Chapter Twenty-five
THREE months had gone by since the
Sunday morning when Dr. Bruce came into
his pulpit with the message of the new
discipleship. They were three months of
great excitement in Nazareth Avenue
Church. Never before had Rev. Calvin
Bruce realized how deep the feeling of
his members flowed. He humbly confessed
that the appeal he had made met with an
unexpected response from men and women
who, like Felicia, were hungry for
something in their lives that the
conventional type of church membership
and fellowship had failed to give them.
But Dr. Bruce was not yet satisfied
for himself. He cannot tell what his
feeling was or what led to the movement
he finally made, to the great
astonishment of all who knew him, better
than by relating a conversation between
him and the Bishop at this time in the
history of the pledge in Nazareth Avenue
Church. The two friends were as before
in Dr. Bruce's house, seated in his
study.
"You know what I have come in this
evening for?" the Bishop was saying
after the friends had been talking some
time about the results of the pledge
with the Nazareth Avenue people.
Dr. Bruce looked over at the Bishop
and shook his head.
"I have come to confess that I have
not yet kept my promise to walk in His
steps in the way that I believe I shall
be obliged to if I satisfy my thought of
what it means to walk in His steps."
Dr. Bruce had risen and was pacing
his study. The Bishop remained in the
deep easy chair with his hands clasped,
but his eye burned with the blow that
belonged to him before he made some
great resolve.
"Edward," Dr. Bruce spoke abruptly,
"I have not yet been able to satisfy
myself, either, in obeying my promise.
But I have at last decided on my course.
In order to follow it I shall be obliged
to resign from Nazareth Avenue Church."
"I knew you would," replied the
Bishop quietly. "And I came in this
evening to say that I shall be obliged
to do the same thing with my charge."
Dr. Bruce turned and walked up to
his friend. They were both laboring
under a repressed excitement.
"Is it necessary in your case?"
asked Bruce.
"Yes. Let me state my reasons.
Probably they are the same as yours. In
fact, I am sure they are." The Bishop
paused a moment, then went on with
increasing feeling:
"Calvin, you know how many years I
have been doing the work of my position,
and you know something of the
responsibility and care of it. I do not
mean to say that my life has been free
from burden-bearing or sorrow. But I
have certainly led what the poor and
desperate of this sinful city would call
a very comfortable, yes, a very
luxurious life. I have had a beautiful
house to live in, the most expensive
food, clothing and physical pleasures. I
have been able to go abroad at least a
dozen times, and have enjoyed for years
the beautiful companionship of art and
letters and music and all the rest, of
the very best. I have never known what
it meant to be without money or its
equivalent. And I have been unable to
silence the question of late: 'What have
I suffered for the sake of Christ?' Paul
was told what great things he must
suffer for the sake of his Lord.
Maxwell's position at Raymond is well
taken when he insists that to walk in
the steps of Christ means to suffer.
Where has my suffering come in? The
petty trials and annoyances of my
clerical life are not worth mentioning
as sorrows or sufferings. Compared with
Paul or any of the Christian martyrs or
early disciples I have lived a
luxurious, sinful life, full of ease and
pleasure. I cannot endure this any
longer. I have that within me which of
late rises in overwhelming condemnation
of such a following of Jesus. I have not
been walking in His steps. Under the
present system of church and social life
I see no escape from this condemnation
except to give the most of my life
personally to the actual physical and
soul needs of the wretched people in the
worst part of this city."
The Bishop had risen now and walked
over to the window. The street in front
of the house was as light as day, and he
looked out at the crowds passing, then
turned and with a passionate utterance
that showed how deep the volcanic fire
in him burned, he exclaimed:
"Calvin, this is a terrible city in
which we live! Its misery, its sin, its
selfishness, appall my heart. And I have
struggled for years with the sickening
dread of the time when I should be
forced to leave the pleasant luxury of
my official position to put my life into
contact with the modern paganism of this
century. The awful condition of the
girls in some great business places, the
brutal selfishness of the insolent
society fashion and wealth that ignores
all the sorrow of the city, the fearful
curse of the drink and gambling hell,
the wail of the unemployed, the hatred
of the church by countless men who see
in it only great piles of costly stone
and upholstered furniture and the
minister as a luxurious idler, all the
vast tumult of this vast torrent of
humanity with its false and its true
ideas, its exaggeration of evils in the
church and its bitterness and shame that
are the result of many complex causes,
all this as a total fact in its contrast
with the easy, comfortable life I have
lived, fills me more and more with a
sense of mingled terror and self
accusation. I have heard the words of
Jesus many times lately: 'Inasmuch as ye
did it not unto one of these least My
brethren, ye did it not unto Me.' And
when have I personally visited the
prisoner or the desperate or the sinful
in any way that has actually caused me
suffering? Rather, I have followed the
conventional soft habits of my position
and have lived in the society of the
rich, refined, aristocratic members of
my congregations. Where has the
suffering come in? What have I suffered
for Jesus' sake? Do you know, Calvin,"
he turned abruptly toward his friend, "I
have been tempted of late to lash myself
with a scourge. If I had lived in Martin
Luther's time I should have bared my
back to a self-inflicted torture."
