Login / Free Registration
We apologize for the need for an account, but it serves to protect the integrity of the works and prevent their being used without permission.
Chapter 7 - The Causes that Operate to Repress this Earnestness in Religion The Church in Earnest by James, John Angell
CHAPTER VII.
THE CAUSES THAT OPERATE TO REPRESS THIS EARNESTNESS OF RELIGION.
Such a state of the church as that to which this volume refers, cannot be rationally looked for without intense solicitude, importunate and incessant prayer, resolute effort, and both a vigorous and watchful opposition to hostile influence. This malign influence is exerted in various ways, and from various quarters. Of course the chief hindrance is from the remains of corruption in the heart of every Christian, and the efforts of Satan; and these must be overcome by a more determined and severe mortification of our members which are upon the earth, and a more unrelenting crucifixion of the flesh, with the affections and lusts thereof; as well as by sobriety and vigilance of mind in resisting the temptations of our adversary, the devil. But now I refer more especially to certain impediments arising out of the state both of the church and of the world.
1. Perhaps we may consider the easy access to church fellowship which is now so generally granted, as one cause of the deterioration of the piety of this day. I am aware that the admission of members to our churches is a subject of perplexing difficulty; it is not at our option to make the door of ingress to the church, and of approach to the table of the Lord, either wider or narrower than it is made by him to whom both the spiritual house and the table for the inmates belong. But the difficulty lies in knowing exactly what is his will on the subject, in each particular case as it occurs. For my own part, it is a heavy burden to determine upon the point; no part of my duty is so perplexing. I am afraid, on the one hand, to repel the true convert, and deprive him of the means of nourishment and growth; and, on the other, of admitting the self-deceived, and being thus the abettor of his delusion and destruction. Two consequences result from the reception of unsuitable persons to communion; they not only are confirmed themselves in their false views of their own case, but by their low state of pious feeling, or total destitution of it, their worldly-mindedness and laxity, they corrupt others, and exert a deadening influence upon the whole community. Their example is a source of corruption to very many, who are allured by it into all their secularities and fashionable follies. One family of such worldly and lukewarm professors is often a grief to the pastor, a lamentation to the spiritual part of the flock, a snare to many of the less pious, and a reproach to the church at large. Too many of this description find their way, in these days of easy profession, into all our churches. I have arrived, therefore, at the conclusion, that our tendency in this day is to make the standard for admission too low, and the test of spiritual fitness too easy. The consequence of this is that our churches have many in them who are professors only, and who exert an unfavorable influence over those of whom we hope better things. They benumb by their torpid touch those with whom they come into contact. It is probable that there is no pastor who, upon looking round upon his church, does not see many members, who, if they had manifested no more concern when they made application for membership than they now do, he would have never thought of receiving them into communion, while they indeed would never have applied for it themselves. How much is it to be wished that such persons, if they do not improve, would dissolve their connection with the church, since their remaining only corrupts it, without doing anything for themselves, but to harden their hearts, aggravate their guilt, and increase their condemnation.
2. There are few things which exert a more unfavorable influence upon the piety of our churches than the mixed marriages between those who are professors of religion, and those who are not; and which, it must be acknowledged and regretted, are in the present day lamentably common. The operation of such unions on the state of religion, so far as regards the parties themselves, need be no mystery to anyone. When two individuals of different tastes, in reference to any matter, are associated, and one of them has an aversion, or even an indifference, to the pursuit of the other, it is next to impossible for the one so opposed to sustain with vigor and perseverance his selected course of action; and then if he cannot assimilate the taste of the other party to his own, he must, for the sake of harmony, give up his cherished predilections. This applies to no subject with such force as it does to religion. Every Christian man carries in his own heart, and encounters from surrounding circumstances, sufficient resistance to a life of godliness, without selecting a still more potent foe to piety in an unconverted wife. Conceive of either party, in such an unsanctified union, continually exposed, if not to the actual opposition, yet to the deadening influence, of the other. Think of a religious wife, to put it in the mildest form, not persecuted indeed, though this is often the case, by an irreligious husband, but left without the aid of his example, his prayer, his cooperation; hindered from a regular attendance upon many of the means of grace which she deems necessary for keeping up the life of godliness in her soul; obliged to be much in a sort of company for which she may have no taste, yea, a positive aversion, and to engage in occupations which she finds it difficult to reconcile to her conscience, or harmonize with her profession; hearing no conversation, and witnessing no pursuits, but what are of the earth, earthly; ridiculed, perhaps, for some of her conscientious scruples, and doomed to hear perpetual sneers cast upon professors for their inconsistency; or, what is still more ensnaring, constantly exposed to the deleterious influence of an unvarying, but, at the same time, unsanctified, amiableness of disposition in her husband, whose want of piety seems compensated by many other excellences - is it likely, unless there be a martyr-like piety, that amidst such trials she will continue firm, consistent, and spiritual? Will she not, if possessed only of the average degree of piety, relax by little and little, till her enfeebled and pliable profession easily accommodates itself to the wishes and tastes of her unconverted husband?
But perhaps the influence on religion generally is still worse when the husband is a professor, and the wife is not; worse because he is more seen and known; has more to do with church affairs; has greater power over others, and therefore may be supposed to be more injurious or beneficial, accordingly as his personal piety is more or less vigorous and consistent. When such a man unites himself with a female whose tastes and habits are opposed to spiritual religion; who is fond of gay company and fashionable amusements; and would prefer a party or a rout to a religious service; who feels restless, uneasy, and discontented in religious society and occupations; who has no love for family devotion, and is often absent from the morning or evening sacrifice - is it likely the husband of such a woman will long retain his consistency, his fervor, his spirituality? Will he not, for the sake of connubial happiness, concede one thing after another, till nearly all the more strict forms of godliness are surrendered, and much of its spirit lost. His house becomes the scene of gayety, his children grow up under maternal influence, his own piety evaporates, and at last he has little left of religion, but the name.
And now what is his influence likely to be upon others? What families usually spring from such marriages; and what churches are, by a still wider spread of mischief, formed by them. This practice is ever going on before our eyes, and we feel unable to arrest it. It was never more common than at this time. Notwithstanding the protests which have been lifted up against it,[1] the evil is continually spreading, and while it too convincingly proves the low state of religion amongst us, is an evidence of the truth of the last particular, that our present practice of the admission of persons to membership is far too lax. Too few of the female members of our churches would refuse an advantageous offer of marriage on the ground of the want of religion in the individual who makes the proposal. And how many of the opposite sex would allow their conscience, on the same ground, to control their fancy, and give law to their passions? Can we wonder that there should be little intense devotion in our churches, in such a state of things as this? How can we look for earnest piety when such hindrances as these are thrown in the way of it? Honorable and noble exceptions, I admit there are. Among others, one especially have I known, where a female, by consenting to marry an ungodly man, could have been raised with her fatherless children, from widowhood, solicitude, suspense, and comparative poverty, to wealth, ease, and grandeur; but where, with martyr-like consistency, she chose rather to struggle on for the support of herself and her children, with the smile of conscience and of God to sustain her noble heart, than to accept the golden bait under the frown of both. But how few are there who would thus account the reproach of Christ greater treasure than all the riches of Egypt!
