Chapter Thirty
"Now, when Jesus heard these things, He
said unto him, Yet lackest thou one
thing: sell all that thou hast, and
distribute unto the poor, and thou shalt
have treasure in heaven: and come,
follow Me."
WHEN Henry Maxwell began to speak
to the souls crowded into the Settlement
Hall that night it is doubtful if he
ever faced such an audience in his life.
It is quite certain that the city of
Raymond did not contain such a variety
of humanity. Not even the Rectangle at
its worst could furnish so many men and
women who had fallen entirely out of the
reach of the church and of all religious
and even Christian influences.
What did he talk about? He had
already decided that point. He told in
the simplest language he could command
some of the results of obedience to the
pledge as it had been taken in Raymond.
Every man and woman in that audience
knew something about Jesus Christ. They
all had some idea of His character, and
however much they had grown bitter
toward the forms of Christian
ecclesiasticism or the social system,
they preserved some standard of right
and truth, and what little some of them
still retained was taken from the person
of the Peasant of Galilee.
So they were interested in what
Maxwell said. "What would Jesus do?" He
began to apply the question to the
social problem in general, after
finishing the story of Raymond. The
audience was respectfully attentive. It
was more than that. It was genuinely
interested. As Mr. Maxwell went on,
faces all over the hall leaned forward
in a way seldom seen in church audiences
or anywhere except among workingmen or
the people of the street when once they
are thoroughly aroused. "What would
Jesus do?" Suppose that were the motto
not only of the churches but of the
business men, the politicians, the
newspapers, the workingmen, the society
people -- how long would it take under
such a standard of conduct to
revolutionize the world? What was the
trouble with the world? It was suffering
from selfishness. No one ever lived who
had succeeded in overcoming selfishness
like Jesus. If men followed Him
regardless of results the world would at
once begin to enjoy a new life.
Maxwell never knew how much it
meant to hold the respectful attention
of that hall full of diseased and sinful
humanity. The Bishop and Dr. Bruce,
sitting there, looking on, seeing many
faces that represented scorn of creeds,
hatred of the social order, desperate
narrowness and selfishness, marveled
that even so soon under the influence of
the Settlement life, the softening
process had begun already to lessen the
bitterness of hearts, many of which had
grown bitter from neglect and
indifference.
And still, in spite of the outward
show of respect to the speaker, no one,
not even the Bishop, had any true
conception of the feeling pent up in
that room that night. Among those who
had heard of the meeting and had
responded to the invitation were twenty
or thirty men out of work who had
strolled past the Settlement that
afternoon, read the notice of the
meeting, and had come in out of
curiosity and to escape the chill east
wind. It was a bitter night and the
saloons were full. But in that whole
district of over thirty thousand souls,
with the exception of the saloons, there
was not a door open except the clean,
pure Christian door of the Settlement.
Where would a man without a home or
without work or without friends
naturally go unless to the saloon?
It had been the custom at the
Settlement for a free discussion to
follow any open meeting of this kind,
and when Mr. Maxwell finished and sat
down, the Bishop, who presided that
night, rose and made the announcement
that any man in the hall was at liberty
to ask questions, to speak out his
feelings or declare his convictions,
always with the understanding that
whoever took part was to observe the
simple rules that governed parliamentary
bodies and obey the three-minute rule
which, by common consent, would be
enforced on account of the numbers
present.
Instantly a number of voices from
men who had been at previous meetings of
this kind exclaimed, "Consent! consent!"
The Bishop sat down, and
immediately a man near the middle of the
hall rose and began to speak.
"I want to say that what Mr.
Maxwell has said tonight comes pretty
close to me. I knew Jack Manning, the
fellow he told about who died at his
house. I worked on the next case to his
in a printer's shop in Philadelphia for
two years. Jack was a good fellow. He
loaned me five dollars once when I was
in a hole and I never got a chance to
pay him back. He moved to New York,
owing to a change in the management of
the office that threw him out, and I
never saw him again. When the linotype
machines came in I was one of the men to
go out, just as he did. I have been out
most of the time since. They say
inventions are a good thing. I don't
always see it myself; but I suppose I'm
prejudiced. A man naturally is when he
loses a steady job because a machine
takes his place. About this Christianity
he tells about, it's all right. But I
never expect to see any such sacrifices
on the part of the church people. So far
as my observation goes they're just as
selfish and as greedy for money and
worldly success as anybody. I except the
Bishop and Dr. Bruce and a few others.
