church 197 THE CURE OF SOULS 1:1. t> and a proper service because he earns wages and lives in a small house ? If any difference be made, then the finer build- ings and the lovelier worship ought to be for the east end, where there is less beauty in the homes and a harder fight for life. If the proletariat is to be won for Christ, it will not be by patronage but by brotherly sympathy and co-operation. The ideal is that a Church of the west and another of the east should go into partner- ship, combining their resources of means and men, and so the gaping wounds of society will be bound and healed ; for Christ alone, by His humanity and Church, can be the meeting-place for all kinds and conditions of men. All machinery, however well conceived and enthusiastically worked, will be un- blessed and useless unless the Church has spiritual aims, and be touched with heaven- Hness, unless she be cleansed from false ideals and a worldly spirit. xqS MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION One is indeed afraid that many of our people in this material age are coming to regard the Church as a huge business con- cern, with its elaborate statistics, its annual balance-sheet, its endless inventions, its spirit of bustling prosperity. The world sees one congregation revive its dwindling attendance with an organ, another selling its site in a poor district and migrating to the suburbs, the amazing advertisements of sermons in the newspapers, the schemes for raising money, from bazaars to anni- versaries. They do not despise the Church for these expedients ; far worse — they sympathise with her. She also finds com- petition keen, and cannot conduct business after the old-fashioned way. She also has to cut the rates, and build bigger steamers, and puff her goods. With our elaborate financial and statistical blue-books in his hands, a layman soon creates his standard of success for a minister, and unless he be a man of very high spirituality it is certain 199 THE CURE OF SOULS 'in ri to be tangible and material. Are all the sittings let ? Are the offiee-bearers mer- chant princes ? Are there Guilds of every kind and description ? Is there a surplus balance at the close of the year ? Then, says this shrewd, respectable man, here is a successful minister. Perhaps, but not on that evidence. Here again is a church with half its sittings unlet, with obscure names in its report, with small funds. Some want of energy here ? Perhaps, and perhaps not. It may be that this man is making men, while the other has only seat-holders. The blue-books serve some purpose, and with the terror of the great permanent officials before the eyes, one dare not speak lightly of their columns ; but one may protest against the success of Christ's Church being tried by figures of sittings and money. What kind of man flourishes best in this commercial atmosphere ? Not the prophet ; he withers and dies in the dust 80Q MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION of figures ; but instead of him you will get that latest product of machinery — the organiser. No, he is not very much of a preacher or scholar, but he is a good busi- ness man and a capital manager. Let us give its due to every talent — and organ- ising is one, — but one grows suspicious, and hesitates to have this man for his minister. Let us make him an electoral agent, or the manager of a working-class insurance company that collects by streets, or let him be sent round to clean up the house for some big heart who has so many people he can't get them into their Guild partitions. Do not hand over a number of poor souls to his preaching ; it will be all from the book of Numbers. Everybody will be a secretary or some- thing in a year, but the people will be going to the next church for their daily bread. In fact, the organiser doesn't need people ; a really capable man of this type could organise a congregation on a desert i 20I THE CURE OF SOULS ^■i. ir: M island. What we want to-day is not or- ganisers, but preachers, and every hindrance ought to be removed that a man who can preach may have an opportunity of fulfilling his high calling. One Minister laboured for three years night and day, and when His ministry was suddenly closed He had only a roomful of people. But one man was St. John and one woman was St. Mary Magdalene. A single Raphael counts more than hundreds of clever im- pressionist sketches. One saintly soul reared by a patient ministry will weigh down in the scales mobs of hearers. Our illustrations have been taken from the congregation of the city, but let no man think lightly of the village church and its faithful pastor. Where would city Christianity be with- out the men and women of strong, stable character that are added from the countrv ? Who made their character? This man who is unheard of, who is too often 203 MACHINERY OF A CONGREGATION badgered about raising money, who has the lowest stipend, who goes home feeling himself a burden on the Church. Let him lift up his head. His is lasting work, for he has wrought in imperishable ma' terial— not in silver or gold, but in the souls of men. His master knoweth : his reward remaineth. Year after year some nameless monk labours on a rough block in some cathedral column till it turns into the very likeness of Christ. He dies, and they bury him in a forgotten grave ; but every morning the light streaming through the eastern window over the head of Christ as from the eyes of the Judge touches with gold that image of the Lord wrought by His servant, and as the gener- ations pace the aisles beneath, high above them, beautiful and unchanging, remains the unknown worker's memorial. i I 203 D ff Hi THE WORK OF A PASTOR !if ;it CHAPTER VII THE WORK OF A PASTOR When the Church of Christ receives a re- inforcement Of common sense, and man- ages her affairs with as much shrewdness as a bank, one is certain that her rulers will make some salutary reforms. Incapa- ble men will be removed without hesita- tion, on the sound principle that the min- istry exists for the Church, and not the Church for the ministry. The man and his work will also be harmonised, so that a scholar who can find his way through documents J. E. P. and D. like a game- keeper over a moor, will not be set to organise an East-end mission ; nor will a robust evangelist, whose sermon consists of three sentences whic:. are charged with 207 wm THE CURE OF SOULS liH ■V'U truth but defy punctuation, be set down to minister from January to December to thinking people. Perhaps some of us may also live to see the day when four struggling congregations in the city will be amalgamated, and one large and pow- erful church will command and serve a district. A congregation of, say, 4000 people all told — with a church holding 2000, which would be sufficient accom- modation for all likely to be present at any single service — would have various un- deniable and important advantages over its four predecessors. (a) The necessary sermon production would be reduced by three-fourths, and the sermon would be more telling, because the preacher would have the electrical stimulus of a mass of human life, and not have to select the largest group in a half-empty church for his practical les- sons, lest, wandering hither and thither among solitariness, he might be charged 208 tHE WORK OF A PASTOR with personality. It is a sin of maladmin- istration, for which some one will have to answer, that men wear out their hearts preaching to a handful whose words might have edified thousands. (If) Ministers and officers would be delivered from the harassing financial problem how to make nineteen shillings do the work of twenty, and the people from the weary drip of collection appeals, both because the income would be much larger and the expenditure would be con- siderably smaller. Giving is a fine grace and an excellent discipline for character, but endless and pathetic begging for money, with all sorts of expedients from bazaars to tea meetings, is not at all within the range of grace, and aids no one's character. (c) The practical work of the congre- gation would be carried on with vigour and an affluence both oi agents and finance — the men who could give, and the 209 I i I, I w m \ m il-V. i' ! ia £ I * 11 THE CURE OF SOULS men who could counsel, and the men who could work, and the men who could pray — the four who ought to lift the paralysed human mass — working in a happy part- nership. (^) The common life of a congregation would be free from the envies, jealousies, ambitions, and quarrels which embitter the narrower life of smaller bodies. Diotrephes is a mighty man among two hundred poor people, and threatens loudly what he will do if he does not get his own way ; but when Diotrephes lands in a large con- gregation and finds himself of no account, he is the most agreeable and deferential of men, for there is none so mean and cow- ardly as the congregational bully. (e) And, which is my present point, in such a congregation one minister would not be expected to fill all offices — to be a preacher, a lecturer, a teacher, an organ- iser, a financier, an ecclesiastic, a pastor, but there would be a staff among whom 310 THE WORK OF A PASTOR the varied and complicated duties of the modern ministry could be divided. It may be a counsel of perfection to expect that church business should be as- signed to an order of ecclesiastics, who would preside at courts, draw up reports, concoct motions, carry out legislation, at- tend committees, and fulfil one hundred irksome duties which try the ordinary minister, and take him away from his study and his people. [The ecclesiastic is a genus by itself, whose members may have to waste their time in the pulpit and in going from door to door, but whose mind lives and moves and has its being in the sphere of law : who discharge the most tiresome sapless v7ork ever laid to the hands of man, with conscientious pains and accuracy, who re- ceive no thanks from ungrateful brethren, with a boyish love for disorderliness ; but who are greatly missed after they are dead, and the business which they once man- 211 i THE CURE OF SOULS s'ilt aged has got into a hopeless tangle. As I have seen a tree drawing its nourish- ment out of a bed of coal, so those patient men may find food in their marvellous phraseology, and at a time one has seen them lifted with some secret joy.] And it may be another vain hope that the whole supervision of Biblical and theological instruction will be given in each large congregation (or group of con- gregations) to one of those accomplished young scholars who are now coming out from our colleges by the score, and often are broken-spirited because they can get no work to do, being inclined to read essays in the pulpit, and being afflicted with fits of painful silence in sick-rooms — who are a priceless waste product. It is, however, surely within practical affairs that this congregation of ours should have two ministers — one to be the preacher and the other the pastor. Many men combine the two gifts of the shepherd, to feed and 212 THE WORK OF A PASTOR to watch, but as Nature specialises on her higher levels, it is rare that one should excel both in the pulpit and the house. One man grudges every hour outside his study, revels in books as a fish in water, can conceive no more exhilarating pleas- ure than reasoning out a truth to its con- clusion ; does not notice people on the street, and is painfully embarrassed if they notice him ; hungers and thirsts for Sun- day morning, when he can deliver his message. He rejoices in forty minutes* intellectual conflict with a crowd of human souls, but afterwards does not wish to see the face of man ; in the reaction which follows a great effort he is company for no one, and resigns his church every Sun- day evening. God made him for his work, and he does it well. His brother is cabined among books, and longs to be among people ; he plans a round of visits, as one going for a pleasant tour, and yet will delay an hour because two little chil- 213 1.1 ' i ,: (I J 1] ■ II *:i ft 1^ ' , !; (i=i .'