Chapter Five
SUNDAY morning dawned again on
Raymond, and Henry Maxwell's church was
again crowded. Before the service began
Edward Norman attracted great attention.
He sat quietly in his usual place about
three seats from the pulpit. The Sunday
morning issue of the NEWS containing the
statement of its discontinuance had been
expressed in such remarkable language
that every reader was struck by it. No
such series of distinct sensations had
ever disturbed the usual business custom
of Raymond. The events connected with
the NEWS were not all. People were
eagerly talking about strange things
done during the week by Alexander Powers
at the railroad shops, and Milton Wright
in his stores on the avenue. The service
progressed upon a distinct wave of
excitement in the pews. Henry Maxwell
faced it all with a calmness which
indicated a strength and purpose more
than usual. His prayers were very
helpful. His sermon was not so easy to
describe. How would a minister be apt to
preach to his people if he came before
them after an entire week of eager
asking, "How would Jesus preach? What
would He probably say?" It is very
certain that he did not preach as he had
done two Sundays before. Tuesday of the
past week he had stood by the grave of
the dead stranger and said the words,
"Earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to
dust," and still he was moved by the
spirit of a deeper impulse than he could
measure as he thought of his people and
yearned for the Christ message when he
should be in his pulpit again.
Now that Sunday had come and the
people were there to hear, what would
the Master tell them? He agonized over
his preparation for them, and yet he
knew he had not been able to fit his
message into his ideal of the Christ.
Nevertheless no one in the First Church
could remember ever hearing such a
sermon before. There was in it rebuke
for sin, especially hypocrisy, there was
definite rebuke of the greed of wealth
and the selfishness of fashion, two
things that First Church never heard
rebuked this way before, and there was a
love of his people that gathered new
force as the sermon went on. When it was
finished there were those who were
saying in their hearts, "The Spirit
moved that sermon." And they were right.
Then Rachel Winslow rose to sing,
this time after the sermon, by Mr.
Maxwell's request. Rachel's singing did
not provoke applause this time. What
deeper feeling carried the people's
hearts into a reverent silence and
tenderness of thought? Rachel was
beautiful. But her consciousness of her
remarkable loveliness had always marred
her singing with those who had the
deepest spiritual feeling. It had also
marred her rendering of certain kinds of
music with herself. Today this was all
gone. There was no lack of power in her
grand voice. But there was an actual
added element of humility and purity
which the audience distinctly felt and
bowed to.
Before service closed Mr. Maxwell
asked those who had remained the week
before to stay again for a few moments
of consultation, and any others who were
willing to make the pledge taken at that
time. When he was at liberty he went
into the lecture-room. To his
astonishment it was almost filled. This
time a large proportion of young people
had come, but among them were a few
business men and officers of the church.
As before, he, Maxwell, asked them
to pray with him. And, as before, a
distinct answer came from the presence
of the divine Spirit. There was no doubt
in the minds of any present that what
they purposed to do was so clearly in
line with the divine will, that a
blessing rested upon it in a very
special manner.
They remained some time to ask
questions and consult together. There
was a feeling of fellowship such as they
had never known in their church
membership. Mr. Norman's action was well
understood by them all, and he answered
several questions.
"What will be the probable result
of your discontinuance of the Sunday
paper?" asked Alexander Powers, who sat
next to him.
"I don't know yet. I presume it
will result in the falling off of
subscriptions and advertisements. I
anticipate that."
"Do you have any doubts about your
action. I mean, do you regret it, or
fear it is not what Jesus would do?"
asked Mr. Maxwell.
"Not in the least. But I would like
to ask, for my own satisfaction, if any
of you here think Jesus would issue a
Sunday morning paper?"
No one spoke for a minute. Then
Jasper Chase said, "We seem to think
alike on that, but I have been puzzled
several times during the week to know
just what He would do. It is not always
an easy question to answer."
"I find that trouble," said
Virginia Page. She sat by Rachel
Winslow. Every one who knew Virginia
Page was wondering how she would succeed
in keeping her promise. "I think perhaps
I find it specially difficult to answer
that question on account of my money.
Our Lord never owned any property, and
there is nothing in His example to guide
me in the use of mine. I am studying and
praying. I think I see clearly a part of
what He would do, but not all. What
would He do with a million dollars? is
my question really. I confess I am not
yet able to answer it to my
satisfaction.
