Chapter Seventeen
THE next day she went down to the
NEWS office to see Edward Norman and
arrange the details of her part in the
establishment of the paper on its new
foundation. Mr. Maxwell was present at
this conference, and the three agreed
that whatever Jesus would do in detail
as editor of a daily paper, He would be
guided by the same general principles
that directed His conduct as the Saviour
of the world.
"I have tried to put down here in
concrete form some of the things that it
has seemed to me Jesus would do," said
Edward Norman. He read from a paper
lying on his desk, and Maxwell was
reminded again of his own effort to put
into written form his own conception of
Jesus' probable action, and also of
Milton Wright's same attempt in his
business.
"I have headed this, 'What would
Jesus do as Edward Norman, editor of a
daily newspaper in Raymond?'
"1. He would never allow a sentence or a
picture in his paper that could be
called bad or coarse or impure in any
way.
"2. He would probably conduct the
political part of the paper from the
standpoint of non-partisan patriotism,
always looking upon all political
questions in the light of their relation
to the Kingdom of God, and advocating
measures from the standpoint of their
relation to the welfare of the people,
always on the basis of 'What is right?'
never on the basis of 'What is for the
best interests of this or that party?'
In other words, He would treat all
political questions as he would treat
every other subject, from the standpoint
of the advancement of the Kingdom of God
on earth."
Edward Norman looked up from the
reading a moment. "You understand that
is my opinion of Jesus' probable action
on political matters in a daily paper. I
am not passing judgment on other
newspaper men who may have a different
conception of Jesus' probable action
from mine. I am simply trying to answer
honestly, 'What would Jesus do as Edward
Norman?' And the answer I find is what I
have put down.'
"3. The end and aim of a daily paper
conducted by Jesus would be to do the
will of God. That is, His main purpose
in carrying on a newspaper would not be
to make money, or gain political
influence; but His first and ruling
purpose would be to so conduct his paper
that it would be evident to all his
subscribers that He was trying to seek
first the Kingdom of God by means of His
paper. This purpose would be as distinct
and unquestioned as the purpose of a
minister or a missionary or any
unselfish martyr in Christian work
anywhere.
"4. All questionable advertisements
would be impossible.
"5. The relations of Jesus to the
employees on the paper would be of the
most loving character."
"So far as I have gone," said
Norman again looking up, "I am of
opinion that Jesus would employ
practically some form of co-operation
that would represent the idea of a
mutual interest in a business where all
were to move together for the same great
end. I am working out such a plan, and I
am confident it will be successful. At
any rate, once introduce the element of
personal love into a business like this,
take out the selfish principle of doing
it for personal profits to a man or
company, and I do not see any way except
the most loving personal interest
between editors, reporters, pressmen,
and all who contribute anything to the
life of the paper. And that interest
would be expressed not only in the
personal love and sympathy but in a
sharing with the profits of the
business."
"6. As editor of a daily paper today,
Jesus would give large space to the work
of the Christian world. He would devote
a page possibly to the facts of Reform,
of sociological problems, of
institutional church work and similar
movements.
"7. He would do all in His power in His
paper to fight the saloon as an enemy of
the human race and an unnecessary part
of our civilization. He would do this
regardless of public sentiment in the
matter and, of course, always regardless
of its effect upon His subscription
list."
Again Edward Norman looked up. "I
state my honest conviction on this
point. Of course, I do not pass judgment
on the Christian men who are editing
other kinds of papers today. But as I
interpret Jesus, I believe He would use
the influence of His paper to remove the
saloon entirely from the political and
social life of the nation."
"8. Jesus would not issue a Sunday
edition.
"9. He would print the news of the world
that people ought to know. Among the
things they do not need to know, and
which would not be published, would be
accounts of brutal prize-fights, long
accounts of crimes, scandals in private
families, or any other human events
which in any way would conflict with the
first point mentioned in this outline.
"10. If Jesus had the amount of money to
use on a paper which we have, He would
probably secure the best and strongest
Christian men and women to co-operate
with him in the matter of contributions.
That will be my purpose, as I shall be
able to show you in a few days.
"11. Whatever the details of the paper
might demand as the paper developed
along its definite plan, the main
principle that guided it would always be
the establishment of the Kingdom of God
in the world. This large general
principle would necessarily shape all
the detail."
Edward Norman finished reading the
plan. He was very thoughtful.