*? ■:«* m THE CURE OF SOULS dren, bcinjQr sent with a message, insist on giving it in person ; old people's faces light up at the sight of him across the street, and he must necuis go over to shake hands ; there is something in the grip of his hand and the sound of his voice which sends people on their way rejoicing — so simple a thing is human nature. When he enters a house there is a general stir and an adhesion of the whole household ; sick people declare with solemnity that he does more for them than the doctor, and in the hour of trial the thoughts of a fam- ily turn by instinct to this man. He also is of God's designing, and wonderfully fitted for his end. Between these men there must be no comparison, for the two are the piers of the arch. The pastoral instinct is quite unworldly, and in this utilitarian day, with its domi- nant precept of * payment by results,' can hardly be understood. What the ideal pastor sees in every member of his congre- 214 THE WORK OF A PASTOR Ration is not some one that will be of use to him btjcause he is such a p^ood worker but a soul that is ^iven him for twenty years by Christ, and whom he must pre- pare for everlasting life. The pastor does not delay over the appearance and circum- slances of a man any more than Christ did; like his Master he pierces to the spiritual part, the real man. He is always impressed, and sometimes quite over- whelmed, by the value of the immortal soul — this soul, still plastic and unfircd, for which he can do so much or so little He trembles for it when lie sees the de- stroyer hovering over it like a hawk poised in mid-air, and would fain have it gathered beneath Christ's wing. He tends and waters it, like a tender vine, noting (;very green leaf and anxiously searching for the promise of autumn. He works on it with all kinds of tools, fashioning and shaping it, as he has opportunity, after the likeness of Christ. That is a 215 r (I ! If I Hi Ir^ ! THE CURE OF SOULS lovely legend which describes how St. John demanded of a presbyter the young man he had committed to his oversight, and when he found the young m.an had lapsed from the faith and become a robber, how the old apostle sought him out and fell at his feet, and would not rest till the wanderer had consented to return to the fold. It was worthy of the friend who had lain on Jesus' bosom and drank in the Master's spirit. His people are ever in the pastor's heart, although this may not appear in his or- dinary manner. He claims identity with them in their joy and sorrow and endless vicissitudes of Hfe. No friend is blessed with any good gift of God but he is also richer. No household suffers loss but he is poorer. If one stand amid great temp- tation he is stronger; if one fall he is weaker. When any one shows conspicu- ous grace the pastor thanks God as for himself ; when any one refuses His call he 216 THE WORK OF A PASTOR is dismayed, counting himself less faithful. He waits eagerly to see whether one who groped in darkness has been visited by the light iTom on high, whether another, who seemed to have gone into a far country, has set his face towards the Father's house. One family lie vvatches with anxiety, be- cause he does not know how they will bear a heavy stroke of adversity, and another with fear lest rapid success in this v/orld may wean their hearts from God. He trembles for this merchant lest he fall below the rule of Christ and do things which are against conscience ; he rejoices over another who has stood fast and re- fuses to soil his hands. He inquires on every hand about some young man of whom he expects great things ; he plans how another may be kept from tempta- tion. One thing he cannot do : criticise his people or make distinctions among them. Others, with no shepherd heart, may n.iss the hidden goodness ; he searches 217 THE CURE OF SOULS I fi for it as for fine gold. Others may judge people for faults and sins ; he takes them for his own. Others may make people's foibles the subject of their raillery ; the pastor cannot because '^'^ loves. Does this interest on the part oi one not related by blood or long friendship seem an im- pertinence ? It ought to be pardoned, for it is the only one of the kind that is likely to be offered. Is it a sentiment ? Assuredly, the same sublime devotion which has made Jesus the Good Shepherd of the soul. If the pastoral ':r>tinct be crushed out of existence bc: ven the upper and lower millstones of ragLig sen- sationalism and ecclesiastical worldhness, then the Christian Church will sink into a theological club or a society for social reform : if it had full play we might see a revival of religion more spiritual and lasting than any since the Reformation. While the theologian has been often hated, and the preacher belittled, the pas- r»i8 THE WORK OF A PASTOR tor has always, been a favourite, and his beautiful duties have frequently appealed to the poetic imagination. How finely has Goldsmith touched the simplicity and saintly poverty of the village pastor, his sympathy with all kinds of suffering, and his unbounded charity ; his powerful pres- ence and spiritual succour at the last hour. But he is most happy in his description of that fond love which is in the religious sphere like the maternal instinct in na- ture : — 'Thus to relieve the wretched was his pride, And ev'n his failings leaned to v'rtue's side; But in his duty prompt, at every call. He watched and wept, he prayed and felt, for all ; And, as a bird each fond endearment tries To tempt its new-fledged offspring to the skies, He tried each art, reproved each dull delay, Allured to brighter worlds, and led the way.' Wordsworth, ever sensible to the beauty of quietness, has his pastor also : 219 m' MIL "% ,1 •1 THE CURE OF SOULS 'The shepherd of his flock, or as a king Is styled, when most affectionately praised, The father of his people.' And to the grace of this conception Victor Hugo owes his noblest character, the Bishop in Les Miserables, who was so beloved by his people that they called him Monseigneur Bienvenu : — ' Prayer, celebration of the religious offices, alms, consoling the afflicted, the cultivation of a little piece of ground, fraternity, frugality, self- sacrifice, confidence, study, and work, filled up each day of his life,' Nor are we to suppose that this ideal is confined to poetry, for it was at least twice realised in history, — when Richard Baxter was minister of Kidderminster, and George Herbert was rector of Bemerton. One was a Puritan, and a type of his kind : keen, restless, conscientious, ever arguing for peace, who made another place of his town ; and I copy the title-page of his book : — • sso THE WORK OF A PASTOR Gildas Salvianus ; The REFORMED Pastor. Shewing the nature of the Pastoral work ; Especially in Private Instruction and Catechizing. With an open Confession of our too open Sins. Prepared for a day of Humiliation kept at Worcester, Dec e tub. 4. 1655. By the Ministers of that County, who subscribed the Agree- ment for Catechizing and Personal Instru- ction, at their entrance upon that work. By their unworthy fellow-servant Richard Baxter. Teacher of the Church at Keder minster. H M Luke 12. 47. 'EKfZwf (Jf o iV)v'kc(: ^ yvoijq to Oilffua tov kv- plov iavTov, Kal fiij iroifxaaag, juyde iroiijaag Trpof to eiTajjua avrov, 8ax ffl >>:■. fl m w THE CURE OF SOULS The other was an Anglican, and typical of his kind : cultured, reverent, charitable, ever praying for peace, who made his parish as a colony of heaven on earth ; and I copy the title-page of his book : — A PRIEST To the TEMPLE, OR The Countrey Parson His CHARACTER, And Rule of Holy Life. The Authour, Mr. G. H. Kjf^l 1652. Many books on the pastoral office have been written since those two servants of Jesus entered into the higher service, and modern treatises on practical theology have their own value, meeting the changed 222 THE WORK OF A PASTOR * i conditions of life, but none, so far as I know, have such depth of piety or such sweetness of spirit. If one prefers to read George Herbert, it is because he has more grace of letters and tenderness of soul — being orator of the University of Cam- bridge and a poet, — and surely nothing better has ever been written on the shep- herd care of the minister than his Parson ill Circuit, who doth not disdain to enter into the poorest cottage, * though he even creep into it,' ' for both God is there also, and those for whom God dyed ' ; and who when he comes to any house first blesseth it, and then, * as hee finds the persons of the house imployed formes his discourse.' So he passes through the parish, com- mending or chiding, exhorting or advising, with such tact and sincerity that it is no wonder that people blessed him as he passed, and left the plow in the furrow when George Herbert's church bell rang for prayers. 223 \ 1 t ■« M'^M k ; i '(;■■■ \ ^ i ( 1, nil 7 •' • ^' ! ! i 1; 1 >f'. THE CURE OF SOULS [The preacher has admiration for his peculi ir reward, but the pastor has affec- tion : if the preacher be ill there are para- graphs in the newspapers ; if the pastor, there is concern in humble homes. No man in human society gathers such a har- vest of kindly feeling as the shepherd of souls, none is held in such grateful memory.] His work, like that of a physician, may be divided into outdoor and indoor ; vz'sz- tation and consultatio7t ; and one is haunt- ed by the secret feeling that visitation — except in sick and special cases — is be- littled by superior persons in the ministry, and regarded as a waste of time. They imagine that some of their brethren go from door to door because it is a release from the sterner work of the study, and an agreeable occupation — being a gentle form of physical exercise, and a complete rest for the mind. The visitor suggests a man delivering circulars or a lady making calls. 