Chapter Thirty-one
HE had planned when he came to the
city to return to Raymond and be in his
own pulpit on Sunday. But Friday morning
he had received at the Settlement a call
from the pastor of one of the largest
churches in Chicago, and had been
invited to fill the pulpit for both
morning and evening service.
At first he hesitated, but finally
accepted, seeing in it the hand of the
Spirit's guiding power. He would test
his own question. He would prove the
truth or falsity of the charge made
against the church at the Settlement
meeting. How far would it go in its
self-denial for Jesus' sake? How closely
would it walk in His steps? Was the
church willing to suffer for its Master?
Saturday night he spent in prayer,
nearly the whole night. There had never
been so great a wrestling in his soul,
not even during his strongest
experiences in Raymond. He had in fact
entered upon another new experience. The
definition of his own discipleship was
receiving an added test at this time,
and he was being led into a larger truth
of the Lord.
Sunday morning the great church was
filled to its utmost. Henry Maxwell,
coming into the pulpit from that all-
night vigil, felt the pressure of a
great curiosity on the part of the
people. They had heard of the Raymond
movement, as all the churches had, and
the recent action of Dr. Bruce had added
to the general interest in the pledge.
With this curiosity was something
deeper, more serious. Mr. Maxwell felt
that also. And in the knowledge that the
Spirit's presence was his living
strength, he brought his message and
gave it to that church that day.
He had never been what would be
called a great preacher. He had not the
force nor the quality that makes
remarkable preachers. But ever since he
had promised to do as Jesus would do, he
had grown in a certain quality of
persuasiveness that had all the
essentials of true eloquence. This
morning the people felt the complete
sincerity and humility of a man who had
gone deep into the heart of a great
truth.
After telling briefly of some
results in his own church in Raymond
since the pledge was taken, he went on
to ask the question he had been asking
since the Settlement meeting. He had
taken for his theme the story of the
young man who came to Jesus asking what
he must do to obtain eternal life. Jesus
had tested him. "Sell all that thou hast
and give to the poor, and thou shalt
have treasure in heaven; and come follow
me." But the young man was not willing
to suffer to that extent. If following
Jesus meant suffering in that way, he
was not willing. He would like to follow
Jesus, but not if he had to give so
much.
"Is it true," continued Henry
Maxwell, and his fine, thoughtful face
glowed with a passion of appeal that
stirred the people as they had seldom
been stirred, "is it true that the
church of today, the church that is
called after Christ's own name, would
refuse to follow Him at the expense of
suffering, of physical loss, of
temporary gain? The statement was made
at a large gathering in the Settlement
last week by a leader of workingmen that
it was hopeless to look to the church
for any reform or redemption of society.
On what was that statement based?
Plainly on the assumption that the
church contains for the most part men
and women who think more 'of their own
ease and luxury' than of the sufferings
and needs and sins of humanity. How far
is that true? Are the Christians of
America ready to have their discipleship
tested? How about the men who possess
large wealth? Are they ready to take
that wealth and use it as Jesus would?
How about the men and women of great
talent? Are they ready to consecrate
that talent to humanity as Jesus
undoubtedly would do?
"Is it not true that the call has
come in this age for a new exhibition of
Christian discipleship? You who live in
this great sinful city must know that
better than I do. Is it possible you can
go your ways careless or thoughtless of
the awful condition of men and women and
children who are dying, body and soul,
for need of Christian help? Is it not a
matter of concern to you personally that
the saloon kills its thousands more
surely than war? Is it not a matter of
personal suffering in some form for you
that thousands of able-bodied, willing
men tramp the streets of this city and
all cities, crying for work and drifting
into crime and suicide because they
cannot find it? Can you say that this is
none of your business? Let each man look
after himself? Would it not be true,
think you, that if every Christian in
America did as Jesus would do, society
itself, the business world, yes, the
very political system under which our
commercial and governmental activity is
carried on, would be so changed that
human suffering would be reduced to a
minimum?
"What would be the result if all
the church members of this city tried to
do as Jesus would do? It is not possible
to say in detail what the effect would
be. But it is easy to say, and it is
true, that instantly the human problem
would begin to find an adequate answer.
