Chapter Two
Henry Maxwell and a group of his
church members remained some time in the
study. The man lay on the couch there
and breathed heavily. When the question
of what to do with him came up, the
minister insisted on taking the man to
his own house; he lived near by and had
an extra room. Rachel Winslow said:
"Mother has no company at present.
I am sure we would be glad to give him a
place with us."
She looked strongly agitated. No
one noticed it particularly. They were
all excited over the strange event, the
strangest that First Church people could
remember. But the minister insisted on
taking charge of the man, and when a
carriage came the unconscious but living
form was carried to his house; and with
the entrance of that humanity into the
minister's spare room a new chapter in
Henry Maxwell's life began, and yet no
one, himself least of all, dreamed of
the remarkable change it was destined to
make in all his after definition of the
Christian discipleship.
The event created a great sensation
in the First Church parish. People
talked of nothing else for a week. It
was the general impression that the man
had wandered into the church in a
condition of mental disturbance caused
by his troubles, and that all the time
he was talking he was in a strange
delirium of fever and really ignorant of
his surroundings. That was the most
charitable construction to put upon his
action. It was the general agreement
also that there was a singular absence
of anything bitter or complaining in
what the man had said. He had,
throughout, spoken in a mild, apologetic
tone, almost as if he were one of the
congregation seeking for light on a very
difficult subject.
The third day after his removal to
the minister's house there was a marked
change in his condition. The doctor
spoke of it but offered no hope.
Saturday morning he still lingered,
although he had rapidly failed as the
week drew near its close. Sunday
morning, just before the clock struck
one, he rallied and asked if his child
had come. The minister had sent for her
at once as soon as he had been able to
secure her address from some letters
found in the man's pocket. He had been
conscious and able to talk coherently
only a few moments since his attack.
"The child is coming. She will be
here," Mr. Maxwell said as he sat there,
his face showing marks of the strain of
the week's vigil; for he had insisted on
sitting up nearly every night.
"I shall never see her in this
world," the man whispered. Then he
uttered with great difficulty the words,
"You have been good to me. Somehow I
feel as if it was what Jesus would do."
After a few minutes he turned his
head slightly, and before Mr. Maxwell
could realize the fact, the doctor said
quietly, "He is gone."
The Sunday morning that dawned on
the city of Raymond was exactly like the
Sunday of a week before. Mr. Maxwell
entered his pulpit to face one of the
largest congregations that had ever
crowded the First Church. He was haggard
and looked as if he had just risen from
a long illness. His wife was at home
with the little girl, who had come on
the morning train an hour after her
father had died. He lay in that spare
room, his troubles over, and the
minister could see the face as he opened
the Bible and arranged his different
notices on the side of the desk as he
had been in the habit of doing for ten
years.
The service that morning contained
a new element. No one could remember
when Henry Maxwell had preached in the
morning without notes. As a matter of
fact he had done so occasionally when he
first entered the ministry, but for a
long time he had carefully written every
word of his morning sermon, and nearly
always his evening discourses as well.
It cannot be said that his sermon this
morning was striking or impressive. He
talked with considerable hesitation. It
was evident that some great idea
struggled in his thought for utterance,
but it was not expressed in the theme he
had chosen for his preaching. It was
near the close of his sermon that he
began to gather a certain strength that
had been painfully lacking at the
beginning.
He closed the Bible and, stepping
out at the side of the desk, faced his
people and began to talk to them about
the remarkable scene of the week before.
"Our brother," somehow the words
sounded a little strange coming from his
lips, "passed away this morning. I have
not yet had time to learn all his
history. He had one sister living in
Chicago. I have written her and have not
yet received an answer. His little girl
is with us and will remain for the
time."
He paused and looked over the
house. He thought he had never seen so
many earnest faces during his entire
pastorate. He was not able yet to tell
his people his experiences, the crisis
through which he was even now moving.
But something of his feeling passed from
him to them, and it did not seem to him
that he was acting under a careless
impulse at all to go on and break to
them this morning something of the
message he bore in his heart.
So he went on:
"The appearance and words of this
stranger in the church last Sunday made
a very powerful impression on me. I am
not able to conceal from you or myself
the fact that what he said, followed as
it has been by his death in my house,
has compelled me to ask as I never asked
before 'What does following Jesus mean?'
I am not in a position yet to utter any
condemnation of this people or, to a
certain extent, of myself, either in our
Christ-like relations to this man or the
numbers that he represents in the world.