"I could tell you what you could do
with a part of it, said Rachel, turning
her face toward Virginia. "That does not
trouble me," replied Virginia with a
slight smile. "What I am trying to
discover is a principle that will enable
me to come to the nearest possible to
His action as it ought to influence the
entire course of my life so far as my
wealth and its use are concerned."
"That will take time," said the
minister slowly. All the rest of the
room were thinking hard of the same
thing. Milton Wright told something of
his experience. He was gradually working
out a plan for his business relations
with his employees, and it was opening
up a new world to him and to them. A few
of the young men told of special
attempts to answer the question. There
was almost general consent over the fact
that the application of the Christ
spirit and practice to the everyday life
was the serious thing. It required a
knowledge of Him and an insight into His
motives that most of them did not yet
possess.
When they finally adjourned after a
silent prayer that marked with growing
power the Divine Presence, they went
away discussing earnestly their
difficulties and seeking light from one
another.
Rachel Winslow and Virginia Page
went out together. Edward Norman and
Milton Wright became so interested in
their mutual conference that they walked
on past Norman's house and came back
together. Jasper Chase and the president
of the Endeavor Society stood talking
earnestly in one corner of the room.
Alexander Powers and Henry Maxwell
remained, even after the others had
gone.
"I want you to come down to the
shops tomorrow and see my plan and talk
to the men. Somehow I feel as if you
could get nearer to them than any one
else just now."
"I don't know about that, but I
will come," replied Mr. Maxwell a little
sadly. How was he fitted to stand before
two or three hundred working men and
give them a message? Yet in the moment
of his weakness, as he asked the
question, he rebuked himself for it.
What would Jesus do? That was an end to
the discussion.
He went down the next day and found
Mr. Powers in his office. It lacked a
few minutes of twelve and the
superintendent said, "Come upstairs, and
I'll show you what I've been trying to
do."
They went through the machine shop,
climbed a long flight of stairs and
entered a very large, empty room. It had
once been used by the company for a
store room.
"Since making that promise a week
ago I have had a good many things to
think of," said the superintendent, "and
among them is this: The company gives me
the use of this room, and I am going to
fit it up with tables and a coffee plant
in the corner there where those steam
pipes are. My plan is to provide a good
place where the men can come up and eat
their noon lunch, and give them, two or
three times a week, the privilege of a
fifteen minutes' talk on some subject
that will be a real help to them in
their lives."
Maxwell looked surprised and asked
if the men would come for any such
purpose.
"Yes, they'll come. After all, I
know the men pretty well. They are among
the most intelligent working men in the
country today. But they are, as a
whole, entirely removed from church
influence. I asked, 'What would Jesus
do?' and among other things it seemed to
me He would begin to act in some way to
add to the lives of these men more
physical and spiritual comfort. It is a
very little thing, this room and what it
represents, but I acted on the first
impulse, to do the first thing that
appealed to my good sense, and I want to
work out this idea. I want you to speak
to the men when they come up at noon. I
have asked them to come up and see the
place and I'll tell them something about
it."
Maxwell was ashamed to say how
uneasy he felt at being asked to speak a
few words to a company of working men.
How could he speak without notes, or to
such a crowd? He was honestly in a
condition of genuine fright over the
prospect. He actually felt afraid of
facing those men. He shrank from the
ordeal of confronting such a crowd, so
different from the Sunday audiences he
was familiar with.
There were a dozen rude benches and
tables in the room, and when the noon
whistle sounded the men poured upstairs
from the machine shops below and,
seating themselves at the tables, began
to cat their lunch. There were present
about three hundred of them. They had
read the superintendent's notice which
he had posted up in various places, and
came largely out of curiosity.
They were favorably impressed. The
room was large and airy, free from smoke
and dust, and well warmed from the steam
pipes. At about twenty minutes to one
Mr. Powers told the men what he had in
mind. He spoke very simply, like one who
understands thoroughly the character of
his audience, and then introduced the
Rev. Henry Maxwell of the First Church,
his pastor, who had consented to speak a
few minutes.