224 THE WORK OF A PASTOR [Certain have given occasion for this caricature of the pastor, who gad about from house to house without purpose, and whose conversation is trivial gossip, who for their own sakes and other people's had better be chained to a desk daily, and receive no food till they translate one of St. Augustine's sermons. It is those weaklings who have d'^preciated the pas- toral office and robbed it of sweet so- lemnity.] With the true pastor, visitation is a spiritual labour, intense and arduous, be- side which reading and study are light and easy. When he has been with ten fami- lies, and done his best by each, he comes home trembling in his very limbs and worn-out in soul. Consider what he has come through, what he has attempted, what, so far as it can be said of a frail human creature, this man has done. He has tasted joy in one home, where the husband has been restored to his wife 225 li ; THE CURE OF SOULS { >i • 1 mf I ^M «!'! from the dust of death ; he has shared sor- row with another family where pet Mar- jorie has died ; he has consulted with a mother about a son in some far country, whose letters fill the anxious heart with dread ; he has heard a letter of twelve pages of good news and overflowing love which another son has sent to his mother ; he has carried God's comfort to Darby and Joan reduced suddenly to poverty, and God's invitation to two young people beginning life together in great pros- perity. ■ He has to adjust himself to a new situation in each house, and to cast himself with utter abandonment into another ex- perience of life. Before evening he has been a father, a mother, a husband, a wife, a child, a friend ; he has been young, middle-aged, old, lifted up, cast down, a sinner, a saint, all sorts and conditions of life. [This is not flexibility — the tact of a man suiting himself to circumstances, 226 THE WORK OF A PASTOR but within his soul neutral and detached, — it is sympathy, the common feeling of the Body of Christ.] It is exhausting to rejoice or to sor- row, hut to taste both sensations in suc- cession is disabling; yet this man has passed through ten moods since midday, and each with all his strength. His ex- periences have net all been wiped out as a child's exercise from a slate ; they have become a strata in his soul. [The coming of a beautiful idea gives the thinker a shock of delight, from which he does not recover for an hour : what must it be for one to bathe himself in the passion of humanity for five hours ?] It is not possible for the pastor to read or write after this effort of love. He is empty and helpless : he has given away himself. The pastor of a large congregation must be very careful and methodical, and be- sides his ordinary pocket address-book, he 227 ^^1 i '' ii .ill THE CURE OF SOULS ,'iM i.n attaches great importance to two hooks. As soon as a family comes to the church he sends them a schedule — a kind of cen- sus paper, about which there will be some simple jesting, which mollifies everything, — in which they write the names of the household and the as^es of all below six- teen, telling also v are communicants and who have done church work. [The pastoral memory grows to won- derful attainments, but it can hardly hold all the details of say three hundred families. It is not supernatural, as the people sup- pose, neither is his knowledge.] The contents of this schedule are then written into a large book, finely papered and strongly bound, like a ledger ; and in this book the pastor has his congregation before him at any moment. He reminds himself who ought to become communi- cants, or ought to take part in the church work, and where recruits can be found for the guilds and classes. Another book the 228 THE WORK OF A PASTOR. pastor keeps in a drawer and shows to no one : it must be destroyed on his death. Its pages contain the spiritual history and character of his people — the results of his diagnosis — and from time to time he erases or adds to the description. Were he to show his photograj)h to a man, it is pos- sible that one would not recognise himself, but that would only prove our amazing ignorance of ourselves, and the advantage of having a faithful and skilled physician. The careful pastor will rnake a yearly visitation of his people, announcing his dates and localities from the pulpit, ac- cording to an ancient fashion, and he will omit no one, however rich, for he needs the pastor most ; or however poor, for he will value him most. This can only be a brief visit — a mere review and interchange of greetings — but it is wonderful how much can be accomplished in fifteen minutes when the visitor is expected, when he is known and loved, when gossip is left 229 'm iVij ;f' I THE CURE OF SOULS » ^ ,',*' out, and it is understood that business has to be done. One thing the pastor will not do, and that is to offer prayer in every house, because no man can pray four times an hour for an afternoon without the most miserable formality, and because prayer ought to spring out of the occasion. There are moments when conversation moves onwards till it reaches the brink of prayer. The visit then culminates and completes itself in prayer, and the petitions come from the heart. After which the pastor instantly leaves, bidding his people good-bye before the Throne of Grace, and in the v^ery presence of the Lord. [This regular visitation secures that no one in the congregation be overlooked ; it satisfies people voracious of attention — they have had their due ; it gives the people an opportunity of telling any un- known trouble, offering any suggestion, or clearing themselves of any grievance. As it progresses there is an increasing famili- 230 THE WORK OF A PASTOR . f arity between the pew and the pulpit, till, when the last district has been over- taken, the whole congregation and the pastor are in touch.] Sometimes the pastor receives a sudden impulse to go to a certain house, and whether it come to him in his room or on the street, he obeys it with all possible speed. On ihe way he will sometimes reproach himself because he may be going on a needless errand, and he will be abashed on the door-step because he has no excuse for calling. He needs none, as it appears, for he discovers in nine cases out of ten that he is needed in that house, and that his arrival is considered a providence. It is really something higher and finer — a guidance of tiic Chief Shepherd by the in- ward light of His Spirit. The pastor is convinced that if he had been more sensi- tive to the Divine touch, and more watch- ful for the Divine lead, he might have cared for the sheep with surer timeliness, 231 '$1 THE CURE OF SOULS and he remembers with regret many in- stances when Jesus called and he did not answer. [Telepathy is not a dream nor an im- posture ; it is a fact within the Body of Christ, whose members suffer one with another, through the Risen Head, Who suffers with us all.] There is one occasion when the pastor never hesitates nor delays. As soon as the message comes from the house of sick- ness he leaves his bed or his book, or his food or his friends, and loses no time on the way. It is possible that the summons may be needless or exaggerated ; but it may not be, and he prefers to err on the safe side in the critical affairs of the soul. Even although he may be preparing his sermon, and be writing the sentence on which the whole argument pivots, he will lay down his pen between the noun and the verb. For the sermon can wait, but it may be this person cannot. 232 {*' ^ii i f .f. 1'' THE WORK OF A PASTOR [Ah me ! to be expected, waited for, looked for with every step and ring, and to come too late !] On the way the pastor recalls all he knows of this person, if he be of his flock, and arranges how he will declare Christ to him ; for this must be his message. He hath a scripture in readiness to give to the sick, a short, simple, tender word ; and it is at such times that familiar passages revive and blossom as if it were spring with them. [Twice does a minister learn beyond all question that the Bible contains the word of the Living God — once when he preach- es the forgiveness of sins to the penitent, once when he sees a soul in the great straits of life lifted, comforted, and filled with peace and joy.] If he ask the sick what scripture they desire, it is only a form, for there is one chapter which every man and woman want to hear in great sorrow, or when the 233 •I I'- ■I I \% U .j,; J;,; m 1 i -^1 : .(iy i . I ■t ,^, r ' Hi ill n i- IS/'. 1 I IV r 11 r; THE CURE OF SOULS shadow is falling. The leaf which con- tains the fourteenth of St. John's Gospel should be made moveable in our Bibles, in order that it might be replaced every ten years. By the time a man has got to middle age that leaf is thinning, and by old age it is only a brown film that is barely legible, and must be gently handled. Yet with every reading — say six times a week — the pastor notices that it yields some new revelation of the Divine Love and the Kingdom of Heaven. If one is sinking into unconsciousness, and you read, * In My Father's house are many mansions,' he will come back and whisper ' mansions,' and he will wait till you finish : * where I am ye may be also,' before he dies in peace. [It is said that there are ministers of Christ who will not attend infectious cases, or will clutch eagerly at means of escape. If this be true — let us hope that it is a slander — the miscreant should be 234 THE WORK OF A PASTOR deposed without delay from the minis- try.] The pastor gives much of his time to consultation, and it is likely that he will have to give more every year. It is the custom of Protestants to denounce the confessional, and not without reason — for the claim of a priest to hear confessions and absolve is a profane interference be- tween the soul and Christ, — but it would be wise to remember that there are times and moods and circumstances when every person desires to open his heart to some brother-man, when some persons cannot otherwise get relief. To whom are these persons to go ? What they want is one who has a wide experience of life, who is versed in human nature, who is accus- tomed to keep secrets, who has faith in God and man, whose office invites and sanctions confidence. Who fulfils those conditions so perfectly as the minister of Christ ? and is it not good that there is 235 . : ; ^■fl THE CURE OF SOULS 4 i ■■ r-'i ItM^': (( v. i 'U ^ :• I ''i;* ■ It I I' 1 i within reach one ordained to be a friend unto every one who is lonely and in dis- tress of mind ? The following are the laws of consulta- tion : (a) That the pastor shall not press for any confidences, but shall receive only such as are freely offered for the relief of the person. [Anything like prying into people's pri- vate affairs and pursuing a clue to the end is most detestable. The pastor must be thoroughly cleansed ^ om curiosity and meddlesomeness.] (d) That the pastor shall urge the per- son to reveal nothing more of any painful secret than may be necessary to enable him to give his advice. [If a woman states that she has a heavy sin on her conscience, and indicates that her husband has no idea of it, then the pastor suggests that they should speak of the matter in general terms, and, if he knows 236 THE WORK OF A PASTOR the