"What is the test of Christian
discipleship? Is it not the same as in
Christ's own time? Have our surroundings
modified or changed the test? If Jesus
were here today would He not call some
of the members of this very church to do
just what He commanded the young man,
and ask them to give up their wealth and
literally follow Him? I believe He would
do that if He felt certain that any
church member thought more of his
possessions than of the Savior. The
test would be the same today as then. I
believe Jesus would demand He does
demand now -- as close a following, as
much suffering, as great self-denial as
when He lived in person on the earth and
said, 'Except a man renounce all that he
hath he cannot be my disciple.' That is,
unless he is willing to do it for my
sake, he cannot be my disciple.
"What would be the result if in
this city every church member should
begin to do as Jesus would do? It is not
easy to go into details of the result.
But we all know that certain things
would be impossible that are now
practiced by church members.
"What would Jesus do in the matter
of wealth? How would He spend it? What
principle would regulate His use of
money? Would He be likely to live in
great luxury and spend ten times as much
on personal adornment and entertainment
as He spent to relieve the needs of
suffering humanity? How would Jesus be
governed in the making of money? Would
He take rentals from saloons and other
disreputable property, or even from
tenement property that was so
constructed that the inmates had no such
things as a home and no such possibility
as privacy or cleanliness?
"What would Jesus do about the
great army of unemployed and desperate
who tramp the streets and curse the
church, or are indifferent to it, lost
in the bitter struggle for the bread
that tastes bitter when it is earned on
account of the desperate conflict to get
it? Would Jesus care nothing for them?
Would He go His way in comparative ease
and comfort? Would He say that it was
none of His business? Would He excuse
Himself from all responsibility to
remove the causes of such a condition?
"What would Jesus do in the center
of a civilization that hurries so fast
after money that the very girls employed
in great business houses are not paid
enough to keep soul and body together
without fearful temptations so great
that scores of them fall and are swept
over the great boiling abyss; where the
demands of trade sacrifice hundreds of
lads in a business that ignores all
Christian duties toward them in the way
of education and moral training and
personal affection? Would Jesus, if He
were here today as a part of our age and
commercial industry, feel nothing, do
nothing, say nothing, in the face of
these facts which every business man
knows?
"What would Jesus do? Is not that
what the disciple ought to do? Is he not
commanded to follow in His steps? How
much is the Christianity of the age
suffering for Him? Is it denying itself
at the cost of ease, comfort, luxury,
elegance of living? What does the age
need more than personal sacrifice? Does
the church do its duty in following
Jesus when it gives a little money to
establish missions or relieve extreme
cases of want? Is it any sacrifice for a
man who is worth ten million dollars
simply to give ten thousand dollars for
some benevolent work? Is he not giving
something that cost him practically
nothing so far as any personal suffering
goes? Is it true that the Christian
disciples today in most of our churches
are living soft, easy, selfish lives,
very far from any sacrifice that can be
called sacrifice? What would Jesus do?
"It is the personal element that
Christian discipleship needs to
emphasize. 'The gift without the giver
is bare.' The Christianity that attempts
to suffer by proxy is not the
Christianity of Christ. Each individual
Christian business man, citizen, needs
to follow in His steps along the path of
personal sacrifice to Him. There is not
a different path today from that of
Jesus' own times. It is the same path.
The call of this dying century and of
the new one soon to be, is a call for a
new discipleship, a new following of
Jesus, more like the early, simple,
apostolic Christianity, when the
disciples left all and literally
followed the Master. Nothing but a
discipleship of this kind can face the
destructive selfishness of the age with
any hope of overcoming it. There is a
great quantity of nominal Christianity
today. There is need of more of the real
kind. We need revival of the
Christianity of Christ. We have,
unconsciously, lazily, selfishly,
formally grown into a discipleship that
Jesus himself would not acknowledge. He
would say to many of us when we cry,
'Lord, Lord,' 'I never knew you!' Are we
ready to take up the cross? Is it
possible for this church to sing with
exact truth,
'Jesus, I my cross have taken,
All to leave and follow Thee?'