It is difficult to know what to do with this evil. Some churches make it a matter of discipline, and expel the member who marries an individual that is not a professor. This is the well-known practice of the Quaker body; and also of some of the churches of the Congregational order. There are objections, however, against this, which I have never yet been able to surmount. A member, whether suspended or excommunicated, can never be restored except upon a profession of penitence. Now, though in this case there can be no reformation, since the married cannot re-marry, there may be repentance; yet it is a delicate affair, as affecting his wife, to bring a man to say he is sorry he ever married; unless, indeed, we separate, by a refined abstraction, the act of marrying an ungodly person, from his act of marrying this particular woman. Instances may occur, and have occurred in my own pastorate, of so very flagrant a nature, indicating so total a want of all sense of religious truth, feeling, and propriety, as to warrant, and indeed require, a church to exscind the party who had thus violated every rule of Scripture and of common decorum. In all cases of this description the pastor is called upon to interfere before the connection is fixed, if he have an opportunity. He should point out the inconsistency in the church-member, the peril that must inevitably ensue to the soul, and the all but uniform and considerable unhappiness that attends such marriages; and in the case of such flagrant impropriety as I have last mentioned, let him candidly state the probability of exclusion from the church.
3. I may mention, as the next hindrance to earnest piety, the taste for amusement by which the present day is, perhaps, characterized more than most which have preceded it. Every age has had its sources of pleasure, and its means and methods of diversion, to relieve the mind from the fatigue and oppression of the more serious occupations of life. The human mind cannot be kept always upon the stretch, nor can the heart sustain, without occasional relief, its burden of care; and we would not rob the soul of its few brief holidays, nor condemn as irrational or unchristian its occasional oblivion of worldly vexations amidst the beauties of nature, or the pleasures of the social circle.[2] There is a time to laugh as well as to weep. It is highly probable that, with the advance of civilization, and of the arts and sciences, man, instead of rendering himself independent of the lighter amusements, will actually multiply them. And it must be admitted that modem taste has, by its elegance, supplanted some of the gross carnality and vulgar joviality of former days. There is an obvious reformation and elevation of popular amusements. The low taste for brutal sports is we hope supplanted by a higher kind of enjoyment, which, if not more Christian, is at any rate more human and rational, and this is something gained to morals, even where the improvement does not go on to religion. Still, it may be seriously questioned whether, among professing Christians, the propensity for entertainments has not been growing too fast, and ripened into something like a passion for worldly pleasures. Dinner parties, among the wealthier classes of professors, have become frequent and expensive; viands the most costly, and wines the most various, are set forth with a profusion which prove at what an outlay the entertainment has been served up to gratify the vanity of the host, and the palate of his guests. There is an interesting incident in point, mentioned in the life of Mr. Scott, the commentator, which I shall here introduce, as showing the light in which that eminent man viewed this subject. I am not quite sure I have not introduced it in one of my other works; if I have, it will bear repetition.
"For some time I had frequent invitations to meet dinner parties formed of persons professing religion, and I generally accepted them; yet I seldom returned home without dissatisfaction, and even remorse of conscience. One day (the Queen's birth day) I met at the house of a rather opulent tradesman, a large party, among whom were some other ministers. The dinner was exceedingly splendid and luxurious, consisting of two courses, including every delicacy in season. Some jokes passed upon the subject; and one person in particular, a minister of much celebrity, said, 'If we proceed thus, we shall soon have the gout numbered among the privileges of the gospel.' This passed off very well; but in the evening, a question being proposed on the principal dangers to which evangelical religion is exposed in the present day, when it came my turn to speak, I ventured to say that conformity to the world among persons professing godliness was the great danger of all. One thing led to another, and the luxurious dinner did not pass unnoticed by me. I expressed myself as cautiously as I could consistently with my conscience, but I observed that however needful it might be for Christians in superior stations to give splendid and expensive dinners to their worldly relations and connections, yet when ministers and Christians met together, as such, it was not consistent, but should be exchanged for more frugal entertainments of each other, and more abundant feeding of the poor, the maimed, the lame, and the blind. Luke xiv. 12-14. Probably I was too pointed; and many strong expressions of disapprobation were used at the time; but I went home as one who had thrown off a great burden from his back - rejoicing in the testimony of my conscience. The consequence was, a sort of tacit excommunication from the circle. The gentleman at whose house this passed never invited me again but once, and then our dinner was literally a piece of boiled beef. He was, however, a truly pious man, though misled by bad examples and customs. He always continued to act towards me in a friendly manner, and though I had not seen him for several years, he left me a small legacy at his death." There are few who will not be of opinion that Mr. Scott's rebuke would have been conveyed with more propriety, had it been administered privately; when it would manifest all the fidelity, without any of the seeming rudeness, with which it was given. Yet how convincingly does it prove the clearness of his perception of what is right, the tenderness of his conscience in shrinking from what is wrong, and the strength of his moral courage in reproving what he deemed to be a fault. What would Scott have said of a professor of religion exhibiting two-and-thirty different sorts of wine upon his table and sideboard at the same time![3]
But it is not the dinner party so much as the evening rout, that is becoming the prevailing custom and the snare of modern Christians, when large assemblages are convened, comprising pious and worldly, grave and gay, young and old, not to enjoy "the feast of reason, and the flow of soul;" not perhaps even to be regaled by the pleasures of music, but by the amusement of the song and the dance; when large expense is incurred, late hours are kept, and everything but a spirit friendly to religion is promoted. It is this kind of social amusement - the fashionable, full-dress, evening party - carried to the extent of entire conformity to the world, and frequently resorted to - that is injurious to the interests of vital godliness in our Christian churches. But even where there is not this extreme of gayety, and a somewhat more sober aspect is thrown over the circle, yet when the winter passes off in a round of evening assemblages for no higher occupations than music and singing, it is an occupation scarcely congenial with the religious taste, or friendly to the promotion of religious improvement. I have known young people, professors of religion too, who have related with gleeful boasting, as if this were the element in which they delighted to live, the number of evenings during one winter they have passed in company, and in such occupations as have been just alluded to.
Now it may be, and it is extremely difficult, and no one would attempt to solve the problem - to determine what kind of parties, and what number of them, are compatible with true godliness, so that when the rule for this kind, and this number of entertainments is transgressed, the religion of the individual is questionable or must be injured. We can only lay down general principles, leaving the application of them to individual judgment. There are, no doubt, persons of such strength of real inrooted piety, of such strong devotional taste, and such fixed habits of godliness, that they could pass unhurt through a constant round of seemingly dissipating amusements; just as there are persons of such strong constitutions and such robust health, that they can breathe a tainted atmosphere, or even take some kinds of poison, without injury. There is a most striking instance of this lately published by the Bishop of Oxford, in the Life of Lady Godolphin, who preserved not only her personal purity, but an unusual degree of spirituality and heavenly-mindedness, amidst the endless gayeties and the revolting licentiousness of the court of Charles the Second. In reference to which, we can only say, "To the pure, all things are pure." But most certainly the average piety of our day is not of such robustness as to be able to resist strong contagion. The very craving after diversion, which there is in some persons, shows a morbid state of the soul. It might be supposed, judging from the representations of true religion which we find in the Word of God, and from the general principles contained in them, as well as from the recorded experience of the saints, which is to be found in religious biography, that a Christian, one who is really such, has been rendered independent of all such sources of enjoyment as those to which the people of the world resort. It might have been concluded, that in the peace that passeth understanding, the joy unspeakable and full of glory, and the rejoicing in hope of the glory of God, he had found not only a substitute for the gratifications which by becoming a Christian he had surrendered, but an infinite compensation, and that he would deem it a disparagement of his religious privileges to suppose that anything more than these were necessary for his felicity, or that if an addition were needed, an adequate one could not be found in healthful recreation amidst the scenery of nature, in the pleasures of knowledge, or the activities of benevolence. To hear all this talk, then, about the necessity of entertainment, and the impossibility of relieving the urgency of labor, and the monotony of life, without parties, routs, and diversions, sounds very like a growing weariness of the yoke of Christ, or a complaining, as if the church's paradise were no better than a waste, howling wilderness, which needed the embellishments of worldly taste, and all the resources of human art, to render it tolerable, or which in fact must become little better than a fool's paradise to please the degenerate Christian. The growing desire after amusement marks a low state of religion, and it is likely to depress it still lower. It is the profession of a Christian, that he is not so much intent upon being happy in this world, as upon securing happiness in the next; that he is rather preparing for bliss, than possessing and enjoying it now; and that he can therefore be very well content to forego many things in which the people of the world see no harm, and the harm of which it might be difficult for him, if called upon for proof, to demonstrate; and which he is willing to abstain from, just because they appear to him to take him off from those pleasures which await him, and for which he is to prepare, in the eternal world.
