USE AND ABUSE OF THE SENSE OF THE VANITY OF THE WORLD— 1Jo
2:17
THE connection of the passage in which these words occur is not
difficult to trace for those who are used to follow those "roots
below the stream," those real rather than verbal links latent in the
substance of St. John’s thoughts. He addresses those whom he has in
view with a paternal authority, as his "sons" in the faith—with an
endearing variation as "little children." He reminds them of the
wisdom and strength involved in their Christian life. Theirs is the
sweetest flower of knowledge—"to know the Father." Theirs is the
grandest crown of victory—"to overcome the wicked one." But there
remains an enemy in one sense more dangerous than the Evil One—the
world. By the world in this place we are to understand that element
in the material and human sphere, in the region of mingled good and
evil, which is external to God, to the influence of His Spirit, to
the boundaries of His Church—nay, which frequently passes over those
boundaries. In this sense it is, so to speak, a fictitious world, a
world of wills separated from God because dominated by self; a
shadowy caricature of creation; an anti-kosmos, which the Author of
the kosmos has not made. What has been well called "the great love
not" rings out—"love not the world." For this admonition two
reasons of ever enduring validity are given by St. John. (1) The application of the law of human nature, that two master
passions cannot coexist in one man. "If any man love the world, the
love of the Father is not in him." (2) The unsatisfactory nature of the world, its incurable
transitoriness, its "visible tendency to nonexistence." "The world
passeth away, and the lust thereof." It will be well to consider how far this thought of the
transitoriness of the world, of its drifting by in ceaseless change,
is in itself salutary and Christian, how far it needs to be
supplemented and elevated by that which follows and closes. the
verse. I There can be no doubt, then, that up to a certain point this
conviction is a necessary element of Christian thought, feeling, and
character; that it is at least among the preliminaries. of a saving
reception of Christ. There is in the great majority of the world a surprising and almost
incredible levity. There is a disposition to believe in the
permanency of that which we have known to continue long, and which
has become habitual. There is a tale of a man who was resolved to
keep from his children the knowledge of death. He was the Governor
of
a colony, and had lost in succession his wife and many children. Two
only, mere infants, were left. He withdrew to a beautiful and
secluded island, and tried to barricade his daughters from the fatal
knowledge which, when once acquired, darkens the spirit with
anticipation. In the ocean island death was to be a forbidden word.
If met with in the pages of a book, and questions were asked, no
answer was to be given. If some one expired, the body was to be
removed, and the children were to be told that the departed had gone
to another country. It does not need much imagination to feel sure
that the secret could not be kept; that some fish on the coral reef,
or some bright bird in the tropic forest, gave the little ones the
hint of a something that touched the splendour of the sunset with a
strange presentiment; that some hour came when, as to the rest of
us,
so to them, the mute presence would insist upon being made known.
Ours is a stranger mode of dealing with ourselves than was the
father’s way of dealing with his children. We tacitly resolve to
play
a game of make believe with ourselves, to forget that which cannot
be
forgotten, to remove to an incalculable distance that which is
inexorably near. And the fear of death with us does not come from
the
nerves, but from the will. Death ushers us into the presence of God.
Those of whom, we speak hate and fear death because they fear God
and
hate His presence. Now it is necessary for such persons as these to
be awakened from their illusion. That which is supremely important
for them is to realise that "the world" is indeed "drifting by";
that there is an emptiness in all that is created, a vanity in all
that is not eternal; that time is short, eternity long. They must be
brought to see that with the world, the "lust thereof" (the
concupiscence, the lust of it, which has the world for its object,
which belongs to it, and which the world stimulates) passes by also.