goodness of her husband, that she ought to confess the sin, whatever it may be, to him. Afterwards the pastor advises her how to meet and overcome this sin if it should arise again, and so this human soul has not been put to shame, but has gained help without losing self-respect] (c) That the pastor, although he has taken no oath of secrecy, regards every confidence as absolutely sacred, and will on no account, except at the command of the law, reveal what has been told him in consultation. [Whosoever holds the pastoral office must learn to keep secrets, and must be on his guard against careless speech. What he has to fear is not dishonour through wilful breach of trust, but mere leakiness. The pastor does not consider his own wife a privileged person in this matter, for though she might be the most prudent and reticent of women, yet it would em- barrass his people to know that their 237 l 1 1 HI ' «|^«; ft If L.., r t) i THE CURE OF SOULS secrets were shared with her. The high honour of doctors, who ca^iy in their breasts so many social tragedies, is an ex- ample to be followed by the clerical pro- fession.] (d) That the pastor will give such practical advice as he can, especially urg- ing restitution, reformation, watchfuhxss, as the case may require. [As he grows older he will know many precedents, and be furnished with many aids for emergencies.] (e) That the pastor will not fail, so far as he may be able, to lead every person who consults him to accept Christ as his Saviour and Friend, so that all the straits of life, its sins, sorrows, disasters, may compel the soul to the faith of Christ. What costs the pastor much more anxi- ety is the diagnosis and treatment of spir- itual diseases, and here he has to be most careful. He distinguishes between an 238 THE WORK OF A PASTOR honest sceptic, whose face is toward the light, and who longs to believe, from one whose back is wilfully turned on Christ, and who is filled with intellectual pride : a merchant whose satisfaction comes from far-seeing and masterly strokes in business, and whose attitude is that of a soldier with his tactics, and another whose whole interest is accumulating wealth, and whose heart is woi Id-eaten : a young man of rich, strong nature who is fighting the flesh with all his might, and another who is feeding his imagination with evil books, and preparing for the sin into which he falls : one woman full of genuine emo- tion, which has to be guided in the ser- vice of Christ, and another whose studied sentiment, like the soft beauty of a peach, covers a heart of stone : that woman whose tongue is a danger through her endless good-natured garrulity, this one who does cruel injury by clever detraction and calculated slander. If any one is 239 M ' ! I' i h I 'A ■ i* ii THE CURE OF SOULS he was in the house on the day of his re- turn, to sec how it had fared with him in the outer world. People turned to him as by an instinct in their joys and sorrows; men consulted him in the crises of life, and, as they lay a-dying, committed their wives and children to his care. He was a head to every widow, and a father to the orphans, and the friend of all low- ly, discouraged, unsuccessful souls. Ten miles away people did not know his name, but his own congregation regarded no other, and in the Lord's presence it was well known, it was often mentioned ; when he laid down his trust, and arrived on the other side, many whom he had fed and guided, and restored and comforted, till he saw them through che gates, were waiting to receive their shepherd-minister, and as they stood around him before the Lord, he, of all men, could say without shame, • Behold, Lord, Thine under-shep- herd, and the flock Thou didst give me.' 94a ■■ THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OF GOD i' i if! y.i » n ^ir; ik i'*' CHAPTER VIII THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OF GOD It is vanity for Christians to shut their eyes to the fact that attendance at public worship is decreasing, and that this is not a hopeful omen for religion. Ingenious advocates may make the best of this tendency, and may bring forward various saving pleas— that public worship is rather an example than a commandment of Holy Scripture ; tiiat God is not confined to any house made with hands, and can be found as surely in the green fields, or in a good book, as in an ecclesiastical build- ing ; that some of the worst people are conspicuous by their presence, and some of the best by their absence ; and that the dreariness of service, as well as the stupid- [: v.. '■k 245 BHH I THE CURE OF SOULS ity of many sermons, is fitted to dull rather than quicken the religious spirit. When this clever person is in a lighter mood, he allows himself to make play with the conventionalities and eccentrici- ties of public worship, but when he rises to his height, he speaks with tears in his eyes of a certain sunset which you are assured has done more for his soul than all the sermons he ever heard. One may frankly grant the force of any one of those arguments, and at the same time remind our friend, what he knows very well, and every other person, that he has not gone to the root of the matter. Granted that some people go to church to whom worship must be a vain show, and that others remain at home to whom it is a spiritual reality, it were quite absurd to divide people into public worshippers who are professional hypocrites, and private worshippers who are unattached saints. As a bare matter of fact, bejieving people 346 THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OF GOD do, as a rule, go to church, and unbeliev- ing people, as a rule, do not : and in order to show that one is not using faith in a dogmatic but a vigorous sense, it may be sufficient to point out that on the Church — her teaching, her influence, her example — the whole system of charity and philan- thropy depends in the Western world. The contrast is not between those who worship in churches and those who worship at home, but between those whose faith in the Risen Christ is so real and strong that it drawls men together on the first day of the week to celebrate His resurrection, by which He has become the Living Way unto the Father, and those to whom this chief event in human history is a fond imagination, and whose idea of God is so vague and impersonal, that they can find Him in the running of a stream as surely as in the face of Christ. Various reasons of secondary impor- tance may of course be given for the 247 i .a- n i' ■ I ^ ^ ?i - i.. ! i 1 « i ' I THE CURE OF SOULS decay of this great function of faith, and they ought to receive serious consideration at the hands of the rulers of Christ's Church. Perhaps the austere conception of God as Sovereign and Judge, which held the souls of our fathers in an irre- sistible grip, has been replaced by a too easy and familiar attitude of thought. Where there is no awe there will be little worship. With this weakening of the Divine fear has come, as a natural con- sequence, a relaxation of parental author- ity, and congregations are thinner to-day because, while in the past a father took order that all his children of convenient age should be with him in the family pew, children now attend church, or not, as they please, — the likes or dislikes of ten- year-olds about preachers and sermons being seriously considered. [The father is God's viceroy, but if God has ceased to have authority, a father can hardly be expected to rule.] 24S THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OF GOD It is also more than likely that the mul- tiplication of religious work and of pecu- liar services, with strange ways and sensa- tional attractions, compete with public worship ; and it is a grave question whether bizarre services, each one of which is vaunted in turn as a new attrac- tion to religion, are not a depreciation of the Church of Christ. When each one of those causes has been credited with its own drain, it remains that worship rises or falls as men believe or disbelieve in the unseen, and that the Church must give her strength to make her worship a mag- nificent and convincing testimony that Jesus did rise from the dead the third day according to the Scriptures. Public worship is a demonstration of the first order, and serves the most practi- cal ends. If one believes in a historic event, such as the achievement of national independence, or desires to see a great measure carried, such as the freedom of 249 li '•- ■ "t THE CURE OF SOULS ■S^^i'. >.;; i:^ i the slave, he joins with others of a like mind ; they organise a procession, with music and banners ; they hold a mass meeting, with fiery speeches and stirring resolutions. * What folly ! ' says some high and mighty person ; ' what good is there in this marching and oratory ? * He is not only cynical, he is superficial. Has he never heard the trnmp of many feet, and wanted to keep step ? has he never been in a big flood of human life and been carried away ? Deny a people the right of public meeting, and you have quenched the fires of enthusiasm and almost killed the hope of progress. Isolation and lone- liness are the nursery of depression and pessimism ; with the multitude are joy and strength. Faith is an inherent faculty of the soul, and is not independent of the laws which regulate human nature. For a week a man has been living in an atmos- phere of sense, seeing and touching till the unseen fades into a dream. Is there 250 THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OF GOD a world behind this painted curtain, or does it cover the wall of our tomb ? Are the last chapters of tne Gospels only a pious invention, the afterglow of a sun that has §unk in night ? Is the Christian creed, with its hope of everlasting life, a worn-out superstition ? Bus)^ with many affairs, and separated from Christian fel- lowship, the man finds his faith fading and shrivelling. The light pricks his eye- lids, and he awakes on the first day of the week : he rises with gracious remem- brances in his mind, and sees a little com- pany hurrying to some church where there is an early tryst between them and their Lord, Who this day burst the tomb and rose a great while before dawn. To-day there is no traffic on the streets, and weary men are resting from their labours. By- and-bye a bell breaks the stillness, and is answered from a distant tower ; bells from every quarter join in, till the air vibrates and quivers with gladness. Our dispirited 251 i If w 'V ^^ ! . Br* f i 1 - r ■1 11 THE CURE OF SOULS friend cannot resist the invitation, and he finds the street alive with people marching along with firm, composed tread. Within the church he is one of fifteen hundred, all gathered in the name of Christ, all calling Him Lord. The minister gives out the hundredth Psalm, and from nave and transepts and galleries pours forth one volume of praise: r *A11 people that on earth do dwell, Sing to the Lord with cheerful voice.