4. The spirit of trade, as it is now carried on, is no less adverse to a high state of religion, than the spirit of amusement; and like that, is all the more dangerous because of the impossibility of assigning limits within which the indulgence of it is lawful, and beyond which it becomes an infringement of the law of God. Our chief danger lies in those things which become sins only by the degree in which an affection or pursuit, not wrong in itself, is carried, - such as covetousness, pleasure-taking, and attention to the business of life; these all originate in things lawful in themselves, and which are sinful only by excess. Fornication, adultery, falsehood, robbery, and other vices, are all so marked out and so marked off, from the region of what is lawful, that the line of division is distinctly perceptible, and we can see at once when we are approaching the point of prohibition, and when we have stepped over it. But we cannot say this of worldly-mindedness. The love of acquisition and appropriation is one of the instinctive principles of our nature, planted in it by the hand of God, and intended to subserve the wisest and most beneficent purposes. The whole fabric of society is founded upon it, and all social organization is regulated by it. Trade may be said to be of God's appointment, if not directly, yet by the law of labor under which we are placed; and we cannot do without it. But then, like every other good, it may be abused and become an evil. It may exert so engrossing an influence over the mind as to absorb it, and to exclude from it the consideration of every other subject. It must never be forgotten that the rule is binding upon us all, to "seek first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness;" to overcome the world by faith; to set our affections on things above, and not on things on the earth. All this is as truly law, now, as it ever was; and no attention to things seen and temporal, no labor even to provide things honest in the sight of all men, much more to provide things abundant and luxurious for ourselves, can release us from the obligation of a supreme regard to things "unseen and eternal."
Now there never was, in the history of the world, an age or a country, in which the spirit of trade was more urgent, than it is in this land, and in our day. We are the greatest trading, manufacturing, and commercial country, not only that now is, but that ever was. Tyre, Carthage, Phoenicia, and Venice, were mere peddlers compared with Britain. Ours is "the mart of nations;" the emporium of the world. Such a state of things affects us all. Scarcely any stand so remote from the scene of busy activity as not to feel the impulse, and to catch the spirit. All push into the contest for wealth; all hope to gain a prize of greater or less value. Education has raised up many from the lower walks, and wealth has attracted down many from the higher walks, to the level of the trading portion of the community; while population, as is natural in such a state of things, has gone on increasing. What is the result? Just what might have been expected, - a keen and eager competition for business, beyond any former precedent. Every trade, every profession, every branch of manufacture, or of commerce, seems overstocked, and every department of action overcrowded. See what must follow - time is so occupied that men have scarcely an hour in a week for thoughtfulness, reading the Scriptures, and prayer - the head, and heart, and hands, are so full of secular matters, that there is no room for God, Christ, salvation, and eternity - competition is so keen and eager, that to get business, the whatsoever things are true, and just, and honest, and lovely, and of good report, are trampled under foot, and conscientiousness is forgotten or destroyed. If these efforts are successful, and wealth flows in, and the tradesman rapidly rises in society, then he is, perhaps, destroyed by prosperity. In addition to all this, what an inconceivable amount of mischief has been inflicted by the gambling system of speculation, which, though not set up, has been stimulated by the railway schemes. What multitudes have plunged into the gulf of perdition which yawns beneath those who have taken up the resolution of the men that will be rich, and who are determined to encounter the many foolish and hurtful lusts which beset their path! Religion becomes a flat, insipid, and abstract thing, amidst all the excitement produced by such pursuits. Even the Sabbath day hardly serves its purpose as a season of respite and repose, given to arrest the eagerness of pursuit after wealth, and to loosen, for a while, the chain that binds man to earth; and is passed with an impatience that says, "When will it be over, that we may buy and sell and get gain?" Of what use are sermons to those whose minds and hearts are intent upon their speculations or their business? And even the voice of prayer, which calls them into the presence of God, calls them not away from their secularities. Their Father's house is made a house of merchandise, and the Holy of Holies a place of traffic. As soon might you expect a company of gamblers to lay down their cards, and, with the stakes yet undecided before their eyes, listen with attention to a homily or a prayer, as some professing Christians to join with reverence in the devotions of the Sabbath, or to hear with interest the voice of the preacher. The spirit of trade thus carried on is flattening the religion that is left, and is preventing more from being produced.
The great object of life to those professing Christians who have the opportunity, seems to be, to become rich. Their chief end does not appear to be so much to glorify God, and enjoy him forever, as to obtain and enjoy the world. Wealth is the center of their wishes, the point to which their desires appear to preserve an invariable tendency. How many who have named the name of Christ, and avouched him to be all their salvation, and all their desire, still make "gold their hope, and say unto fine gold, Thou art my confidence." Jehovah is the God of their creed, but Mammon is the god of their hearts. Part of one day only, they profess to worship in the sanctuary of religion, and all the other six days of the week they are devout adorers of the god of wealth. Professing Christians! it is this worldly spirit that blights your hopes - that chills religion to the very heart - that withers your graces - that poisons your comforts, and blasts the fair fame of your Redeemer's kingdom. While this spirit pervades the professing people of God, vital godliness will not only be low, but will remain so. How can it be otherwise than that the church will appear covered with the dust of the earth, and robbed of her heavenly glory, while there are few to weep over the woes of Jerusalem - few who struggle for her prosperity, who are affected by her reproach, or are jealous for her honor? Let us, then, be duly impressed with the fact that in this country and in this age, trade is contending with religion for the universal dominion over men's minds, hearts, and consciences, and that, according to present appearances, there is no small danger of the victory being gained by the former. Christians, take the alarm!
5. Among the hindrances to a spirit of earnest piety must be mentioned the political excitement which has so extensively prevailed in this country since the passing of the Reform Bill, and the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts[4]. Both these measures were just and right; and what is politically right, cannot in itself be morally wrong; they only conceded rights which could not be refused in equity, and did but redress wrongs which not only degraded the party that endured them, but also disgraced that which inflicted them, and thus wiped out blots which had long disfigured the British constitution, and sullied the page of English history. But at the same time, these great changes brought professing Christians into new perils, exposed their religion to fresh dangers, and rendered it necessary to give a greater vigor to that faith which overcometh the world. It is freely admitted, as has been a thousand times repeated, that in putting on the Christian, we do not put off the citizen; and do not, upon entering the church, retire altogether from the world. Religious liberty has an intimate connection with the interests of religion, for the freedom of the Christian cannot exist without the liberty of the man, and the stability and progress of the Redeemer's kingdom is considerably affected by the course of legislation. Hence it seems neither possible, if it were right, nor right, if it were possible, for professing Christians altogether to quit the arena of politics. Still, however, it must be confessed that it requires a far larger measure of the life of faith than they appear to have possessed, to resist the paralyzing influence which comes from such a quarter over the spirit of piety; and the consequence has been that she has come out of the scene of strife, covered with its dust, and enfeebled by its struggles.