But I never found much difference
between men of the world, as they are
called, and church members when it came
to business and money making. One class
is just as bad as another there."
Cries of "That's so!" "You're
right!" "Of course!" interrupted the
speaker, and the minute he sat down two
men who were on the floor for several
seconds before the first speaker was
through began to talk at once.
The Bishop called them to order and
indicated which was entitled to the
floor. The man who remained standing
began eagerly:
"This is the first time I was ever
in here, and may be it'll be the last.
Fact is, I am about at the end of my
string. I've tramped this city for work
till I'm sick. I'm in plenty of company.
Say! I'd like to ask a question of the
minister, if it's fair. May I?"
"That's for Mr. Maxwell to say,"
said the Bishop.
"By all means," replied Mr. Maxwell
quickly. "Of course, I will not promise
to answer it to the gentleman's
satisfaction."
"This is my question." The man
leaned forward and stretched out a long
arm with a certain dramatic force that
grew naturally enough out of his
condition as a human being. "I want to
know what Jesus would do in my case. I
haven't had a stroke of work for two
months. I've got a wife and three
children, and I love them as much as if
I was worth a million dollars. I've been
living off a little earnings I saved up
during the World's Fair jobs I got. I'm
a carpenter by trade, and I've tried
every way I know to get a job. You say
we ought to take for our motto, 'What
would Jesus do?' What would He do if He
was out of work like me? I can't be
somebody else and ask the question. I
want to work. I'd give anything to grow
tired of working ten hours a day the way
I used to. Am I to blame because I can't
manufacture a job for myself? I've got
to live, and my wife and my children
have got to live. But how? What would
Jesus do? You say that's the question we
ought to ask."
Mr. Maxwell sat there staring at
the great sea of faces all intent on
his, and no answer to this man's
question seemed for the time being to be
possible. "O God!" his heart prayed;
"this is a question that brings up the
entire social problem in all its
perplexing entanglement of human wrongs
and its present condition contrary to
every desire of God for a human being's
welfare. Is there any condition more
awful than for a man in good health,
able and eager to work, with no means of
honest livelihood unless he does work,
actually unable to get anything to do,
and driven to one of three things:
begging or charity at the hands of
friends or strangers, suicide or
starvation? 'What would Jesus do?'" It
was a fair question for the man to ask.
It was the only question he could ask,
supposing him to be a disciple of Jesus.
But what a question for any man to be
obliged to answer under such conditions?
All this and more did Henry Maxwell
ponder. All the others were thinking in
the same way. The Bishop sat there with
a look so stern and sad that it was not
hard to tell how the question moved him.
Dr. Bruce had his head bowed. The human
problem had never seemed to him so
tragical as since he had taken the
pledge and left his church to enter the
Settlement. What would Jesus do? It was
a terrible question. And still the man
stood there, tall and gaunt and almost
terrible, with his arm stretched out in
an appeal which grew every second in
meaning. At length Mr. Maxwell spoke.
"Is there any man in the room, who
is a Christian disciple, who has been in
this condition and has tried to do as
Jesus would do? If so, such a man can
answer this question better than I can."
There was a moment's hush over the
room and then a man near the front of
the hall slowly rose. He was an old man,
and the hand he laid on the back of the
bench in front of him trembled as he
spoke.
"I think I can safely say that I
have many times been in just such a
condition, and I have always tried to be
a Christian under all conditions. I
don't know as I have always asked this
question, 'What would Jesus do?' when I
have been out of work, but I do know I
have tried to be His disciple at all
times. Yes," the man went on, with a sad
smile that was more pathetic to the
Bishop and Mr. Maxwell than the younger
man's grim despair; "yes, I have begged,
and I have been to charity institutions,
and I have done everything when out of a
job except steal and lie in order to get
food and fuel. I don't know as Jesus
would have done some of the things I
have been obliged to do for a living,
but I know I have never knowingly done
wrong when out of work. Sometimes I
think maybe He would have starved sooner
than beg. I don't know."