If we can sing that truly, then we may
claim discipleship. But if our
definition of being a Christian is
simply to enjoy the privileges of
worship, be generous at no expense to
ourselves, have a good, easy time
surrounded by pleasant friends and by
comfortable things, live respectably and
at the same time avoid the world's great
stress of sin and trouble because it is
too much pain to bear it -- if this is
our definition of Christianity, surely
we are a long way from following the
steps of Him who trod the way with
groans and tears and sobs of anguish for
a lost humanity; who sweat, as it were,
great drops of blood, who cried out on
the upreared cross, 'My God, my God, why
hast thou forsaken me?'
"Are we ready to make and live a
new discipleship? Are we ready to
reconsider our definition of a
Christian? What is it to be a Christian?
It is to imitate Jesus. It is to do as
He would do. It is to walk in His
steps."
When Henry Maxwell finished his
sermon, he paused and looked at the
people with a look they never forgot
and, at the moment, did not understand.
Crowded into that fashionable church
that day were hundreds of men and women
who had for years lived the easy,
satisfied life of a nominal
Christianity. A great silence fell over
the congregation. Through the silence
there came to the consciousness of all
the souls there present a knowledge,
stranger to them now for years, of a
Divine Power. Every one expected the
preacher to call for volunteers who
would do as Jesus would do. But Maxwell
had been led by the Spirit to deliver
his message this time and wait for
results to come.
He closed the service with a tender
prayer that kept the Divine Presence
lingering very near every hearer, and
the people slowly rose to go out. Then
followed a scene that would have been
impossible if any mere man had been
alone in his striving for results.
Men and women in great numbers
crowded around the platform to see Mr.
Maxwell and to bring him the promise of
their consecration to the pledge to do
as Jesus would do. It was a voluntary,
spontaneous movement that broke upon his
soul with a result he could not measure.
But had he not been praying for is very
thing? It was an answer that more than
met his desires.
There followed this movement a
prayer service that in its impressions
repeated the Raymond experience. In the
evening, to Mr. Maxwell's joy, the
Endeavor Society almost to a member came
forward, as so many of the church
members had done in the morning, and
seriously, solemnly, tenderly, took the
pledge to do as Jesus would do. A deep
wave of spiritual baptism broke over the
meeting near its close that was
indescribable in its tender, joyful,
sympathetic results.
That was a remarkable day in the
history of that church, but even more so
in the history of Henry Maxwell. He left
the meeting very late. He went to his
room at the Settlement where he was
still stopping, and after an hour with
the Bishop and Dr. Bruce, spent in a
joyful rehearsal of the wonderful events
of the day, he sat down to think over
again by himself all the experience he
was having as a Christian disciple.
He had kneeled to pray, as he
always did before going to sleep, and it
was while he was on his knees that he
had a waking vision of what might be in
the world when once the new discipleship
had made its way into the conscience and
conscientiousness of Christendom. He was
fully conscious of being awake, but no
less certainly did it seem to him that
he saw certain results with great
distinctiveness, partly as realities of
the future, partly great longings that
they might be realities. And this is
what Henry Maxwell saw in this waking
vision:
He saw himself, first, going back
to the First Church in Raymond, living
there in a simpler, more self-denying
fashion than he had yet been willing to
live, because he saw ways in which he
could help others who were really
dependent on him for help. He also saw,
more dimly, that the time would come
when his position as pastor of the
church would cause him to suffer more on
account of growing opposition to his
interpretation of Jesus and His conduct.
But this was vaguely outlined. Through
it all he heard the words "My grace is
sufficient for thee."
He saw Rachel Winslow and Virginia
Page going on with their work of service
at the Rectangle, and reaching out
loving hands of helpfulness far beyond
the limits of Raymond. Rachel he saw
married to Rollin Page, both fully
consecrated to the Master's use, both
following His steps with an eagerness
intensified and purified by their love
for each other. And Rachel's voice sang
on, in slums and dark places of despair
and sin, and drew lost souls back to God
and heaven once more.
He saw President Marsh of the
college using his great learning and his
great influence to purify the city, to
ennoble its patriotism, to inspire the
young men and women who loved as well as
admired him to lives of Christian
service, always teaching them that
education means great responsibility for
the weak and the ignorant.