* Amid the mass of living, pulsating faith this solitary man's fears and doubts vanish, and he comes out into the sunshine, established afresh in the faith of the Risen Lord, his life caught up into the life which is hid with Christ in God. It is a great reinforcement to multiply a single faith by fifteen hundred. * He is not risen, no — He lies and moulders low ; Christ is not risen,' 252 ] '4. t THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OF GOD SO the world says, in many ways, for six days, and then the Church gathers together her children, and declares with fuller mean- ing than Clough intended : *In the great gospel and true creed He is yet risen indeed, Christ is yet risen.' If public worship is to feed faith in her straits, and fill the soul with heavenliness, then it must be a beautiful function, to which the minister in our day ought to give loving study and attention. [There are churches which depreciate the service, and churches which depreciate the sermon, and both err, because sermon and service are not rivals but auxiliaries, the service spiritualising and softening the heart for the message of God, and the Evangel being the answer to the praise and prayer.] One cannot treat of the conduct of service without touching on the compara- 253 M ": P ' I.I THE CURE OF SOULS tive advantages of a lituigy and free prayer. [It is too late to discuss the lawfulness of a prayer-book, for that indeed was settled when Jesus was pleased to give the dis- ciples the Lord's Prayer : as the dear old Sc( h lady said — yielding unwillingly to its introduction by her minister, — ' I have no particular objection to that,' although she evidently felt it a dangerous precedent. The dislike to a prayer-book in a certain quarter is not theological : it is historical. If a man declines to use a liturgy, and you crop his ears and slit his nose to encour- age him, human nature is so constituted that he is apt to grow more obstinate, and to conceive a quite unreasonable prejudice against the Look.] This is the case for a liturgy such as the Prayer-book of the Anglican Church : — (a) That a liturgy, whose materials have been drawn from the classical ages of de- votional literature, has a certain stateliness 254 mi THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OF GOD of thought and charm of style which satisfy the ear and cHng to the memory. (b) That a liturgy, being instinct with the spirit of undivided (Christendom, will lift its children out of sectarian and pro- vincial ideas of religion and bring them into the communion of the Church Catholic. (c) That a liturgy being framed for the use of the Body of Christ, not to express any individual mood or experience, will embody the ordinary wants of all kinds and conditions of men. {d) That a liturgy makes the worship- pers independent of the officiating clergy- man, so that his faults do not hinder their devotions. {e) That a liturgy, affording a common and uniform means of worship, serves to bind together all the members of a church, both old and young, into one fellowship and loyalty. (/) That a liturgy is especially suitable 255 ii-.i If i r ^1 ' ill' 1 ', * ■ i if' li 'i ',1 • ■ * I ft 4i|.-^' ' THE CURE OF SOULS for old people, because of its unchanging form of words ; for people wearied by the week's toil, because their minds are not strained following a prayer through an un- known country ; for young people, because their interest is sustained, and they have some part in the worship. (jr^ That a liturgy can be taught to children from early years in the church, nnd unto their last days they will love and respond to the dear familiar words. For the custom of free prayer — where the Church does not supply her children with the means of common worship, but each minister makes his prayers for the occasion — this case may be put : — (a) That it encourages the grace of prayer bestowed upon the Church by the coming of the Holy Ghost, Who inter- cedeth within us, as Christ intercedeth for us, in the heavenly places. (d) That free prayer gives to the ser- vice a certain life and freshness which are 256 THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OF GOD Impossible when the same form is used every day from January to Deccmher, from year to year, from century to cen- tury. (c) That with free prayer it is possible to render thanks for great mercies which may have been received of God, to seek His help in sore straits that have come upon us, with particular and comforting reference. (d) That free prayer allows, in the ex- perience of many, a tenderness of heart and a nearness to God that are not pos- sible under any form. It is well to recognise that the diversity of human nature should have full play in the Church, and as there will always be different systems of doctrine, so there ought to be different methods of worship. Some minds are churchly, reserved, deli- cate in their religion ; they require a liturgy, since the idea of their devotions being led by one who could ask whatso- 257 r < I. m 0'\ ,-. I' 1: m Is 1 IH t.:l hi w\ M' ! .N, THE CURE OF SOULS ever he pleased for the congregation would only disgust and alienate them. Other minds are individualistic, frank, robust ; they will not be content with a book, but rejoice in the thought of perfect freedom in prayer, and are willing on occasion to encourage their leader v/ith sympathetic exclamations. It is possible, of course, that there may be a 7'approchement be- tween the two methods, as Churches with liturgies shorten or adapt them, and Churches without liturgies insist on some order of service, anJ even prepare forms of prayer for the use of their ministry. The ultimate issue for the Church in general might be a combination of liturgi- cal and extemporaneous prayer. One factor in the situation must re- ceive due weight, and that is the growth in culture within the half-century and its kgitimate influence on worship. People have more sensitive ears and a keener ap- preciation of perfection : they detect slip- 258 % . THE PUBLIC WOI^SHIP OF GOD shod phrases, and are offended by any vul- garity of thought : they will not endure that a coarse man should harangue the Almi^; ;at the pitch of his voice, or a 'weak ...an go maundering into His pres- ence in their name. They are careful as to the furnishing of their homes, as to their clothing, as to their friends, as to their books. They shrink from what is loud and glaring ; th. / love what is dainty and lovely ; they appreciate fine shades, graceful manners, finished style. When these people come into the House of God, and address themselves to the highest act of life, they cannot lay aside this habit of mind, and do not see any reason why they should. They cherish the belief that the service of the Church ought to represent the very ideal of thought and feeling and language, that from beginning to end there must not be one jarring note in the spirit, or one infelicitous expression in the form.' It is open to say that such people are 259 I n, It s I ' THE CURE OF SOULS critical, and that bad grammar has often expressed a full heart. But they insist that they are simply reverent, and that bad grammar does not express thoir heart. Private worship may be on the level of each family, but public worship must be on the highest. They also point out that the prayers of the Bible, whether in the Psalms or Epistles, arc cast into very stately language, and yet it is not to be expected that any one will say that the Psalmists or St. Paul lacked in fervency. They will be perfectly satisfied if the prayers of the Church, however composed, should be after the grand style of Holy Scripture ; but they refuse, when they bow their souls before God, to have for their mouthpiece a minister whose ideas and words outrage their feeling of good taste and reverence. Let him pray after this fashion when he is alone, for then he is speaking for himself ; let him, if better cannot be got, preach, for then he is speak- a6o m f THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OF GOD ing to men, but it is not fitting nor just that he should conduct public prayer. This is an unanswerable contention, and cannot be despised. We are all aware, of course, that in every Church there is a number of minis- ters to whom has been very richly given the spirit of grace and supplication, and Who lead the devotions of God's people with tenderness and beauty. Worship under their charge combines the perfect form of a liturgy with the loveliness and spontaneity of spoken prayer. If the Church could furnish ev^ery one of her congregations with such a minister, then little could be said for a prayer-book ; but every one knows that such men are the elect. We remember with unfeigned gratitude those anointed priests who went in our name into the Holiest of all, and who presented unto God what was in our hearts with the fragrance of their piety upon every word; but we also remember 261 H*. I'i i ( ; .1 !■ i 'i m ii':^^ rim % ii ... ,5.V;-,'«l? I il, t: i"' THE CURE OF SOULS how others, to whorri God had not been pleased to give such grace, misrepresented a thousand people woefully, asking things we did not desire, omitting to ask many things we did desire, and asking every- thing in terms we had never dreamt of using to a local dignitary. Without question ?. have suffered loss, and it is no compensation to assure us that the minister was a good man, or that he proved himself a forcible preacher. When the Church of Christ of any branch assembles a congregation of her people together for divine service, and commits its conduct to the absolute dis- cretion of one man, she undertakes an enormous responsibility. Has she not entered into a covenant with those present that this man will be their mouthpiece, and that all the ordinary and ^eneral wanes of a bodv oi han.