But all that does not prevent me from
feeling that much that the man said was
so vitally true that we must face it in
an attempt to answer it or else stand
condemned as Christian disciples. A good
deal that was said here last Sunday was
in the nature of a challenge to
Christianity as it is seen and felt in
our churches. I have felt this with
increasing emphasis every day since.
"And I do not know that any time is
more appropriate than the present for me
to propose a plan, or a purpose, which
has been forming in my mind as a
satisfactory reply to much that was said
here last Sunday."
Again Henry Maxwell paused and
looked into the faces of his people.
There were some strong, earnest men and
women in the First Church.
He could see Edward Norman, editor
of the Raymond DAILY NEWS. He had been a
member of the First Church for ten
years.
No man was more honored in the
community. There was Alexander Powers,
superintendent of the great railroad
shops in Raymond, a typical railroad
man, one who had been born into the
business. There sat Donald Marsh,
president of Lincoln College, situated
in the suburbs of Raymond. There was
Milton Wright, one of the great
merchants of Raymond, having in his
employ at least one hundred men in
various shops. There was Dr. West who,
although still comparatively young, was
quoted as authority in special surgical
cases. There was young Jasper Chase the
author, who had written one successful
book and was said to be at work on a new
novel. There was Miss Virginia Page the
heiress, who through the recent death of
her father had inherited a million at
least, and was gifted with unusual
attractions of person and intellect. And
not least of all, Rachel Winslow, from
her seat in the choir, glowed with her
peculiar beauty of light this morning
because she was so intensely interested
in the whole scene.
There was some reason, perhaps, in
view of such material in the First
Church, for Henry Maxwell's feeling of
satisfaction whenever he considered his
parish as he had the previous Sunday.
There was an unusually large number of
strong, individual characters who
claimed membership there. But as he
noted their faces this morning he was
simply wondering how many of them would
respond to the strange proposition he
was about to make. He continued slowly,
taking time to choose his words
carefully, and giving the people an
impression they had never felt before,
even when he was at his best with his
most dramatic delivery.
"What I am going to propose now is
something which ought not to appear
unusual or at all impossible of
execution. Yet I am aware that it will
be so regarded by a large number,
perhaps, of the members of this church.
But in order that we may have a thorough
understanding of what we are
considering, I will put my proposition
very plainly, perhaps bluntly. I want
volunteers from the First Church who
will pledge themselves, earnestly and
honestly for an entire year, not to do
anything without first asking the
question, 'What would Jesus do?' And
after asking that question, each one
will follow Jesus as exactly as he knows
how, no matter what the result may be. I
will of course include myself in this
company of volunteers, and shall take
for granted that my church here will not
be surprised at my future conduct, as
based upon this standard of action, and
will not oppose whatever is done if they
think Christ would do it. Have I made my
meaning clear? At the close of the
service I want all those members who are
willing to join such a company to remain
and we will talk over the details of the
plan. Our motto will be, 'What would
Jesus do?' Our aim will be to act just
as He would if He was in our places,
regardless of immediate results. In
other words, we propose to follow Jesus'
steps as closely and as literally as we
believe He taught His disciples to do.
And those who volunteer to do this will
pledge themselves for an entire year,
beginning with today, so to act."
Henry Maxwell paused again and
looked out over his people. It is not
easy to describe the sensation that such
a simple proposition apparently made.
Men glanced at one another in
astonishment. It was not like Henry
Maxwell to define Christian discipleship
in this way. There was evident confusion
of thought over his proposition. It was
understood well enough, but there was,
apparently, a great difference of
opinion as to the application of Jesus'
teaching and example.
He calmly closed the service with a
brief prayer. The organist began his
postlude immediately after the
benediction and the people began to go
out. There was a great deal of
conversation. Animated groups stood all
over the church discussing the
minister's proposition. It was evidently
provoking great discussion. After
several minutes he asked all who
expected to remain to pass into the
lecture-room which joined the large room
on the side. He was himself detained at
the front of the church talking with
several persons there, and when he
finally turned around, the church was
empty. He walked over to the lecture-
room entrance and went in. He was almost
startled to see the people who were
there. He had not made up his mind about
any of his members, but he had hardly
expected that so many were ready to
enter into such a literal testing of
their Christian discipleship as now
awaited him. There were perhaps fifty
present, among them Rachel Winslow and
Virginia Page, Mr. Norman, President
Marsh, Alexander Powers the railroad
superintendent, Milton Wright, Dr. West
and Jasper Chase.