He saw Alexander Powers meeting
with sore trials in his family life,
with a constant sorrow in the
estrangement of wife and friends, but
still going his way in all honor,
serving in all his strength the Master
whom he had obeyed, even unto the loss
of social distinction and wealth.
He saw Milton Wright, the merchant,
meeting with great reverses. Thrown upon
the future by a combination of
circumstances, with vast business
interests involved in ruin through no
fault of his own, but coming out of his
reverses with clean Christian honor, to
begin again and work up to a position
where he could again be to hundreds of
young men an example of what Jesus would
do in business.
He saw Edward Norman, editor of the
NEWS, by means of the money given by
Virginia, creating a force in journalism
that in time came to be recognized as
one of the real factors of the nation to
mold its principles and actually shape
its policy, a daily illustration of the
might of a Christian press, and the
first of a series of such papers begun
and carried on by other disciples who
had also taken the pledge.
He saw Jasper Chase, who had denied
his Master, growing into a cold,
cynical, formal life, writing novels
that were social successes, but each one
with a sting in it, the reminder of his
denial, the bitter remorse that, do what
he would, no social success could
remove.
He saw Rose Sterling, dependent for
some years upon her aunt and Felicia,
finally married to a man far older than
herself, accepting the burden of a
relation that had no love in it on her
part, because of her desire to be the
wife of a rich man and enjoy the
physical luxuries that were all of life
to her. Over this life also the vision
cast certain dark and awful shadows but
they were not shown in detail.
He saw Felicia and Stephen Clyde
happily married, living a beautiful life
together, enthusiastic, joyful in
suffering, pouring out their great,
strong, fragrant service into the dull,
dark, terrible places of the great city,
and redeeming souls through the personal
touch of their home, dedicated to the
Human Homesickness all about them.
He saw Dr. Bruce and the Bishop
going on with the Settlement work. He
seemed to see the great blazing motto
over the door enlarged, "What would
Jesus do?" and by this motto every one
who entered the Settlement walked in the
steps of the Master.
He saw Burns and his companion and
a great company of men like them,
redeemed and giving in turn to others,
conquering their passions by the divine
grace, and proving by their daily lives
the reality of the new birth even in the
lowest and most abandoned.
And now the vision was troubled. It
seemed to him that as he kneeled he
began to pray, and the vision was more
of a longing for a future than a reality
in the future. The church of Jesus in
the city and throughout the country!
Would it follow Jesus? Was the movement
begun in Raymond to spend itself in a
few churches like Nazareth Avenue and
the one where he had preached today, and
then die away as a local movement, a
stirring on the surface but not to
extend deep and far? He felt with agony
after the vision again. He thought he
saw the church of Jesus in America open
its heart to the moving of the Spirit
and rise to the sacrifice of its ease
and self-satisfaction in the name of
Jesus. He thought he saw the motto,
"What would Jesus do?" inscribed over
every church door, and written on every
church member's heart.
The vision vanished. It came back
clearer than before, and he saw the
Endeavor Societies all over the world
carrying in their great processions at
some mighty convention a banner on which
was written, "What would Jesus do?" And
he thought in the faces of the young men
and women he saw future joy of
suffering, loss, self-denial, martyrdom.
And when this part of the vision slowly
faded, he saw the figure of the Son of
God beckoning to him and to all the
other actors in his life history. An
Angel Choir somewhere was singing. There
was a sound as of many voices and a
shout as of a great victory. And the
figure of Jesus grew more and more
splendid. He stood at the end of a long
flight of steps. "Yes! Yes! O my Master,
has not the time come for this dawn of
the millennium of Christian history? Oh,
break upon the Christendom of this age
with the light and the truth! Help us to
follow Thee all the way!"
He rose at last with the awe of one
who has looked at heavenly things. He
felt the human forces and the human sins
of the world as never before. And with a
hope that walks hand in hand with faith
and love Henry Maxwell, disciple of
Jesus, laid him down to sleep and
dreamed of the regeneration of
Christendom, and saw in his dream a
church of Jesus without spot or wrinkle
or any such thing, following him all the
way, walking obediently in His steps.
THE END
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