The old man's voice trembled and he
looked around the room timidly. A
silence followed, broken by a fierce
voice from a large, black-haired,
heavily-bearded man who sat three seats
from the Bishop. The minute he spoke
nearly every man in the hall leaned
forward eagerly. The man who had asked
the question, "What would Jesus do in my
case?" slowly sat down and whispered to
the man next to him: "Who's that?"
"That's Carlsen, the Socialist
leader. Now you'll hear something."
"This is all bosh, to my mind,"
began Carlsen, while his great bristling
beard shook with the deep inward anger
of the man. "The whole of our system is
at fault. What we call civilization is
rotten to the core. There is no use
trying to hide it or cover it up. We
live in an age of trusts and combines
and capitalistic greed that means simply
death to thousands of innocent men,
women and children. I thank God, if
there is a God --which I very much
doubt-- that I, for one, have never
dared to marry and make a home. Home!
Talk of hell! Is there any bigger one
than this man and his three children has
on his hands right this minute? And he's
only one out of thousands. And yet this
city, and every other big city in this
country, has its thousands of professed
Christians who have all the luxuries and
comforts, and who go to church Sundays
and sing their hymns about giving all to
Jesus and bearing the cross and
following Him all the way and being
saved! I don't say that there aren't
good men and women among them, but let
the minister who has spoken to us here
tonight go into any one of a dozen
aristocratic churches I could name and
propose to the members to take any such
pledge as the one he's mentioned here
tonight, and see how quick the people
would laugh at him for a fool or a crank
or a fanatic. Oh, no! That's not the
remedy. That can't ever amount to
anything. We've got to have a new start
in the way of government. The whole
thing needs reconstructing. I don't look
for any reform worth anything to come
out of the churches. They are not with
the people. They are with the
aristocrats, with the men of money. The
trusts and monopolies have their
greatest men in the churches. The
ministers as a class are their slaves.
What we need is a system that shall
start from the common basis of
socialism, founded on the rights of the
common people--"
Carlsen had evidently forgotten all
about the three-minutes rule and was
launching himself into a regular oration
that meant, in his usual surroundings
before his usual audience, an hour at
least, when the man just behind him
pulled him down unceremoniously and
arose. Carlsen was angry at first and
threatened a little disturbance, but the
Bishop reminded him of the rule, and he
subsided with several mutterings in his
beard, while the next speaker began with
a very strong eulogy on the value of the
single tax as a genuine remedy for all
the social ills. He was followed by a
man who made a bitter attack on the
churches and ministers, and declared
that the two great obstacles in the way
of all true reform were the courts and
the ecclesiastical machines.
When he sat down a man who bore
every mark of being a street laborer
sprang to his feet and poured a perfect
torrent of abuse against the
corporations, especially the railroads.
The minute his time was up a big, brawny
fellow, who said he was a metal worker
by trade, claimed the floor and declared
that the remedy for the social wrongs
was Trades Unionism. This, he said,
would bring on the millennium for labor
more surely than anything else. The next
man endeavored to give some reasons why
so many persons were out of employment,
and condemned inventions as works of the
devil. He was loudly applauded by the
rest.
Finally the Bishop called time on
the "free for all," and asked Rachel to
sing.
Rachel Winslow had grown into a
very strong, healthful, humble Christian
during that wonderful year in Raymond
dating from the Sunday when she first
took the pledge to do as Jesus would do,
and her great talent for song had been
fully consecrated to the service of the
Master. When she began to sing tonight
at this Settlement meeting, she had
never prayed more deeply for results to
come from her voice, the voice which she
now regarded as the Master's, to be used
for Him.
Certainly her prayer was being
answered as she sang. She had chosen the
words,
"Hark! The voice of Jesus calling,
Follow me, follow me!"