"I have merely sketched a faint
outline. I have a hundred ideas for
making the paper powerful that I have
not thought out fully as yet. This is
simply suggestive. I have talked it over
with other newspaper men. Some of them
say I will have a weak, namby-pamby
Sunday-school sheet. If I get out
something as good as a Sunday-school it
will be pretty good. Why do men, when
they want to characterize something as
particularly feeble, always use a
Sunday-school as a comparison, when they
ought to know that the Sunday-school is
one of the strongest, most powerful
influences in our civilization in this
country today? But the paper will not
necessarily be weak because it is good.
Good things are more powerful than bad.
The question with me is largely one of
support from the Christian people of
Raymond. There are over twenty thousand
church members here in this city. If
half of them will stand by the NEWS its
life is assured. What do you think,
Maxwell, of the probability of such
support?"
"I don't know enough about it to
give an intelligent answer. I believe
in the paper with all my heart. If it
lives a year, as Miss Virginia said,
there is no telling what it can do. The
great thing will be to issue such a
paper, as near as we can judge, as Jesus
probably would, and put into it all the
elements of Christian brains, strength,
intelligence and sense; and command
respect for freedom from bigotry,
fanaticism, narrowness and anything else
that is contrary to the spirit of Jesus.
Such a paper will call for the best that
human thought and action is capable of
giving. The greatest minds in the world
would have their powers taxed to the
utmost to issue a Christian daily."
"Yes," Edward Norman spoke humbly.
"I shall make a great many mistakes, no
doubt. I need a great deal of wisdom.
But I want to do as Jesus would. 'What
would He do?' I have asked it, and shall
continue to do so, and abide by the
results."
"I think we are beginning to
understand," said Virginia, "the meaning
of that command, 'Grow in the grace and
knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ.' I am sure I do not know all
that He would do in detail until I know
Him better."
"That is very true," said Henry
Maxwell. "I am beginning to understand
that I cannot interpret the probable
action of Jesus until I know better what
His spirit is. The greatest question in
all of human life is summed up when we
ask, 'What would Jesus do?' if, as we
ask it, we also try to answer it from a
growth in knowledge of Jesus himself. We
must know Jesus before we can imitate
Him."
When the arrangement had been made
between Virginia an Edward Norman, he
found himself in possession of the sum
of five hundred thousand dollars to use
for the establishment of a Christian
daily paper. When Virginia and Maxwell
had gone, Norman closed his door and,
alone with the Divine Presence, asked
like a child for help from his
all-powerful Father. All through his
prayer as he kneeled before his desk ran
the promise, "If any man lack wisdom,
let him ask of God who giveth to all men
liberally and upbraideth not, and it
shall be given him." Surely his prayer
would be answered, and the kingdom
advanced through this instrument of
God's power, this mighty press, which
had become so largely degraded to the
base uses of man's avarice and ambition.
Two months went by. They were full
of action and of results in the city of
Raymond and especially in the First
Church. In spite of the approaching heat
of the summer season, the after-meeting
of the disciples who had made the pledge
to do as Jesus would do, continued with
enthusiasm and power. Gray had finished
his work at the Rectangle, and an
outward observer going through the place
could not have seen any difference in
the old conditions, although there was
an actual change in hundreds of lives.
But the saloons, dens, hovels, gambling
houses, still ran, overflowing their
vileness into the lives of fresh victims
to take the place of those rescued by
the evangelist. And the devil recruited
his ranks very fast.
Henry Maxwell did not go abroad.
Instead of that, he took the money he
had been saving for the trip and quietly
arranged for a summer vacation for a
whole family living down in the
Rectangle, who had never gone outside of
the foul district of the tenements. The
pastor of the First Church will never
forget the week he spent with this
family making the arrangements. He went
down into the Rectangle one hot day when
something of the terrible heat in the
horrible tenements was beginning to be
felt, and helped the family to the
station, and then went with them to a
beautiful spot on the coast where, in
the home of a Christian woman, the
bewildered city tenants breathed for the
first time in years the cool salt air,
and felt blow about them the
pine-scented fragrance of a new lease of
life.
There was a sickly babe with the
mother, and three other children, one a
cripple. The father, who had been out of
work until he had been, as he afterwards
confessed to Maxwell, several times on
the edge of suicide, sat with the baby
in his arms during the journey, and when
Maxwell started back to Raymond, after
seeing the family settled, the man held
his hand at parting, and choked with his
utterance, and finally broke down, to
Maxwell's great confusion. The mother, a
wearied, worn-out woman who had lost
three children the year before from a
fever scourge in the Rectangle, sat by
the car window all the way and drank in
the delights of sea and sky and field.