In such times as those of the great conflict against tyranny and popery, in the reign of the Stuarts, when everything dear to liberty and religion was at stake, the politicians and heroes of those days prepared themselves for the senate and the camp by the devout exercises of the closet - fed the flame of their courage at the fount of their piety - felt that they must be saints in order to be patriots - and expected to have power to conquer man, only as they had power to prevail with God. It might be truly said of them it was not that their religion was political, but their politics religious. Everything they did was consecrated by the Word of God and prayer. They were wrong in some things they did, and unwise in some things they said, but even this was at the dictate of conscience, though a misguided one. There were hypocrites among them no doubt, for it was hardly possible that such splendid virtues as many of them possessed should not be admired and imitated by some who had not the grace to be genuine followers: and an uncouth cast of phraseology and some modes of action no doubt marred their piety, but even these disfigurements could not conceal their manly spirits. Is it so now in our struggles for objects which, though of some consequence, are of less importance than theirs? Have we not all the ardor of political excitement, without the felt necessity of personal religion? Do we realize the need of a new baptism of the Spirit, to prepare us for political contests, and are we acting as if we were convinced that we must put on afresh the whole armor of God before we go into the battlefield of contending parties? Have we made our politics religious, instead of making our religion political? Have our pastors, when they have engaged in these matters, prepared themselves for it by communion with God; and have our senators, before they have gone to the place of legislation, and our councilors, and aldermen ere they have entered the civic hall, fortified themselves by fasting and prayer, with the spirit of religion? Have we not, on the contrary, lost in piety what we have gained in liberty, and felt "the powers of the world to come" weakened in their influence over us, in proportion as we have had a share in wielding the power of the world that now is? As dissenters, have we not been too anxious about our political influence? Or, at any rate, have we not, in seeking to increase this, lost something of a better influence which we should have labored to preserve? Perhaps it may be thought that this is the day of struggle for great principles - the reform of great abuses - the contest for lost rights - and the settlement of a wise, equitable, and permanent constitution of things, and that though the spirit of saintly and seraphic piety may suffer somewhat during the conflict, yet the time will come, by and by, when, having conquered an honorable peace, she shall sit down amidst the trophies that have been won, to heal her wounds, and recover her strength. I wish it may be so; but what if by venturing unnecessarily so far into the thick of the affray, she should receive wounds that are incurable, and sink into a state of exhaustion from which she cannot be easily or speedily recovered? What I say, then, is this, that if we must be political, - and to a certain extent we must be, - do not let us smile with contempt at the craven fears, or the superstitious apprehensions, or the ignoble whinings, as they will be called, of those who would remind us that a time of political excitement brings on a state of things which endangers all that is vital in godliness, damps the flame of devotion in the soul, and tends to depress religion in our churches.
But there are other excitements against which we have need to be on our guard, excitements which come still more within the unquestioned circle of religious activity. It is well for us to remember that true religion, even in its most vigorous and energetic course of action, is of a calm, gentle, and equable temperament. It resembles its Divine Author, of whom it is said, "He shall not strive nor cry, neither shall any man hear his voice in the streets;" it loves the quiet retreat of the closet, and flourishes amidst the stillness of meditation; to which it adds the tranquil pleasures of the sanctuary, and the soft and soothing delights of the communion of saints. It cannot live, and grow, and flourish, amidst perpetual agitation; and it is ever placed in a dangerous position, in an atmosphere too troubled, and in an element uncongenial with its nature, when its active duties are pushed so far as to exclude the devotional ones. There are times when it must come out of its retreat, and mingle in the scenes of agitation and excitement. There are occasions when it must join the crowd, and let its voice be heard, not only borne upon the gale of popular sentiment and feeling, but swelling it. Yet this must be but occasional, and not habitual. If we look back upon the great questions which have called out professing Christians into the scene of agitation during the last half, or only quarter of a century, how many subjects of a public nature shall we find that have called up our consideration, feeling, and activity? What a struggle we maintained, in what crowds we gathered, and to what a pitch of enthusiasm we were wrought up, for the removal of that foul blot upon our country's history - that heavy curse upon humanity - and that deep disgrace on our Christian profession - the slave-trade and slavery! In what a troubled element have we lived of late, by contending against the various schemes of popular education, because we viewed them as unfriendly to our liberties as dissenters and hostile to the manly independence of the people! There are other topics, which need not be specified, tending greatly to agitate the church of Christ. The wonder, perhaps, is, and it is a cause for gratitude, that, considering these things, so much personal religion still remains. Yet it becomes us to remember that as this is an element uncongenial with its nature, there is the need of constant watchfulness, intense solicitude, and earnest prayer, that the churches, while contending for important objects, do not let down the tone of their spirituality.
6. Even that which is the glory of the church in this age, and the hope of the world - which is one of the brightest signs of the times - and the loss of which would be an occasion to clothe the heavens with sackcloth, and the earth with mourning - I mean the spirit of holy zeal which is so active, - yes, even this, for want of watchfulness, care, and earnest prayer, may become a snare and a mischief to personal godliness. We have need to take care that the reproach be not brought against us, that, while we have kept the vineyards of others, our own we have not kept; that our zeal has been maintained, not by our religion, but at the expense of it; that our ardor is not the natural putting forth of the vital energies of the tree, in branches, leaves and fruit, but an excrescence upon it, which draws to itself the sap and impoverishes the genuine produce. Ours is the age of societies - the era of organization - the day of the platform, the public meeting, the orator, the speech, and the placard. Everything is trumpeted, blazoned, shall I say puffed - not only our Missionary and Bible Society meetings, but our ordination services, formerly so quiet and so solemn; even the subjects of our very sermons, the most awful verities of our religion, must now obtrude themselves in glaring placards, and stare out in imposing capitals, side by side with advertisements of plays by celebrated actors - concerts by renowned singers - lectures by itinerant philosophers - and feats of agility by equestrian performers. All is agitation, excitement, and publicity, and religion is one subject for this among many others. Something of all this, no doubt, is proper, and cannot be otherwise managed at present, and ought not to be discontinued; but then, on the other hand, much of it is contrary to the dignity, the peacefulness, and the sanctity, of true religion. There is in some of our religious concerns too near an approach by far to mountebankship[5] - to the newspaper puffing of noisy and obtrusive tradesmen - to the catch-penny trickery of quacks and impostors. Let us consider how the truly religious spirit - the lofty, heavenly, devout aspirations of the renewed mind, must suffer for all this; how true godliness must be corrupted and changed into a novelty-seeking, wonder-loving thing; how the flame of devotion must expire, or be changed into the fantastic fires round which little children dance in sport.