Again Henry Maxwell, sitting there,
was reminded of his first night at the
Rectangle in the tent when Rachel sang
the people into quiet. The effect was
the same here. What wonderful power a
good voice consecrated to the Master's
service always is! Rachel's great
natural ability would have made her one
of the foremost opera singers of the
age. Surely this audience had never
heard such a melody. How could it? The
men who had drifted in from the street
sat entranced by a voice which "back in
the world," as the Bishop said, never
could be heard by the common people
because the owner of it would charge two
or three dollars for the privilege. The
song poured out through the hall as free
and glad as if it were a foretaste of
salvation itself. Carlsen, with his
great, black-bearded face uplifted,
absorbed the music with the deep love of
it peculiar to his nationality, and a
tear ran over his cheek and glistened in
his beard as his face softened and
became almost noble in its aspect. The
man out of work who had wanted to know
what Jesus would do in his place sat
with one grimy hand on the back of the
bench in front of him, with his mouth
partly open, his great tragedy for the
moment forgotten. The song, while it
lasted, was food and work and warmth and
union with his wife and babies once
more. The man who had spoken so fiercely
against the churches and ministers sat
with his head erect, at first with a
look of stolid resistance, as if he
stubbornly resisted the introduction
into the exercises of anything that was
even remotely connected with the church
or its forms of worship. But gradually
he yielded to the power that was swaying
the hearts of all the persons in that
room, and a look of sad thoughtfulness
crept over his face.
The Bishop said that night while
Rachel was singing that if the world of
sinful, diseased, depraved, lost
humanity could only have the gospel
preached to it by consecrated prima
donnas and professional tenors and altos
and bassos, he believed it would hasten
the coming of the Kingdom quicker than
any other one force. "Why, oh why," he
cried in his heart as he listened, "has
the world's great treasure of song been
so often held far from the poor because
the personal possessor of voice or
fingers, capable of stirring divinest
melody, has so often regarded the gift
as something with which to make money?
Shall there be no martyrs among the
gifted ones of the earth? Shall there be
no giving of this great gift as well as
of others?"
And Henry Maxwell, again as before,
called up that other audience at the
Rectangle with increasing longing for a
larger spread of the new discipleship.
What he had seen and heard at the
Settlement burned into him deeper the
belief that the problem of the city
would be solved if the Christians in it
should once follow Jesus as He gave
commandment. But what of this great mass
of humanity, neglected and sinful, the
very kind of humanity the Savior came
to save, with all its mistakes and
narrowness, its wretchedness and loss of
hope, above all its unqualified
bitterness towards the church? That was
what smote him deepest. Was the church
then so far from the Master that the
people no longer found Him in the
church? Was it true that the church had
lost its power over the very kind of
humanity which in the early ages of
Christianity it reached in the greatest
numbers? How much was true in what the
Socialist leader said about the
uselessness of looking to the church for
reform or redemption, because of the
selfishness and seclusion and
aristocracy of its members?
He was more and more impressed with
the appalling fact that the
comparatively few men in that hall, now
being held quiet for a while by Rachel's
voice, represented thousands of others
just like them, to whom a church and a
minister stood for less than a saloon or
a beer garden as a source of comfort or
happiness. Ought it to be so? If the
church members were all doing as Jesus
would do, could it remain true that
armies of men would walk the streets for
jobs and hundreds of them curse the
church and thousands of them find in the
saloon their best friend? How far were
the Christians responsible for this
human problem that was personally
illustrated right in this hall tonight?
Was it true that the great city churches
would as a rule refuse to walk in Jesus'
steps so closely as to suffer --
actually suffer -- for His sake?
Henry Maxwell kept asking this
question even after Rachel had finished
singing and the meeting had come to an
end after a social gathering which was
very informal. He asked it while the
little company of residents with the
Raymond visitors were having a
devotional service, as the custom in the
Settlement was. He asked it during a
conference with the Bishop and Dr. Bruce
which lasted until one o'clock. He asked
it as he knelt again before sleeping and
poured out his soul in a petition for
spiritual baptism on the church in
America such as it had never known. He
asked it the first thing in the morning
and all through the day as he went over
the Settlement district and saw the life
of the people so far removed from the
Life abundant. Would the church members,
would the Christians, not only in the
churches of Chicago, but throughout the
country, refuse to walk in His steps if,
in order to do so, they must actually
take up a cross and follow Him? This was
the one question that continually
demanded answer.
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