( .n beings will so far as possible hi Die:';'nfed before the Throne oi Grace r Suppose^ through the THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OF GOD carelessness, or forgetf ulness, or ignorance, or idiosyncrasy of this minister, no prayer is offered for the country and its rulers, or for the sick and dying, or for the sorrow- ful, or for those in danger on the sea, or for distant friends, or for little children, or for those who have lost the kindly light of reason, or for prodigals, or for those who have secret trials ;— suppose there be no thanksgiving for the gifts of Provi- dence, for deliverance from disease, for succour to the soul, for increase of lio-ht for the coming of Christ, for the indwell- ing of the Holy Ghost, for the victory of the departed, for the life everlasting; — will there not be hundreds who entered the church laden with the weight of care or gratitude, and who hoped to the end, but hoped in vain, for relief? Can any service where such petitions and thanks- givings are absent be called public wor- ship? Where the Church provides no liturgy, 263 N &■ I 'i f ' r^ m Pi m^ t- ^ THE CURE OF SOULS the minister must give great care to the service of prayer, and there are certain faults against which he will do well to guard. One is /^r^^r/^/;^^ in prayer. When the minister expounds a doctrine of the truth, though this be the atoning sacrifice of our Lord ; when he repeats a varied and quite unrelated cento of texts to which the speeches of Hebrew prophets on public affairs, and some of the most foolish utterances of Job's friends, largely con- tribute ; when he exhorts his people to repentance and faith, or to some practical duty of the Christian life ; or when he con- founds sceptics, and corrects the errors of the day, treating with much unction those points wherein he conscientiously differs from his brethren, he has gravely mis- taken and misused his opportunity. Another is Egotism — when the minister does not seem able to distinguish between his study and the church, or his own private experiences and the needs of the 264 THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OF GOD congregation, but gives himself to the fervent and often affecting exposition of his own doubts and fears, and hopes and anxieties, finally disappearing out of reach and understanding in a cloud of mystical language. [' Do you suppose,' said an excellent man of the subjective school, 'that I am to be interrupted to pray for sailors when I am wrestling before the Mercy-seat f His wresuing, however, was not petitions for the people, but an explanation of the *ate of his own soul, and the sailor's mother was not greatly comforted by his lamentations.] A third fault is Slovenliness — when a minister embarks on the great affairs of prayer without a chart or compass, know- ing not whither he may be carried, but hoping to arrive somewhere ; when the congregation are certain that he does not know what he will say next sentence ; when he toils with a refractory sentence 265 i^ I r THE CURE OF SOULS i t ! t I (! i JIT I « ii^ ^ ) .:i I If for a while, and finally lets it go in despair — hiding his defeat by a hasty outburst of artificial fervour, and when he drops into painful colloquialisms which would not be tolerated in the humblest public address. [This style of prayer is excused on the ground of godly familiarity — two words which do not go well together : it ought to be condemned on the ground of un- godly impudence.] Perhaps the worst offence is Profanity — when that man whose soul ought to be most full of awe, sprinkles his prayer with the name of the Deity, which is accom- panied by no adjectives of adoration, and is shouted aloud ; or when a sinful man composes a speech stiff with embroidery of rhetoric and figures, and makes an empty pretence of addressing it to God, whi'e he is evidently calculating its effect on his -Uvlience of fellow-sinners; or when some thin-blooded and venomous creature abuses his sacred position and utilises the privilege 266 THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OF GOD of prayer to attack some person of his con- gregation who has resisted his will or done him some slight injury. If any one desires to perfect the form of his prayers, then he can do no better than read from time to time the liturgies of the Early Church, and the choice books of Christian devotion — a collection of which should lie handy to the minister's hand. There are moments when one lays down the pen in weariness or perplexity of thought, then let him take a draught from one oi those ancient welln, nnd he will not only be immediately nfreshed, but it will come to pass that he will catch the very style of the saints, not through laborious imitation, but as one who keeps high company acquires the manners of his host. If one desires to complete the substance of his prayers, it is wise to form a litany for himself with much care and pains — collecting all the ordinary petitions which 267 I ^ I'i! »•: i :< ;. jn ^i; [»>1- THE CURE OF SOULS occur to him, or arc suggested by his ex- perience as a minister, and inquiring from time to time whether any one of his people has one he knew not of, and then casting them all into order and simple tender words of devotional speech, adding a con- fession of sin and a general thanksgiving. This he will call the Prayer of Interces- sion, and use daily without fail or change, save for a few special collects which can be inserted in their season, say for colleges and schools at their re-opening, or for an election, or for a harvest, for the meeting of a Church court, and such like. [Con- servative people will not object to the use of this form, but will come to love it — complaining if a word be changed.] Worship culminates in the administra- tion of the Sacraments, which our i.ord gave us as the quickeners of the Christian life, and which are the seals of our faith. One is to oe administered with great so- lemnity, with a Holy Table set apart for 268 ■!■ THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OP' GOD this end, and guarded from every other use, with pure white linen on the pews, in token that the people are gathered at Christ's board, with grave sweet nr-lody, with minute observance by the minister of every symbolical word and action of the Lord, with thanksgiving lor the Church triumphant, with supplication for the Church militant, in the hush of the church while the elements are carried down the aisles, and the silent, awestruck people pledge themselves anevv to their Lord in the mystery of His Body and Blood. The other Sacrament had better have a service unto itself, after the benediction in the morning, for which parents and children could remain, and the minister should make a little address on the mys- tery of h ve and the beauty of holiness, and the excellence of the religious life, and on Jesus as the Good Shepherd of the soul and the Friend of little children ; and the people should stand at the act of Baptism, 269 'I ' ■^J a. W r\ .^% IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) 1.0 I.I imil II2.5 ,50 ■■"■=— Ills IS lis IIIIIM 1115 I u 1.6 ^ <^ /} Si.. "^5 -^ r Photographic Sciences Corporation 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, NY. 14580 (716) 873-4503 ^ ,-\ i\ \^ ^ vm V THE CURE OF SOULS i'l 11 5 •., t r and the choir should chant ' Amen ' when the child is baptized into the threefold Name ; and there should be a short form of prayer, which the minister can com- pose for himself, with a thanksgiving for the gift of the child and the recoveiy of the mother, and a committing of the little one into Jesus' care, and a prayer for grace to be given to the father and mother for the child's upbringing, and a petition that the child heart should be kept in all present till they come to our Father's House. And there should be bright music and joyful hymns. [Unto this service will frequently re- main old men and women that have never been married, who will often speak to the mother and lift up her heart by praising the child — lonely souls in whom the love of God dwelleth richly.] Public worship ought to be comforting, joyful, enthusiastic, beautiful, the flower of all the week, but its chief note should be 270 THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OF GOD reverence and godly fear. Praise and prayer, the reading of Holy Scripture, and the preaching of the Evangel, should con- spire to lift the congregation above the present world and the sensible atmosphere in which they have been living, and bring them face to face with the Eternal. It was this tender and gracious fear which made the glory of Puritan faith and gave visible force to Puritan character. Noth- ing is more urgently needed in this day, which knows how to doubt and jest, but is forgetting how to revere and adore, when the great function of worship has become pleasing and amusing, a perform- ance and a comedy. What we may well pray for is a baptism into our fathers' pen- itent, austere, enduring Christian faith, who summoned themselves hourly to the judgment-seat of Christ, and therefore considered it a small thing to be judged of man's judgment, who never met in the Great Name, whether in stately cathedral 271 1. m 11 THE CURE OF SOULS or bare hillside, but they came to the spirits of just men made perfect, and to Jesus, the Mediator of the new covenant and to God, the Judge of all. ni if 111. ' 11 f 873 S-Jlix^SBagBiitmmmmmm imiii.iim!iaii»j9it. the d to lant, THE MINISTER'S CARE OF HIMSELF I 1*1 f i !^n if ''^*»ta-.^ - INSTITUTE. CHAPTER IX THE minister's CARE OF HIMSELF As it is the will of God that the Church should be fed and guarded by a human ministry, there is no man on the face of the earth who has such responsibility, and who ought to take such care of himself, as the minister of Christ. And first he must see to his health, for the spiritual prosperity of a congregation depends very largely on the minister being not only sound in doctrine but also sound in body. It is not merely that a valetudinarian is a source of endless anxiety to kind-hearted people who have enough concern in their own homes without the burden of the minister's weakness, and that the work is certain to be crippled with a leader that is 275 tt^ I ft .j THE CURE OF SOULS » t* SI; I'M M^ ipr ,1 '^ ,(i V' •i i ■ "4 r 1] I ' r I ii afraid of breaking down, but, what is much more unfortunate and injurious, the in- vaHdism of his body will certainly creep into his teaching, for, as a rule, one can only get robust sermons from a robust man. . One ought indeed to be thankful that Christ chose as riis first apostles men not only of conspicuous spiritual genius, but also of a hardy, natural, wholesome habit of life — fishermen, and such like, — and that of the four Gospels that must remain for ever the authoritative documents of our faith, three proceeded, directly or indi- rectly, from those weatherbeaten Galileans, and the fourth from a physician. What- ever may be said of later Christian litera- ture, there is nothing sickly, unreal, mawkish, or gloomy in the Gospels. They are sober, sensible, downright, manly books, such as able-bodied men would write and real men like to read. The body is a factor in thinking, as well as in 276 THE MINISTER'S CARE OF HIMSELF pulling ropes and forging iron. Suppo:,c two men be both saints, you need not ex- pect equally good stuff from each in the way of thought if one be sound in body and the other unsound. As a rule, any one who has inherited an inferior constitu- tion, or whose nervous system is over- wrought, or whose body is deformed, or who is a chronic dyspeptic, or who is in any way below the working average of strength, will be peevish in temper, in- clined to useless argument, fiercely intoler- ant of other people's views, a slave to crotchets, and pessimistic in the extreme. It is his misfortune, and allowance ought to be made for it. He may live above it, but the chances are he will not. One ought to extend to him every considera- tion, as to a crippled man, bul it is wise to make some discount from his opinions. Unless he be singularly assisted by the grace of God, as certain like Pascal and Baxter evidently were, they will be less 277 •r THE CURE OF SOULS than true : he is sub-normal, and his views are apt to be sub-normal too — deficient in balance, sobriety, charity. When a min- ister is untouched in wind, sturdy in limb, clean in blood, you have a certain guarantee of bright, honest, manly thinking. He is not likely to be falsetto, hysterical, garru- lous, simply because he is sound in body as well as in mind. [It is, however, possible to be exasper- atingly healthy, and one can understand a much tried woman being driven away from a minister whose radiant unlined face showed that he had never known pain, and who had married a rich wife, and taking refuge in a church whose minister had a liver and preached rampant Calvin- ism. ' Was yon a man ' — so she put it — ' for a widow with seven children to sit under?