And where matters are not in this fashion, and there is nothing but the mere reiteration of public meetings, yet may they not by their frequency draw off the attention from personal religion, and in many cases become a substitute for it? There are public meetings, and resolutions, and speeches, and anecdotes, for everything - and we must have them, and even be thankful for them, as long as the present mode of carrying on our schemes of evangelization are pursued. But then let us take care, anxious, prayerful, vigilant care, that these things do not exert an unfavorable influence upon us, - by producing a taste for excitement which shall make the ordinary means of grace, and Sabbath-day opportunities, tame, flat, and insipid - by throwing an air of frivolity over our whole religion - by drawing us out of our closets, and making us in religion resemble our Gallic neighbors, who are said to know little of home enjoyment, and who live almost entirely abroad - by making us ostentatious and vainglorious, instead of humble and retiring - by impairing the modesty of our youth, who are so early brought into action and notice - by corrupting the purity of our motives through the publicity given to names and donations - by engrossing that time which should be spent in private prayer, reading the Scriptures, and meditation - in short, by converting our whole religion into a bustling activity about religion.
7. The danger here set forth is not a little increased, in our day, by the modern invention and extensive prevalence of certain social convocations, - such, for instance, as tea-meetings. Of this species of fraternal intercourse our fathers were ignorant, and so were we ourselves till within the last few years; but now they are the prevailing fashion of the day, and are become so common, and in such frequent demand, as to have led in many congregations to the fitting up of a kind of culinary apparatus for their celebration. The incorporation of these social festivities with religions matters, though it prevails more among the Methodists and Dissenters, is not exclusively confined to these bodies, as some of the clergy of the Church of England have adopted the practice.
There are few things among modern customs which more need the vigilance, caution, and supervision of Christian pastors and the churches; than these religio-convivial entertainments. There can be no harm in the abstract idea of Christians eating and drinking together, especially when the elements of the feast are nothing more expensive, inebriating, or epicurean, than tea and bread and butter, or cakes. There can be little doubt that the primitive Christians had their social meals, and that to these agape, or love feasts, as they were called, Jude refers, where he speaks of some who were "spots upon your feasts of charity." Out of this custom of having meals together, which were made appendages of the Lord's Supper, grew the corruptions mentioned in the first epistle to the Corinthians. The practice of eating and drinking together for purposes of unity and charity still continued in the early churches, till it was so abused to carnal purposes as to call for ecclesiastical interference, and by the council of Laodicea, in the fourth century, it was forbidden to eat and drink, or spread tables, in the house of God.
There is little fear, it may be presumed, of the modern practice of tea-meetings ever being abused in such manner as this; yet it becomes us to recollect that all corruptions were at one time only as a grain of mustard seed, which, sown in a congenial soil, advanced after the first insidious germination with rapid growth to unsuspected strength and stature. It is not, however, to what these entertainments may become, should the tea-meeting be exchanged for a supper, that I now allude, but to what they are already. I have been present at some, in which not only my taste as a man, but my sensibilities as a Christian, have been somewhat offended. I have seen the house of God turned into what had all the air of a place of public amusement; I have beheld grave ministers, and deacons, and members, of the Christian Church, mingled up with professors, and non-professors of religion, young men and women, boys and girls, in all the noisy buzz, and perhaps sometimes approaching to obstreperous[6] mirth, at one of these meetings; I have witnessed young women of the working classes, dressed up as ladies for the occasion, flirting about with their beaux of the other sex; in short all was glee, and merriment, and hilarity - and this, perhaps, in connection with some religious object; the anniversary of opening a chapel for God's worship, or the celebration of a minister's settlement with his flock. Probably it will be said by some, this is caricature. I am conscious it does not exceed the truth, and I might appeal to many of my brethren who have witnessed and lamented the same things.
To come to what is no less fashionable, but perhaps somewhat less injurious to the spirit of religion, than these things, - I mean the soirées of the present day; these also require some caution in their management, when held in connection with religion, lest they degenerate into a species of worldly amusement, the tendency of which will be to depress the tone of piety, and to destroy the seriousness of mind with which it ought ever to be regarded. Now I know that it is difficult to prove logically that these things are wrong, and I do not mean to assert that they are; by no means; but as they are the increasing custom of the day, and are liable to be abused, either by being too frequent, or by being held in a spirit of worldliness, I think the church of Christ, and for them I write, should be put upon their guard, and called to a spirit of holy vigilance. I know that the social, the cheerful, and even the tasteful, are sanctioned by religion, than which nothing is more social, cheerful and tasteful; and heaven is full of all these attributes. But, then, religion is at the same time no less characterized by solemnity, sanctity and deep seriousness, than it is by joy. It is that which connects the soul with God, with salvation, with heaven, and with eternity - it is the conflict of a soul fighting the great fight of faith, and laying hold of eternal life - the agony of a heaven-born spirit, reaching after celestial bliss - the training of an immortal mind for the beatific vision of God and the Lamb - and, therefore, with which all our pursuits, and our pleasures too, should be in strict and constant harmony. When we affirm, as we most truly may, that
"Religion never was designed
To make our pleasures less,"
we should, at the same time, recollect that it puts aside many of the pleasures of the world as beneath our notice, if not injurious to our character, by others so incomparably superior, as to dispose us, by a natural process, to reject the drop for the sake of the fountain, and to lay aside the taper when we see the sun. We have only to consider what religion is, what it calls to, and what it requires of us, and leads us to, and is intended to prepare us for, to see at once, and to feel, as by a holy instinct, what kind of pleasures it should lead us to seek, and what to refuse. It will probably be asked, whether I would suppress all these modern usages of tea-meetings, soirées, and social entertainments. I reply, certainly not. They may unite much instruction, and much spiritual improvement, with as much innocent social enjoyment. But then I would watch them, with an entire conviction that they may by possibility come to what is harmful. I would limit their growth, that they do not become too frequent and too trivial; and I would, where religion is in any form their object, take care that they be conducted in a religious spirit. I would let religion, with all her cheerfulness, but yet with all her seriousness and sanctity, preside over the scene, and diffuse her blessed influence through every soul. If, as is usually the case, there are non-professors and unconverted persons present, I would let them see how happy Christians are, not indeed by transferring the pleasures of the world into the social circle of the redeemed, but by drawing down the pleasures of heaven into the church on earth. The way to win the ungodly to religion is not by showing them that their pleasures are ours, but that ours are infinitely superior to any which they know. A Christian ought to be, and would be, if he understood his privileges, the very type of bliss in himself, and an index pointing out the way of happiness to others.
It were well if the minister were always present at every tea-meeting held amongst any section of his flock, and were to endeavor to repress all undue levity as soon as it appeared, and to maintain a tone of rational, religious and agreeable intercourse. The meetings of Sunday school teachers especially require his presence and his influence, not only to make them feel that he is in fact their supreme superintendent, and the teacher of teachers, but to prevent that excessive hilarity which would, perhaps, in some cases, be likely to spring up. And the pastor might also, with great propriety and utility, hold occasionally such meetings with the members of the church, and thus promote the unity and love of his flock among themselves, and their attachment to him. I adopt this plan myself. The church under my care is large, amounting to upwards of nine hundred members, and scattered over the whole expanse of this great town; and the public business and correspondence devolving upon me, in common with my brethren, are so oppressive that I cannot pretend to fill up the measure of pastoral duty; and, therefore, to remedy, as far as possible, this defect, I invite the members by sections to take tea with me in the vestry, when I converse a little with each individual separately, and then hold devotional exercises with them all collectively. At such meetings nothing, of course, but what is serious and devout occurs; all is solemn, joyful and to edification; all sanctified by the Word of God and prayer.