The world, which is the object of the desire, is a phantom and a
shadow; the desire itself must be therefore the phantom of a phantom
and the shadow of a shadow. This conviction has a thousand times over led human souls to the one
true abiding centre of eternal reality. It has come in a thousand
ways. It has been said that one heard the fifth chapter of Genesis
read, with those words eight times repeated over the close of each
record of longevity, like the strokes of a funeral bill, "and he
died"; and that the impression never left him, until he planted his
foot upon the rock over the tide of the changing years. Sometimes
this conviction is produced by the death of friends—sometimes by the
slow discipline of life—sometimes no doubt it may be begun,
sometimes deepened, by the preacher’s voice upon the watch night, by
the effective ritualism of the tolling bell, of the silent prayer,
of
the well-selected hymn. And it is right that the world’s dancing in,
or drinking in, the New Year, should be a hint to Christians to pray
it in. This is one of the happy plagiarisms which the Church has
made
from the world. The heart feels as it never did before the truth of
St. John’s sad, calm, oracular survey of existence. "The world
passeth away, and the lust thereof." II But we have not sounded the depth of the truth—certainly we
have not exhausted St. John’s meaning—until we have asked something
more. Is this conviction alone always a herald of salvation? Is it
always, taken by itself, even salutary? Can it never be exaggerated,
and become the parent of evils almost greater than those which it
supersedes? We are led by careful study of the Bible to conclude that this
sentiment of the flux of things is capable of exaggeration. For
there
is one important principle which arises from a comparison of the Old
Testament with the New in this matter. It is to be noticed that the Old Testament has infinitely more which
corresponds to the first proposition of the text, without the
qualification which follows it, than we can find in the New. The patriarch Job’s experience echoes in our ears. "Man that is born
of a woman hath but a short time to live, and is full of misery. He
cometh up, and is cut down, like a flower; he fleeth as it were a
shadow, and never continueth in one stay." The Funeral Psalms make
their melancholy chant. "Behold, Thou hast made my days as it were a
span long Verily every man living is altogether vanity. For
man walketh in a vain shadow, and disquieteth himself in
vain spare me a little that I may smile again." Or we read
the words of Moses, the man of God, in that ancient psalm of his,
that hymn of time and of eternity. All that human speech can say is
summed up in four words, the truest, the deepest, the saddest, and
the most expressive, that ever fell from any mortal pen. "We bring
our years to an end, as a sigh." Each life is a sigh between two
eternities! Our point is that in the New Testament there is greatly less of this
element—greatly less of this pathetic moralising upon the vanity and
fragility of human life, of which we have only cited a few
examples—and that what there is lies in a different atmosphere, with
sunnier and more cheerful surroundings. Indeed, in the whole compass
of the New Testament there is perhaps but one passage which is set
quite in the same key with our familiar declamations upon the
uncertainty and shortness of human life—where St. James desires
Christians ever to remember in all their projects to make deduction
for the will of God, "not knowing what shall be on the morrow." In
the New Testament the voice which wails for a second about the
changefulness and misery is lost in the triumphant music by which it
is encompassed. If earthly goods are depreciated, it is not merely
because "the load of them troubles, the love of them taints, the
loss of them tortures"; it is because better things are ready. There
is no lamentation over the change, no clinging to the dead past. The
tone is rather one of joyful invitation. "Your raft is going to
pieces in the troubled sea of time; step into a gallant ship. The
volcanic isle on which you stand is undermined by silent fires; we
can promise to bring you with us to a shore of safety where you
shall
be compassed about with songs of deliverance." It is no doubt true to urge that this style of thought and language
is partly to be ascribed to a desire that the attention of
Christians
should be fixed on the return of their Lord, rather than upon their
own death. But, if we believe Scripture to have been written under
Divine guidance, the history of religion may supply us with good
grounds for the absence of all exaggeration from its pages in
speaking of the misery of life and the transitoriness of the world. The largest religious experiment in the world, the history of a
religion which at one time numerically exceeded Christendom, is a
gigantic proof that it is not safe to allow unlimited license to
melancholy speculation. The true symbol for humanity is not a skull
and an hourglass. Some two thousand five hundred years ago, towards the end of the
seventh century before Christ, at the foot of the mountains of
Nepaul, in the capital of a kingdom of Central India, an infant was
born whom the world will never forget. All gifts seemed to be