* Invalid ministers have a certain use and do gather sympathetic congrega- tions — becoming a kind of infirmary chaplains. But their ecclesiastical and 278 THE MINISTER'S CARE OF HIMSELF theological views must be taken with great caution.] It is not extravagance to say that tho physical health of theologians has affect- ed the religious character of nations. No one can estimate how much Germany has gained from Luther's genial and robust nature, or Scotland lost through Calvin being a chronic invalid and Knox bemg a broken man. Durinir lontr cen- turies it was the custom of Christendom for a baron to send his able-bodied sons to che field and any deformed or sickly lad to the Church. Was it wonderful that theology and religion got out of touch with life, and became fantastic and unreasonable? Human life has now more doors for the infirm, and the Chris- tian Church has ceased to be a home for incurables, but it is not as a rule the strong, stirring, full-blooded boys of a family who enter the ministry, but tne lad who is half-alive, who plays no games, 279 i 1.' :H-.i Lib ir K! THE CURE OF SOULS who is painfully composed. This is a pub- lic misfortunn, since, if any other man bo out of sorts, his wife suffers, but if a min- ister be below par a thousand people have a Ic'is successful life for a week. His business is to put heart 'n them for six days' woric and trial, but for that enter- prise a man's pulse must beat hifi^h and his own heart be buoyant. If his diges- tion be bad, then he goes into the pulpit and hits viciously at some heresy or mourns the decay of morals. The people, who have been expecting a glimpse of heaven, go home in despair. The saints lament the degeneracy of the times, and the young people resolve that they will have nothing to do with religion. But the times are really the best we have ever seen, and religion is the strength of the human soul. The trouble is in this case neither in the Bible nor the world, but in the pulpit, which that day was filled by a hypochondriac or a melan- 280 TIIH MINISTER'S CARE OF HIMSELF choliac. Every church should have a pliysical examination at the entrance to the theological college and only admit those men who would have passed as first-class lives with an insurance company. And the working minister should have his own rules of health — to have his study re-charged with oxygen every hour, to sleep with his bedroom window open, to walk four miles a day, to play an out- door game once a week, t, have six weeks' holiday a year and once in seven years three months— all that his thouirht and teaching may be oxygenated and the fresh air of Christianity fill the souls of his people. He must also guard and husband his tmic with unrelenting jealous resolution ; for if he fail to do so in this day, his work will dwindle down into a mere round of religious and secular trifles. Imagine the contrast between the student's ideal of the ministry and its 2S1 ■«i V :' f: i: ■■! :i< V ^1 sir THE CURE OF SOULS actual practice. It may not be given to every man to hear that sudden and irresistible voice that came to St. Francis when he left the supper-table, and, stand- ing below the blue of the Umbrian sky. knew he was called of God to abandon all for Christ's dear sake ; but v/ithin the heart of everv true man the intention of the holy ministry is associated with romantic dreams and hopes. He does not expect a material reward, and he is pre- pared for hard work. He is willing to brave opposition and reproach to fulfil God's will; every sacrifice will have its compensation in those moments of rever- ent study when his heart suddenly burns within him and he knows Christ's pres- ence is ih the room, in hours when lie can see the soul of his hearers leap into their faces in response to the Evangel, in days spent in carrying the Lord's con- solation to the afflicted. Pard'^n his illu- sions ; he is still young and ingenuous ; 282 i THE M!NISTER'S CARE OF HIMSELF 1 i the student sees himself the prophet of God's truth, the shepherd of human souls. Lay down this poem, and take his diary, ten years later, when he is the minister of a city charge, and, so far as opportunity goes, has come to the height of his ministry. Moiday, the minister, exhausted by Sunday's work, faces a pile of letters that has accumulated in the end of the week, with disgust and rebellion. They are on all kinds of subjects, from a schedule is- sued by some committee voracious of statistics to a note of charming irrelevancy from a lady about a cook that had once been in his congregation. Two hours of clerk's work for at least five days a week was not a part of his original programme, and it is that item v/hich whitens men's hair. His note -book shows that an Ec- clesiastical Court meets in the afternoon, and after a battle with his lower sell, which leans to golf, he attends, in all the glow of moral victory, to find its members 283 i w ll THE CURE OF SOULS engaged in persuading some poor congre- gation to give an extra five pounds to some fund, and afterwards throwing them- selves into the discussion of a point of order with unaffected delight. In the evening he is due at a meeting which has now risen from a soiree to a conversazione, and is just bordering on a reception, where, finding six other neighbours, he contents himself with explaining the inter- esting circumstances in which he first met their esteemed pastor at a hydropathic. Tuesday morning he spends at the local School Board, trying to discover under the rules how much an ex-pupil-teacher ought to get as an assistant mistress, and whether a charge of 2S. 6d. ex- pended by the caretaker on his coal-cellar can be charged against the rates. He does visit one or two sick that day, but is hampered by an afternoon tea, where he meets seven ladies, whose hus- bands, being business men, were not ex- 284 THE MINISTER'S CARE OF HIMSELF pected to come. In the evening he pre- sides at the Young Men's Society, which can only be kept up by his watchful pres- ence, and hears a paper on JuHus Cx^sar, on which he offers remarks hurriedly gath- ered from an encyclopaedia, but suggestive of omniscie.ice. Wednesday morning is occupied in drawing up a report on the debt of a church for a board, and at three o'clock he moves a resolution at the annual meet- ing of the Society for the Reformation of Tramway Boys. He counts himself for- tunate in saving two hours for the prepa- ration of his address for the mid-week ser- vice. Thursday opens well, and the minister begins to work for Sunday, when a visitor comes, and then a crowd— a young lady who is anxious to be a nurse ; a young man (who was once at the young men's sermon) to get a testimonial for a situa- tion; a member of the church with no 285 I ■>.} T ,1 I lift I L^ ! I'h A THE CURE OF SOULS business, who wished to introduce a coun- try friend ; the travelling secretary of some third-rate society, whose time is paid ; an elderly person who got good from one of the minister's sermons in a strange church, and borrows five shillings. In the even- ing he takes the chair at the deacons* meeting, where the main features are the church officer's salary, and a draught which is the alleged reason of the irregular at- tendance of two families. On Friday that good angel, the minis- ter's wife, comes to the rescue, and gives strict orders that no one shall be admitted. The outside world struggles on without apparent disaster, and the minister has the luxury of four hours' consecutive thought. If he had many forenoons like this he might become a preacher. He is, indeed, so intoxicated with study that he proposes to have a long evening with his books, when he recollects an engagement to meet the workers at Bethesda— a mission 286 THE MINISTER'S CARE OF HIMSELF p m It" hall on unsectarian principles, which a member of his own church supports at the cost of ^200 a year, and where he preaches to a select audience of seventy children and thirty adult pensioners. The minis- ter wishes for the moment that he had re- fused to have anything to do with this mistaken form of Christian enterprise, and persuaded the good man to have aided a poor church with his liberality; but the minister has not more moral courage than other people, and he was afraid of being called unevangelical instead of sensible. But Saturday / This will make up for all. Alas ! his wife goes off guard, and a picturesque foreigner from the East takes possession of the study. The minister, courteous as one ought to be to distant strangers, lays himself out to extricate the visitor's meaning, and after an hour's patient exploration discovers that his caller comes from an unknown place, that he represents himself, that he wishes 287 M !l THE CURE OF SOULS )•;? to build somethinjr, that he is determined to preach in the minister's church to- morrow for a collection. When the man from Mesopotamia has been induced to depart, it is in vain to take up the sermon till evening. So far as I know, these de- tails are not exaggerated, and they are given at length for a serious purpose. It is not to suggest that Christ's minister should hold himself aloof from the great charities or social causes which are the glory of national life, or be indifferent to the extension of God's kingdom or the work of foreign churches. No man is wearied or harassed by an enterprise of the first order. He is done to death by petty details, by useless talk, by religious faddists, by unnecessary correspondence. Why should a minister be concussed into the service of all kinds of trumpery soci- eties ? Has not the full time come when he ought to be released from the burden of financial affairs, whether building a 288 THE MINISTER'S CARE OF HIMSELF church or assisting a dozen business men to administer a few hundred pounds? Is it necessary that the minister should be present at every church committee ? Is there to be no finality in church or- ganisation? Is the minister to be more and more dragged away from his chief work into every new scheme of social ref- ormation ? The ministry will have to take a stand and put it to their people whether they desire preachers or general agents, for if a man is to be in any degree a prophet he must not be driven along the dusty highways of life from Monday till Saturday, but must be allowed days of absolute quiet wherein the thoughts of God may arise and take shape in his soul. It is absolutely necessary that the minis- ter manage his affairs with discretion, for in his case it will not be possible to separate his private