The object, then, of all these remarks will be seen; and that their design is to resist the tendency which some of our modern customs have to diminish the seriousness, repress the earnestness, and altogether change the nature of true religion - to impair the dignity, to lower the spirituality, and impede the usefulness of its professors - and thus, instead of making the people of the world religious, to make the members of the church worldly.
8. But, perhaps, there are few things which tend more effectually to repress the spirit of earnest piety, and to keep it down at a low point, than those fallacies about its nature, and that perversion of acknowledged principles and facts in connection with it, in which so many professors indulge. We will mention some of these.
Is it not clear that many persons satisfy themselves with admitting the necessity of earnestness, without ever once endeavoring to obtain it, and thus put their conviction and admission of the necessity of the thing in the place of seeking after the thing itself? We talk to a cold or lukewarm individual, and represent to him the inconsistency of such a heartless religion as his, and the indispensable necessity of more devotedness. It is all, and at once, admitted; and he stops the conversation, gets rid of the subject, and evades impression and conviction by this ready assent. And thus, by such a facile, assenting, unresisting admission, the power of the awful truth that he is in a dangerous state, seems to be destroyed. It were better, far better, that these lukewarm professors should deny the necessity of more intensity of thinking, feeling, and acting, that they may be reasoned and expostulated with; and made to think by force of argument, and to feel by the power of representation. But in this easy admission, without opposition, question, or doubt, the strongest representation only goes in to be cushioned, and fall asleep.
And then the applicability of the subject to so many, if not to all, is another cause of individual evasion. "It concerns me," is the inward thought, "not more than all these myriads of professors." Its absolute importance as applicable to anyone, seems dissipated in the idea of how many it is applicable to. There is some unthinking feeling; as if the authority and importance of the one great admonition to earnestness were divided into innumerable diminutive shares, with but inconsiderable force in each. How kindly and humbly each is willing not to account his soul more important than that of any of his fellow-mortals! Yet not so benevolent either, in another view of the matter; for in a certain indistinct way, he is laying the blame on the rest of mankind; if he is indifferent about his own highest interest, "they are under the same great obligation; in their manner of practically acknowledging it, they are my pattern; they keep me down to their level. If their shares of the great concern were more worthily attended to, perhaps mine would be also. One has fancied sometimes what might have been the effect, in the selected instances, if the case had been that the Sovereign Creator had appointed but a few men, here and there one, to an immortal existence, or at least declared it only with respect to them. One cannot help imagining them to feel every hour the impression of their sublime and awful predicament! But why - why is it less felt a sublime and awful one, because the rest of our race are in it too? Does not each as a perfectly distinct one stand in the whole magnitude of the concern, and in the responsibility and the danger, as absolutely as if there were no other one? How is it less to him than if he stood alone? Their losing the happy interest of eternity will not be that he shall not have lost it for himself. If he shall have lost it, he will feel that they have not lost it for him. He should, therefore, now feel that upon him is concentrated, even individually upon him, the entire importance of this chief concern."
Foster, in his lecture on "Earnestness in Religion," from which this extract is taken, enumerates other fallacies by which men impose upon themselves in excuse for lukewarmness in religion, such as taking a perverse advantage of the obscurity of the objects of our faith, and of the incompetence of our faculties to apprehend them - the recognition of the obligations of religion upon our life, as a whole, without making them bear upon all the particular parts of it as they pass - and a soothing self-assurance, founded, the man can hardly say on what, that some how or other, and at some time or other, he shall be better: a kind of superstitious hope, excited by some particular circumstance, that he shall yet be improved, although at the time he makes no effort, and forms no intention, to amend.
There is no cause more fatal, in depressing true piety among its professors, than the notion that religion is to be regarded rather as a fixed state, than a progress; a point to be reached, rather than a course to be continually pursued. It is both; but it is only one of these notions that is taken up by many persons. Justification does introduce us to a state of favor with God; regeneration into a state of holy life; and membership into a state of communion with the church - but in addition to this, there is the progress of sanctification - the going on unto perfection. It is to me extremely probable that many of the ministers of the Evangelical school have almost unconsciously, or inconsiderately, given countenance to this mistaken, because partial view, by dwelling too exclusively on the mere transition from a state of death to a state of life. They have shown that in the act of receiving the gospel, a man is at once changed both in his moral relation and moral condition. From that time he becomes another man, his state is altered - he passes from death unto life. But then this state is to manifest itself by a progressive development of the new principle. He is not only to be born, but he is to grow. It is fallacious to infer the growth, when we cannot infallibly determine the birth: it is much safer to infer the birth from the growth. The New Testament everywhere represents the Christian life by things denoting growth and progress: "The path of the just is as the shining light, which shineth more and more unto the perfect day." There is first the babe, then the young man, then the father in Christ. There is first the springing of the corn, then the blade, then the full ear. We are to abound more and more in knowledge, faith, and all holiness. The Scriptures never fail to keep before us the idea of advancement.
But this is almost entirely overlooked by many professing Christians; their idea is to get into a state of justification and regeneration, and having attained that, they are content. They repose in it. They have, as they imagine, escaped the tempest, and reached the shore in safety, and there they stand, exulting at best in their deliverance, without attempting to penetrate and possess the country they have reached. Their feeling is, "I am converted, and am in the church;" and there they stop. From the time they are received into fellowship, their solicitude begins to abate; from that point they sink down into the repose of those who are at ease in Zion - they have received their certificate of personal religion, and are satisfied. There is no great anxiety to grow in grace, to be ever advancing in the divine life, and to be ever making fresh attainments in holiness. If you see them ten or twenty years after their profession was first made, you find them where you left them, or even gone back from first love; their religion has had some kind of motion, but it has been stationary or circular, not locomotive; it has gone upon hinges, not upon wheels, or if upon the latter, they have moved in a circle, not on a line. Yet what invaluable means of culture they have had; what auspicious Sabbaths they have spent, what sermons they have heard, what books they have read! Still their tempers are as unsubdued, their corruptions as unmortified, and their graces as stunted, as they were at first. No pupils make so little proficiency as those which are educated in the school of Christ; in no case is so much instruction, so much discipline, bestowed in vain; nowhere is improvement so little perceptible as here. How is this? Just because these persons are laboring under the fatal mistake of their having come into a state; reached a standing point, not a starting point; gained an advantage, which render solicitude and progress unnecessary. They do not actually admit this in words, or even in thought, but, unconsciously to themselves, this is the secret working of their minds.
Akin to this is the sad abuse which is made of the humiliating fact that there is no perfection upon earth; as if this should reconcile us to all kinds and to all degrees of imperfection. It is astonishing, and somewhat painful, to observe with what indifference, and almost satisfaction, this reflection upon our fallen humanity is made by some persons, as if they were glad to find in this admission a cover and an excuse for all their faults. Under the pretext that there is no perfection, they do things at which a tender-hearted Christian, a professor with a delicate sensibility of conscience, would be shocked. They forget that the command of God is to "perfect holiness in the fear of the Lord;" "to go on unto perfection:" to "be perfect;" and that he who does not desire to be perfect, does not seek to be so, and does not lament his imperfections, and labor to remove as many of them as possible, discovers a heart not yet brought into subjection to the authority of Christ. The true earnestness of piety is an intense desire and labor after a perfect conformity to the revealed will of God. The individual who has this mind in him can tolerate no imperfections, but sincerely wishes to discover all his faults; he searches his heart, and implores God to search it, in order that he may find them out, and put them away. He knows that the bliss of heaven arises in great part from the perfection of holiness, and he wishes to approach as near to heaven upon earth as he can, by coming as near as possible to perfect holiness.