Dr. Bruce was very pale. Never had
he seen the Bishop or heard him when
under the influence of such a passion.
There was a sudden silence in the room.
The Bishop sat down again and bowed his
head.
Dr. Bruce spoke at last:
"Edward, I do not need to say that
you have expressed my feelings also. I
have been in a similar position for
years. My life has been one of
comparative luxury. I do not, of course,
mean to say that I have not had trials
and discouragements and burdens in my
church ministry. But I cannot say that I
have suffered any for Jesus. That verse
in Peter constantly haunts me: 'Christ
also suffered for you, leaving you an
example that ye should follow His
steps.' I have lived in luxury. I do not
know what it means to want. I also have
had my leisure for travel and beautiful
companionship. I have been surrounded by
the soft, easy comforts of civilization.
The sin and misery of this great city
have beaten like waves against the stone
walls of my church and of this house in
which I live, and I have hardly heeded
them, the walls have been so thick. I
have reached a point where I cannot
endure this any longer. I am not
condemning the Church. I love her. I am
not forsaking the Church. I believe in
her mission and have no desire to
destroy. Least of all, in the step I am
about to take do I desire to be charged
with abandoning the Christian
fellowship. But I feel that I must
resign my place as pastor of Nazareth
Church in order to satisfy myself that I
am walking as I ought to walk in His
steps. In this action I judge no other
minister and pass no criticism on
others' discipleship. But I feel as you
do. Into a close contact with the sin
and shame and degradation of this great
city I must come personally. And I know
that to do that I must sever my
immediate connection with Nazareth
Avenue Church. I do not see any other
way for myself to suffer for His sake as
I feel that I ought to suffer."
Again that sudden silence fell over
those two men. It was no ordinary action
they were deciding. They had both
reached the same conclusion by the same
reasoning, and they were too thoughtful,
too well accustomed to the measuring of
conduct, to underestimate the
seriousness of their position.
"What is your plan?" The Bishop at
last spoke gently, looking with the
smile that always beautified his face.
The Bishop's face grew in glory now
every day.
"My plan," replied Dr. Bruce
slowly, "is, in brief, the putting of
myself into the centre of the greatest
human need I can find in this city and
living there. My wife is fully in accord
with me. We have already decided to find
a residence in that part of the city
where we can make our personal lives
count for the most."
"Let me suggest a place." The
Bishop was on fire now. His fine face
actually glowed with the enthusiasm of
the movement in which he and his friend
were inevitably embarked. He went on and
unfolded a plan of such far-reaching
power and possibility that Dr. Bruce,
capable and experienced as he was, felt
amazed at the vision of a greater soul
than his own.
They sat up late, and were as eager
and even glad as if they were planning
for a trip together to some rare land of
unexplored travel. Indeed, the Bishop
said many times afterward that the
moment his decision was reached to live
the life of personal sacrifice he had
chosen he suddenly felt an uplifting as
if a great burden were taken from him.
He was exultant. So was Dr. Bruce from
the same cause.
Their plan as it finally grew into
a workable fact was in reality nothing
more than the renting of a large
building formerly used as a warehouse
for a brewery, reconstructing it and
living in it themselves in the very
heart of a territory where the saloon
ruled with power, where the tenement was
its filthiest, where vice and ignorance
and shame and poverty were congested
into hideous forms. It was not a new
idea. It was an idea started by Jesus
Christ when He left His Father's House
and forsook the riches that were His in
order to get nearer humanity and, by
becoming a part of its sin, helping to
draw humanity apart from its sin. The
University Settlement idea is not
modern. It is as old as Bethlehem and
Nazareth. And in this particular case it
was the nearest approach to anything
that would satisfy the hunger of these
two men to suffer for Christ.
There had sprung up in them at the
same time a longing that amounted to a
passion, to get nearer the great
physical poverty and spiritual
destitution of the mighty city that
throbbed around them. How could they do
this except as they became a part of it
as nearly as one man can become a part
of another's misery? Where was the
suffering to come in unless there was an
actual self-denial of some sort? And
what was to make that self-denial
apparent to themselves or any one else,
unless it took this concrete, actual,
personal form of trying to share the
deepest suffering and sin of the city?
So they reasoned for themselves,
not judging others. They were simply
keeping their own pledge to do as Jesus
would do, as they honestly judged He
would do. That was what they had
promised. How could they quarrel with
the result if they were irresistibly
compelled to do what they were planning
to do?
The Bishop had money of his own.
Every one in Chicago knew that he had a
handsome fortune. Dr. Bruce had acquired
and saved by literary work carried on in
connection with his parish duties more
than a comfortable competence. This
money, a large part of it, the two
friends agreed to put at once into the
work, most of it into the furnishing of
the Settlement House.
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