It all seemed a miracle to her. And
Maxwell, coming back into Raymond at the
end of that week, feeling the scorching,
sickening heat all the more because of
his little taste of the ocean breezes,
thanked God for the joy he had
witnessed, and entered upon his
discipleship with a humble heart,
knowing for almost the first time in his
life this special kind of sacrifice. For
never before had he denied himself his
regular summer trip away from the heat
of Raymond, whether he felt in any great
need of rest or not.
"It is a fact," he said in reply to
several inquiries on the part of his
church, "I do not feel in need of a
vacation this year. I am very well and
prefer to stay here." It was with a
feeling of relief that he succeeded in
concealing from every one but his wife
what he had done with this other family.
He felt the need of doing anything of
that sort without display or approval
from others.
So the summer came on, and Maxwell
grew into a large knowledge of his Lord.
The First Church was still swayed by the
power of the Spirit. Maxwell marveled at
the continuance of His stay. He knew
very well that from the beginning
nothing but the Spirit's presence had
kept the church from being torn asunder
by the remarkable testing it had
received of its discipleship. Even now
there were many of the members among
those who had not taken the pledge, who
regarded the whole movement as Mrs.
Winslow did, in the nature of a
fanatical interpretation of Christian
duty, and looked for the return of the
old normal condition. Meanwhile the
whole body of disciples was under the
influence of the Spirit, and the pastor
went his way that summer, doing his
parish work in great joy, keeping up his
meetings with the railroad men as he had
promised Alexander Powers, and daily
growing into a better knowledge of the
Master.
Early one afternoon in August,
after a day of refreshing coolness
following a long period of heat, Jasper
Chase walked to his window in the
apartment house on the avenue and looked
out.
On his desk lay a pile of
manuscript. Since that evening when he
had spoken to Rachel Winslow he had not
met her. His singularly sensitive nature
-- sensitive to the point of extreme
irritability when he was thwarted --
served to thrust him into an isolation
that was intensified by his habits as an
author.
All through the heat of summer he
had been writing. His book was nearly
done now. He had thrown himself into its
construction with a feverish strength
that threatened at any moment to desert
him and leave him helpless. He had not
forgotten his pledge made with the other
church members at the First Church. It
had forced itself upon his notice all
through his writing, and ever since
Rachel had said no to him, he had asked
a thousand times, "Would Jesus do this?
Would He write this story?" It was a
social novel, written in a style that
had proved popular. It had no purpose
except to amuse. Its moral teaching was
not bad, but neither was it Christian in
any positive way. Jasper Chase knew that
such a story would probably sell. He was
conscious of powers in this way that the
social world petted and admired. "What
would Jesus do?" He felt that Jesus
would never write such a book. The
question obtruded on him at the most
inopportune times. He became irascible
over it. The standard of Jesus for an
author was too ideal. Of course, Jesus
would use His powers to produce
something useful or helpful, or with a
purpose. What was he, Jasper Chase,
writing this novel for? Why, what nearly
every writer wrote for -- money, money,
and fame as a writer. There was no
secret with him that he was writing this
new story with that object. He was not
poor, and so had no great temptation to
write for money. But he was urged on by
his desire for fame as much as anything.
He must write this kind of matter. But
what would Jesus do? The question
plagued him even more than Rachel's
refusal. Was he going to break his
promise? "Did the promise mean much
after all?" he asked.
As he stood at the window, Rollin
Page came out of the club house just
opposite. Jasper noted his handsome face
and noble figure as he started down the
street. He went back to his desk and
turned over some papers there. Then he
came back to the window. Rollin was
walking down past the block and Rachel
Winslow was walking beside him. Rollin
must have overtaken her as she was
coming from Virginia's that afternoon.
Jasper watched the two figures
until they disappeared in the crowd on
the walk. Then he turned to his desk and
began to write. When he had finished the
last page of the last chapter of his
book it was nearly dark. "What would
Jesus do?" He had finally answered the
question by denying his Lord. It grew
darker in his room. He had deliberately
chosen his course, urged on by his
disappointment and loss.
"But Jesus said unto him, no man
having put his hand to the plow, and
looking back, is fit for the Kingdom of
God."
|