What a different aspect would the church of God present to the world, and in what power and glory would its professors of religion appear, if it consisted of a multitude of men and women all striving and struggling after a perfect conformity to that law which makes it our duty to love God with all our heart, and our neighbors as ourselves - all anxious to come as near to a resemblance of God, and to have as much of the mind of Christ, as could be attained by anyone out of heaven - all hunting after their short-comings and offenses, and glad of any help to discover them, in order that they might be put away - all stimulating and helping each other on in the career of moral improvement - all watching and praying for the aid of the Divine Spirit to help their infirmities - what a scene, I say, would then be exhibited to an astonished world, on which the angels of God would delight to gaze! What less than this is the law of Christ's church? In what less interesting and important aspect than this ought the church of Christ to be seen?
It is not improbable that a dread of singularity, a fear of breaking through the barrier of conventionality, a dislike of being thought to be setting up as a reformer, have kept many back from seeking a higher degree of piety than has been exhibited around them. They have been conscious of prevailing defects, and of their own also, and under the stern rebuke of an enlightened conscience, have determined to advance to a more marked separation from the world, and a higher tone of spiritual feeling. From this resolution, however, they have been immediately and effectually deterred, by an apprehension of the remarks, perhaps the sneers, they would bring upon themselves from the lukewarm and the worldly, who would taunt them for setting up as reformers of their brethren, and as affecting the odor of superior sanctity. This apprehension is strengthened in many persons by too low an estimate of their own influence. "What can I do?" they say; "I who am so obscure and uninfluential, to stay the torrent of worldly-mindedness which is flowing through the church? My example can do nothing for the good of others, and can only bring opposition, reproach and reproof, upon myself. I see the miserably low condition of professors around me, and I feel and lament my own; happy should I be to see a healthier state of religion in our church, and gladly would I follow in the wake of those who would attempt to improve it, but I cannot attempt this myself. I should only be laughed at as a person affecting what I did not possess, inflated by vanity, or cherishing the pride of singularity." Let such persons remember that whatever may be thought of their conduct by others, whatever influence it may have upon them, or whatever opposition it may provoke, they are not to take these matters into account: convinced of their short-comings, they are intensely and laboriously to seek to have them made up. Whether others will applaud or censure, follow or resist, approve or condemn, they are to go on. No dread of ridicule or reproach should deter them from growing in grace. They must dare to be singular; venture to go alone; determine, whether men will bear or forbear, to go forward. The church can never be improved if this spirit of timidity prevails. There could have been neither martyr nor reformer upon these craven principles. I tell the man who will be in advance of his generation, he will be the object of their envy, their suspicion, and their ill-will; and there will be no exemption from such treatment for the professing Christian who aims at a higher standard of piety than he sees in the church of which he is a member.
The people of the world will be less envious, jealous, and spiteful, towards a neighbor who excels them in honesty and integrity, than inconsistent and worldly-minded professors will be towards a fellow-member who has more piety than they have; just because their conscience, having a little more light, reflected from the example and expostulation of their more consistent neighbor, is thus rendered more sensitive, and is more easily wounded. Such persons are more censorious of superior holiness, and more tolerant of great imperfections, than any others; and he who would, by avoiding their sins, rebuke them, though it be in love, is sure to be the object of their dislike. But we must not be thus stopped in our endeavors after higher attainments in piety. We must follow out our convictions, endeavoring to live up to the standard set before us in God's Word, and not suffer ourselves to be deterred from our duty by the opinion of our fellow creatures, or fellow-professors. Our condemnation will be the greater, if, after our attention has been drawn to the subject, and our conscience awakened, we allow ourselves to be turned aside by the fear of either the frowns or the sneers of others. God will help us if we are willing to be helped, and raise us above all that fear of man which bringeth a snare. No one who is really in earnest to grow in grace, and to attain to more eminent piety, will be left to struggle on, unassisted in his endeavors. Divine grace will be made sufficient for him, and he shall be successful in his efforts.
At the same time, he must remember that his humility, meekness, and gentleness, must be no less apparent than his other excellences. It must be earnestness itself, and not the appearance of it merely, that he seeks and manifests; and it must be for its own sake, and not for the sake of gaining the character of it. There must be nothing even remotely approaching to the contemptuous disposition which says, "Stand by, I am holier than thou." No affected airs of superior piety - no offensive obtrusion of our example - no supercilious rebukes - no bitter censoriousness - no angry reproaches - but a piety, which, like the sun, shall be seen rather than heard, and shall diffuse its influence in a noiseless manner, and almost without drawing attention to its source. Such a profession must do good, however humble the station in life of him who makes it; and if all who are convinced by these pages of their own deficiencies, as well as of those of the church at large, shall attempt to make up the latter by beginning with the former, this volume will not have been written in vain.
9. This enumeration of the causes that tend to depress and injure the spirit of vital godliness would be incomplete if I did not mention the modern taste for frequenting watering places and traveling abroad. Having dwelt on this at length in "The Christian Professor," under the chapter, "The Professor away from Home," I shall only briefly advert to the subject here. There are few things which have had a more unhappy influence upon the middling and upper classes of professing Christians than this. Even those annual visits to the coast, or the inland places of fashionable resort, now so prevalent, are sufficiently pernicious in their influence to put all who have any regard to their eternal welfare most seriously upon their guard, against the temptations which are thus presented, by the sudden and complete transition from employment to idleness - by the removal of those salutary restraints with which they are surrounded in the habitations where they statedly reside, and the mixed characters of the society into which they are almost necessarily thrown - by the amusements which are there most prevalent and fashionable - by the general air of dissipation which is thrown over the whole scene - by the interruption of their usual habits of devotion, private, domestic, and social - and by the indisposedness which is the consequence of all this, for the seasons and exercises of religion. These are no imaginary dangers, as the experience of all who have adopted this practice must attest, and as the total apostasy of some, and the backsliding of many, will corroborate.
This danger is of course increased by foreign travel, in numerous ways - by a removal from the usual means of grace - by the frequent desecration of the Sabbath - by associations oftentimes with worldly-minded companions - by a strain upon, and tampering with, conscience, in reference to many matters of very questionable propriety - and by the familiar gaze of mere curiosity upon scenes and customs known to be sinful. In all these ways may the spirituality of our minds, the tenderness of our conscience, and the delicacy of our moral sensibilities, be impaired by those continental tours which are so fashionable and so fascinating. Their influence, no doubt, has been mischievous to an extent of which we are not aware, among many whose religion was already of a feeble and a doubtful kind. Nor have more vigorous spiritual constitutions escaped the influence of the malaria of these infected regions. But as the thing is lawful in itself, and only sinful - when abused, let us, if disposed thus to recreate our minds, and gratify our curiosity which we innocently may, recollect that we are about to expose ourselves to peril, earnestly pray for grace to preserve us, and watch as well as pray that we enter not into temptation. As our best preservative from home, and at home - as one of the most effectual means of resisting temptation and promoting holiness, "Let us consider ourselves under the all-seeing eye of the Divine Majesty, as in the midst of an infinite globe of light, which compasseth us about both behind and before, and pierceth to the innermost recesses of the soul. The sense and the remembrance of the Divine presence is the most ready and effectual means, both to discovering what is unlawful, and to restrain us from it. There are some things which a person could make a shift to palliate or defend, and yet he dares not look Almighty God in the face, and adventure upon them. If we look unto him we shall be lightened; if we set him always before us, he will guide us with his eye, and instruct us in the way wherein we should walk.'"[7]
10. The last thing I shall mention as tending to depress the spirit of true religion, is the spirit of sectarianism, which so extensively prevails among the various sections of the Christian Church.