from his public life. The question of voluntary celibacy is one 289 i THE CURE OF SOULS he ought to face before his ordination and settle his duty by his calHng of God. An unmarried man can give himself without reserve to the work of the Evangel amid the dangers of heathen lands or the squalof of our great cities : he is free from worldly cares and social entanglements : he re- quires little from the Church and he is at her absolute disposal. If a man decide that it is God's will he should marry, then of all men he ought to be most care- ful in the choice of his wife, for she may be either a help or a hindrance not merely to his comfort but to his work. [One does not mean that a minister had better marry a woman who can preach or con- duct meetings, in order that he may divide his duties with her, any more than one would advise a doctor to marry a nurse to assist him with his cases. Every self- respecting man does his own work, and refuses to throw any of its burden on his wife. Those stories of ministers who read 2go THE MINISTER'S CARE OF HIMSELF their sermons to their wives before they a: 1 preached — so depriving the poor wom- an of any edification on Sunday or doub- ling her trial— and afflict her with all the little worries of his work, are wicked in- ventions. A minister is quite as manly as a doctor or lawyer, and knows that his wife has enough to do in her own depart- ment] It is not the speaker who really ^ fulfils the wife's part, nor the quiet woman who fails by the minister's side. She is a good wife who manages his house with skill and economy, so that he has to give no thought to domestic affairs, who br - gs up her children in the Divine Love, whose father has so little time for their over- sight, who carries herself so wisely and kindly among his people that none are offended— for they have h sense of proper- ty in her too which is very pleasant : who advises her husband on every important matter and often restrains him from hasty speech ; and who receives him weary, dis- 291 t^ * ^f ^ 6* 1 [i^^^H K H ^-i j >': Si.', i! i r.. i ^ti* Hi Sit * U: W.I THE CURE OF SOULS couraged, irritable, and sends him out again strong, hopeful, sweet-tempered. The woman is in the shadow and the man stands in the open, and it is not till that woman dies and the man is left alone that the people or he himself knows what she has been — for Livingstone is buried in Westminster Abbey, but his wife's grave is in the African forest. This is the other woman, who is waste- ful, extravagant, heedless, who is jealous of her position and full of petty social ambitions, who has an evil or garrulous tongue and creates mischief in all direc- tions, who is ignorant, ill-mannered, offen- sive, or who is unbelieving and worldly. Such a woman tied to a minister will drive him from church to church, bring reproach upon his name although he be a saint, undo half the good he has wrought, and may drag him down to her own level, till he grow bitter, grasping, suspicious, un- manageable. For in our profession a man 292 THE MINISTER'S CARE OF HIMSELF may double or divide his usefulness by his marriage. The minister's Household has a fierce light beating upon it, and must be so gov- erned as to illustrate the Gospel its head preaches. His house must be fair and sweet, like George Herbert's parsonage, but there must not be in it any vain show or soft luxury. He is bound to show hos- pitality as becomes Christ's minister, but with love and simplicity. His children may not have all the enjoyments of others, although they ought to be heirs of peace, for life in a minister's house hath a certain severity. If the minister be married and have children, as is supposed, then he is not to count himself different from other men and make no provision for their main- tenance in case of his death. It is his duty to set by a sufficient store for them, that they may not be 'ependent on charity ; and should he be tempted to say that he will leave them penniless to the care of 293 jii m ' i 11 '!' If It) i m W j" . lis il: lii] THE CURE OF SOULS God, he must not boast of his faith, but understand that he is worse than an infidel. Few things alienate sensible men more quickly from religion than a minister who docs not pay his debts or consigns his chil- dren to the public. And the minister re- quires at every turn to deny himself pleasures and to mortify innocent fancies lest he should cast a stumbling-block in the way of timid and scrupulous souls — who may be very foolish, but for whom Christ was willing to die. As the minister goeth before on the steep ascent, he must re- member the many little children who are following and place his feet in plain safe places. But chiefly this man must have regard to his soul, that it may be pure and strong, and unto that end he will have to fight, as against all sins ; so especially against three which do most easily beset ministers. The first is laziness, and as, in a day of high pressure and religious fussing, when 294 THE MINISTER'S CARE OF HIMSELF every minister is supposed to he working himself to death, it is easy to make a show of activity, this sin is very insidious and dangerous. The minister has no hour at which he must hegin work, no day through which he is kept at work, no check which shows how much work he has done. His time is at his disposal ; his work is his own arranging, he is his own master. If he chooses to idle the day away there is no one to call him to account, except his wife, and she will delight some of his brother ministers by pleading with them to induce her husband not to study so much lest he injure his brain, while they know he does not do two hours' honest study in the week. [If anything could rouse a sluggard and move him to play the man, it would be his wife's faith in him. All over the world, within and without the ministry, hard-working and self-sacrificing women 295 i /-! til ill' ; THE CURE OF SOULS are covering useless vagabonds and apolo- gising for their faults, and assigning them to ill-health, and prophesying the great things they will yet do. God grant the man may do something for that woman's sake.] When the minister shuts himself up in his study for a forenoon, nobody except himself and God knows whether he spent the time in work or in lazying about from one book-shelf to another, or in smoking over the newspaper, or in read- ing the last novel. He goes out to visit at two and comes home at six, and his wife discovers he looks tired, and suggests rest ; but he may have spent an hour in one house — to the neglect of four sick- rooms, where he was anxiously expected • — because the people were agreeable and allowed him to speak about himself. It is possible to put together a sermon in a few hours — a mere thing of glue and paint — which will please the eye at a dis- 296 THE MINISTER'S CARE OF HIMSELF tance, and only a few examine any sermon closely. [Ought a man to preach an old sermon ? Yes; if (i) it be a good one ; (2) the min- ister be really unable to produce a new one ; (3) if it still fit him so that he can wear it comfortably. For sermons are like clothes, the suit of two years ago is impossible to-day — it ought to be too small.] Laziness grows on a man, and eats away his morale ; he is ashamed in the pulpit, and full of apologies in houses, till at last the people — long-suffering and patient — lose faith in him, and his ministry closes in helplessness and contempt. The second sin is nnmanlmess, which afflicts many ministers, and for which this excuse can be made, that it is fostered by their circumstances. It is dangerous for any man, however strong and modest he may be, to lay down the law twice every Sunday to audiences who have no right of 897 flf^ THE CUKE OF SOULS reply, to be treated with special respect by the majority of people in consequence of his office, to preside frequently over com- mittees whose members are inclined to fall in with his ideas, to be surrounded by women whose piety is apt to make too much of him for his work's sake. Unless he be watchful 0\^er himself, and go into the world and meet with men holding other views from his, and have faithful friends to criticise and brace him, he will become intolerant of opposition, autocratic in his tone, furious if resisted, petted if beaten — a peevish child. If a man has been a woman's minister, one dare not differ from him on the weather. Another corroding and deadening sin is professionalism, which shows itself in an affected tone of voice, a studied manner, a use of conventional phrases, and an unholy familiarity with spiritual things. When the minister of Christ falls into this state of soul, it is a woeful tragedy. Conceive 293 * t THE MINISTER'S CARE OF HIMSELF it that a man should receive infants in the name of Christ, should dispense the Sacrament of the Lord's death, should minister by the bedside of the dying, should be witness of the supreme conflicts of the soul, should carry the message of the Divine Love, should intercede for the people with God, should live and work amid sacred mysteries — and should have lost all sense of their awfulness, their love- liness, their tenderness. If any man be able to leave the pulpit without fear, or administer a sacrament without being ex- hausted, or return from seeing one of his flock pass into eternity, and plunge into society, then he may well ask whether the Spirit of Christ has not forsaken him, and he has not been deposed from his office by the Lord's own hands. Against those sins and every other the minister's alone protection and defence is the presence of the Lord. In the study of a very fallible and unworthy minister, and 299 |i: Mi If \'\ Is , . ■ i; THE CURE OF SOULS above the desk where he writes his sermons, hangs Andrea Dei Sarto's head of Christ, the face of One Whose Passion is over, and Who is now alive for ever- more, full of peace and majesty. This minister has come to use that picture as a sacrament, in which the mind of the Lord is declared to his heart and conscience with secret approvals and saving judgments. If he consults his own ease and refuses some irksome duty, or through fear of man keeps back the wholesome truth, then is the face of the Master clouded with sadness and disappointment ; if, being moved by the Divine Grace, that minister has during the day humbled himself or done some ser- vice at a cost to one of the disciples, then is the face lit up with joy, and the eyes of love bid him welcome on his return. The Christ is not in the poor print but in that minister's soul, and it is within we find the Lord before Whom at every moment we stand to be approved or condemned. If 300 THE MINISTER'S CARE OF HIMSELF God give us success, then to the feet of Jesus let our sheaves be carried ; if it be His will we should fail, to the same dear Lord let us flee, Who knows what it is to see His life fall into the ground and dis- api)ear. From His words let us learn to preach ; from His example let us learn to serve ; in His communion let us find our strength, comfort, peace. 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