Maxwell will never forget the
feeling with which for the first time he
stood before the grimy-faced audience of
working men. Like hundreds of other
ministers, he had never spoken to any
gatherings except those made up of
people of his own class in the sense
that they were familiar in their dress
and education and habits. This was a new
world to him, and nothing but his new
rule of conduct could have made possible
his message and its effect. He spoke on
the subject of satisfaction with life;
what caused it, what its real sources
were. He had the great good sense on
this his first appearance not to
recognize the men as a class distinct
from himself. He did not use the term
working man, and did not say a word to
suggest any difference between their
lives and his own.
The men were pleased. A good many
of them shook hands with him before
going down to their work, and the
minister telling it all to his wife when
he reached home, said that never in all
his life had he known the delight he
then felt in having the handshake from a
man of physical labor. The day marked an
important one in his Christian
experience, more important than he knew.
It was the beginning of a fellowship
between him and the working world. It
was the first plank laid down to help
bridge the chasm between the church and
labor in Raymond.
Alexander Powers went back to his
desk that afternoon much pleased with
his plan and seeing much help in it for
the men. He knew where he could get some
good tables from an abandoned eating
house at one of the stations down the
road, and he saw how the coffee
arrangement could be made a very
attractive feature. The men had
responded even better than he
anticipated, and the whole thing could
not help being a great benefit to them.
He took up the routine of his work
with a glow of satisfaction. After all,
he wanted to do as Jesus would, he said
to himself.
It was nearly four o'clock when he
opened one of the company's long
envelopes which he supposed contained
orders for the purchasing of stores. He
ran over the first page of typewritten
matter in his usual quick, business-like
manner, before he saw that what he was
reading was not intended for his office
but for the superintendent of the
freight department.
He turned over a page mechanically,
not meaning to read what was not
addressed to him, but before he knew it,
he was in possession of evidence which
conclusively proved that the company was
engaged in a systematic violation of the
Interstate Commerce Laws of the United
States. It was as distinct and
unequivocal a breaking of law as if a
private citizen should enter a house and
rob the inmates. The discrimination
shown in rebates was in total contempt
of all the statutes. Under the laws of
the state it was also a distinct
violation of certain provisions recently
passed by the legislature to prevent
railroad trusts. There was no question
that he had in his hands evidence
sufficient to convict the company of
willful, intelligent violation of the
law of the commission and the law of the
state also.
He dropped the papers on his desk
as if they were poison, and instantly
the question flashed across his mind,
"What would Jesus do?" He tried to shut
the question out. He tried to reason
with himself by saying it was none of
his business. He had known in a more or
less definite way, as did nearly all the
officers of the company, that this had
been going on right along on nearly all
the roads. He was not in a position,
owing to his place in the shops, to
prove anything direct, and he had
regarded it as a matter which did not
concern him at all. The papers now
before him revealed the entire affair.
They had through some carelessness been
addressed to him. What business of his
was it? If he saw a man entering his
neighbor's house to steal, would it not
be his duty to inform the officers of
the law? Was a railroad company such a
different thing? Was it under a
different rule of conduct, so that it
could rob the public and defy law and be
undisturbed because it was such a great
organization? What would Jesus do? Then
there was his family. Of course, if he
took any steps to inform the commission
it would mean the loss of his position.
His wife and daughter had always enjoyed
luxury and a good place in society. If
he came out against this lawlessness as
a witness it would drag him into courts,
his motives would be misunderstood, and
the whole thing would end in his
disgrace and the loss of his position.
Surely it was none of his business. He
could easily get the papers back to the
freight department and no one be the
wiser. Let the iniquity go on. Let the
law be defied. What was it to him? He
would work out his plans for bettering
the condition just before him. What more
could a man do in this railroad business
when there was so much going on anyway
that made it impossible to live by the
Christian standard? But what would Jesus
do if He knew the facts? That was the
question that confronted Alexander
Powers as the day wore into evening.
The lights in the office had been
turned on. The whirr of the great engine
and the clash of the planers in the big
shop continued until six o'clock. Then
the whistle blew, the engine slowed up,
the men dropped their tools and ran for
the block house.
Powers heard the familiar click,
click, of the clocks as the men filed
past the window of the block house just
outside. He said to his clerks, "I'm not
going just yet. I have something extra
tonight." He waited until he heard the
last man deposit his block. The men
behind the block case went out. The
engineer and his assistants had work for
half an hour but they went out by
another door.
At seven o'clock any one who had
looked into the superintendent's office
would have seen an unusual sight. He was
kneeling, and his face was buried in his
hands as he bowed his head upon the
papers on his desk.
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