By the spirit of sectarianism, I mean that overweening attachment to our distinctive opinions on doctrine, government, and sacrament, which leads to a disproportionate and often a distempered zeal for upholding and promulgating them; and to a state of alienation, if not of hostility, towards those who differ from us, notwithstanding their agreement with us in still more fundamental and important matters. This spirit of exclusiveness, which shuts out from our affection, sympathy, and communion, all those, however evangelical in sentiment and holy in conduct, who are not within the pale of our church, and which would seem to restrict all excellence to our own body, is, whatever its abettors may imagine, not only anti-social, but positively anti-Christian. It is the essence of bigotry; the germ of intolerance; and in its last development, the spirit of persecution.
That such a spirit of sectarianism as this does prevail, is the confession and the lamentation of all catholic-minded Christians. It might seem as if this spirit were itself an indication and an operation of earnestness. So it is of the earnestness of party, but not of piety. Saul of Tarsus had no lack of this when he was hastening to Damascus, and breathing out threatening and slaughter against the disciples of Jesus; nor the Popish inquisiton in exterminating heretics by fire and sword; but who will call this the earnestness of true religion? It is zeal, but kindled by a spark from the flaming pit below. Zeal for lesser matters, to the neglect of greater ones, and which produces more dislike, or even indifference, to those who differ from us in these minor points, than friendship, sympathy, and love to them, on the ground of those more important ones on which we are united, is an antagonistic feeling to true piety. This is easily demonstrated. - It is an injury and opposition to that truth which is the basis of all religion, inasmuch as it depresses its more momentous doctrines, and gives an undue elevation to its lesser ones. - It is at open war with that love which is the greatest of the Christian graces, the very essence of religion, and without which all else is but as sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal. - It introduces a foreign and corrupting element into true godliness, and envenoms it with the poison of malice and wrath. - It diverts attention from primary to secondary matters, and exhausts the energies of the soul in bringing forth the fruits of contention, instead of the peaceable fruits of righteousness. - It cuts off the channels of sympathy between the different sections of the universal church, and thus deprives each part of the benefit of what may be found in the way of example, spiritual literature, and cooperation, in the other sections of the great fellowship of believers. - It tends to perpetuate our strifes and divisions, by extinguishing the spirit by which alone we are likely to come to ultimate agreement. - It fosters in many a disposition to infidelity, by disparaging the excellence and weakening the power of true religion. - It represses the spirit of prayer, and thus is a barrier to the spread of the gospel in the world - and it grieves the Holy Spirit of God, whereby he is induced to withhold his gracious influence.
Such are the consequences of sectarianism, and can anyone doubt whether this is inimical to religion? It may substitute for the fervor of a pure zeal, a fiery turbulence; but this is not genuine piety; this is not the true vital warmth of a soul in full health, but the fever of a diseased and morbidly restless spirit. It is high time to stop the progress and destroy the power of this hateful temper. If we have not religion enough to vanquish sectarianism, sectarianism will acquire more and more power to vanquish religion. Let charity arise into the ascendant. We cannot do a better thing, either for the church, or for the world, than to seek for a greater degree of love among the friends of Christ. How has religion been tarnished in her beauty, weakened in her influence, and limited in her reign, by these contentions among her friends! Success, therefore, be to those efforts which are now being made, by the sons of peace, to bring the scattered and alienated followers of the Lamb into a closer union with each other; and whether the Evangelical Alliance shall continue to exist or not, in its present form and constitution, all good men must join in the longings and the prayers of our Divine Lord, when he thus breathed out his heart for his disciples, "That they all may be one; as thou Father art in me, and I in thee; that they all may be one in us: that the world may believe that thou hast sent me."
[1] By none, I believe, more frequently than myself, for I have adverted to it, or dwelt at length upon it, in several of my works.
[2] Two or three of the particulars of this chapter have been touched upon in the volume upon "An Earnest Ministry;" but as they still more intimately relate to the congregation, they are reintroduced here.
[3] When will the ministers and members of our churches begin generally to inquire, whether it is not expedient for them, if not for their own sakes, yet for the sake of the community, to discontinue altogether the use of intoxicating liquors? When it is considered that one half of the insanity, two thirds of the abject poverty, and three fourths of the crime, of our country, are to be traced up to drunkenness, - that more than £60,000,000 are annually expended in destructive beverages, - that myriads annually die the drunkard's death, and descend still lower than the drunkard's grave - that thousands of church members are every year cut off from Christian fellowship for inebriety - that every minister of the gospel has to complain of the hindrance to his usefulness from this cause - and that more ministers are displaced by this than by any other habit - that in short more misery and more crime flow over society from this source than from any other, war and slavery not excepted - and that by the highest medical authorities these intoxicating drinks are reduced as diet, from the rank of necessaries to luxuries - it surely does become every professor of religion to ask whether it is not incumbent upon him, both for his own safety and for the good of his fellow-creatures, to abstain from this pernicious indulgence. On the authority of Mr. Sheriff Alison, it is stated that in the rear 1840, there were in Glasgow amongst about 30,000 inhabited houses, no fewer than 3010 appropriated to the sale of intoxicating drinks. The same gentleman declared that the consumption of ardent spirits in that city amounted to 1,800,000 gallons yearly, the value of which is £1,350,000. No fewer than 30,000 persons there, go to bed drunk every Saturday night; 25,000 commitments are annually made on account of drunkenness, of which 10,000 are females. Is Glasgow worse than many other places? Professors of religion, ponder this; and will you not, by abstaining from a luxury, lend the aid of your example to discountenance this monster crime, and monster misery? It is in the power, and therefore is it not the duty, of the Christian church to do much to stop this evil, which sends more persons to the mad-house, the jail, the hulks and the gallows - more bodies to the grave - and more souls to perdition, than any other that can be mentioned. Can the church be in earnest till it is prepared to make this sacrifice?
[4]The passage of these two acts brought great and warranted delight to the dissenting churches. The reform act was aimed at decreasing the influence wealthy Lords, who were largely Anglican, had over the appointments of ministers of parliament. The repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts, originally instituted in 1673 and 1661respectively, meant that those belonging to other Christian communions could hold public office. Previously, under the acts, one must have received the sacrament in the Church of England, Ireland or Scotland to serve in any public capacity. James was justly worried that the Christian dissenters would view these victories as more important than the genuine graces of God and that the new found temporal powers would obscure their vision for an authentic increase in piety and usefulness. [ed.]
[5]A flamboyant purveyor of quack medicines, akin to the snake oil salesman of the early 20th century in America. [ed.]
[6]Unruly, noisy and lacking restraint. [ed.]
[7] Scougal's "Life of God in the Soul of Man." Would God the whole generation of the professors of true religion of this day, and of every age, would read this most beautiful and incomparable treatise on practical religion! This is the religion we want, and of which we have too little. There is an edition of Scougal's whole works, in one small volume, among Collins' Select Authors, enriched by an inestimable Introductory Essay, by that able and eminent man, the late Rev. Richard Watson.