He closed the door of the lecture-
room and went and stood before the
little group. His face was pale and his
lips trembled with genuine emotion. It
was to him a genuine crisis in his own
life and that of his parish. No man can
tell until he is moved by the Divine
Spirit what he may do, or how he may
change the current of a lifetime of
fixed habits of thought and speech and
action. Henry Maxwell did not, as we
have said, yet know himself all that he
was passing through, but he was
conscious of a great upheaval in his
definition of Christian discipleship,
and he was moved with a depth of feeling
he could not measure as he looked into
the faces of those men and women on this
occasion.
It seemed to him that the most
fitting word to be spoken first was that
of prayer. He asked them all to pray
with him. And almost with the first
syllable he uttered there was a distinct
presence of the Spirit felt by them all.
As the prayer went on, this presence
grew in power. They all felt it. The
room was filled with it as plainly as if
it had been visible. When the prayer
closed there was a silence that lasted
several moments. All the heads were
bowed. Henry Maxwell's face was wet with
tears. If an audible voice from heaven
had sanctioned their pledge to follow
the Master's steps, not one person
present could have felt more certain of
the divine blessing. And so the most
serious movement ever started in the
First Church of Raymond was begun.
"We all understand," said he,
speaking very quietly, "what we have
undertaken to do. We pledge ourselves to
do everything in our daily lives after
asking the question, 'What would Jesus
do?' regardless of what may be the
result to us. Some time I shall be able
to tell you what a marvelous change has
come over my life within a week's time.
I cannot now. But the experience I have
been through since last Sunday has left
me so dissatisfied with my previous
definition of Christian discipleship
that I have been compelled to take this
action. I did not dare begin it alone. I
know that I am being led by the hand of
divine love in all this. The same divine
impulse must have led you also.
"Do we understand fully what we
have undertaken?"
"I want to ask a question," said
Rachel Winslow. Every one turned towards
her. Her face glowed with a beauty that
no physical loveliness could ever
create.
"I am a little in doubt as to the
source of our knowledge concerning what
Jesus would do. Who is to decide for me
just what He would do in my case? It is
a different age. There are many
perplexing questions in our civilization
that are not mentioned in the teachings
of Jesus. How am I going to tell what He
would do?"
"There is no way that I know of,"
replied the pastor, "except as we study
Jesus through the medium of the Holy
Spirit. You remember what Christ said
speaking to His disciples about the Holy
Spirit: "Howbeit when he, the Spirit of
truth, is come, he shall guide you into
all the truth: for he shall not speak
from himself; but what things soever he
shall hear, these shall he speak: and he
shall declare unto you the things that
are to come. He shall glorify me; for he
shall take of mine, and shall declare it
unto you. All things whatsoever the
Father hath are mine: therefore said I,
that he taketh of mine, and shall
declare it unto you.' There is no other
test that I know of. We shall all have
to decide what Jesus would do after
going to that source of knowledge."
"What if others say of us, when we
do certain things, that Jesus would not
do so?" asked the superintendent of
railroads.
"We cannot prevent that. But we
must be absolutely honest with
ourselves. The standard of Christian
action cannot vary in most of our acts."
"And yet what one church member
thinks Jesus would do, another refuses
to accept as His probable course of
action. What is to render our conduct
uniformly Christ-like? Will it be
possible to reach the same conclusions
always in all cases?" asked President
Marsh.
Mr. Maxwell was silent some time.
Then he answered, "No; I don't know that
we can expect that. But when it comes to
a genuine, honest, enlightened following
of Jesus' steps, I cannot believe there
will be any confusion either in our own
minds or in the judgment of others. We
must be free from fanaticism on one hand
and too much caution on the other. If
Jesus' example is the example for the
world to follow, it certainly must be
feasible to follow it. But we need to
remember this great fact. After we have
asked the Spirit to tell us what Jesus
would do and have received an answer to
it, we are to act regardless of the
results to ourselves. Is that
understood?"
All the faces in the room were
raised towards the minister in solemn
assent. There was no misunderstanding
that proposition. Henry Maxwell's face
quivered again as he noted the president
of the Endeavor Society with several
members seated back of the older men and
women.
They remained a little longer
talking over details and asking
questions, and agreed to report to one
another every week at a regular meeting
the result of their experiences in
following Jesus this way. Henry Maxwell
prayed again. And again as before the
Spirit made Himself manifest. Every head
remained bowed a long time. They went
away finally in silence. There was a
feeling that prevented speech. The
pastor shook hands with them all as they
went out. Then he went into his own
study room back of the pulpit and
kneeled. He remained there alone nearly
half an hour. When he went home he went
into the room where the dead body lay.
As he looked at the face he cried in his
heart again for strength and wisdom. But
not even yet did he realize that a
movement had begun which would lead to
the most remarkable series of events
that the city of Raymond had ever known.
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