showered on this child. He was the son of a powerful king and heir
to
his throne. The young Siddhartha was of rare distinction, brave and
beautiful, a thinker and a hero, married to an amiable and
fascinating princess. But neither a great position nor domestic
happiness could clear away the cloud of melancholy which hung over
Siddhartha, even under that lovely sky. His deep and meditative soul
dwelt night and day upon the mystery of existence. He came to the
conclusion that the life of the creature is incurably evil from
three
causes—the very fact of existence, desire, and ignorance. The things
revealed by sense are evil. None has that continuance and that
fixity
which are the marks of Law, and the attainment of which is the
condition of happiness. At last his resolution to leave all his
splendour and become an ascetic was irrevocably fixed. One splendid
morning the prince drove to a glorious garden. On his road he met a
repulsive old man, wrinkled, toothless, bent. Another day, a
wretched
being wasted with fever crossed his path. Yet a third excursion - and a funeral passes along the road with a corpse on an open bier,
and friends wailing as they go. His favourite attendant is obliged in
each case to confess that these evils are not exceptional—that old
age, sickness, and death are the fatal conditions of conscious
existence for all the sons of men. Then the Prince Royal takes his
first step towards becoming the deliverer of humanity. He
cries—"woe, woe to the youth which old age must destroy, to the
health which sickness must undermine, to the life which has so few
days and is so full of evil." Hasty readers are apt to judge that
the Prince was on the same track with the Patriarch of Idumea, and
with Moses the man of God in the desert—nay, with St. John, when tie
writes from Ephesus that "the world passeth away, and the lust
thereof." It may be well to reconsider this; to see what contradictory
principle lies under utterances which have so much superficial
resemblance. Siddhartha became known as the Buddha, the august founder of a great
and ancient religion. That religion has of later years been
favourably compared with Christianity—yet what are its necessary
results, as drawn out for us by those who have studied it most
deeply? Scepticism, fanatic hatred of life, incurable sadness in a
world fearfully misunderstood; rejection of the personality of man,
of God, of the reality of Nature. Strange enigma! The Buddha sought
to win annihilation by good works; everlasting non-being by a life
of
purity, of alms, of renunciation, of austerity. The prize of his
high
calling was not everlasting life, but everlasting death; for what
else is impersonality, unconsciousness, absorption into the
universe,
but the negation of human existence? The acceptance of the
principles
of Buddhism is simply a sentence of death intellectually, morally,
spiritually, almost physically, passed upon the race which submits
to
the melancholy bondage of its creed of desolation. It is the opium
drunkenness of the spiritual world without the dreams that are its
temporary consolation. It is enervating without being soft, and
contemplative without being profound. It is a religion which is
spiritual without recognising the soul, virtuous without the
conception of duty, moral without the admission of liberty,
charitable without love. It surveys a world without nature, and a
universe without God. The human soul under its influence is not so
much drunken as asphyxiated by a monotonous, unbalanced, perpetual
repetition of one half of the truth—"the world passeth away, and
the lust thereof." For let us carefully note that St. John adds a qualification which
preserves the balance of truth. Over against the dreary
contemplation
of the perpetual flux of things, he sets a constant course of
doing—over against the world, God in His deepest, truest
personality, "the will of God"—over against the fact of our having
a short time to live, and being full of misery, an everlasting
fixity, "he abideth forever"—(so well brought out by the old gloss
which slipped into the Latin text, "even as God abideth forever").
As the Lord had taught before, so the disciple now teaches, of the
rocklike solidity, of the permanent abiding, under and over him who
"doeth." Of the devotee who became in his turn the Buddha,
Cakhya-Mouni could not have said one word of the close of our text.
"He"—but human personality is lost in the triumph of knowledge.
"Doeth the will of God"—but God is ignored, if not denied.
"Abideth forever"—but that is precisely the object of his
aversion, the terror from which he wishes to be emancipated at any
price, by any self-denial. It may be supposed that this strain of thought is of little
practical
importance. It may be of use, indeed, in other lands to the
missionary who is brought into contact with forms of Buddhism in
China, India, or Ceylon, but not to us in these countries. In truth
it is not so. It is about half a century ago since a great English
theologian warned his University that the central principle of
Buddhism was being spread far and wide in Europe from Berlin. This
propaganda is not confined to philosophy. It is at work in
literature
generally, in poetry, in novels, above all in those collection of
"Pensees" which have become so extensively popular. The unbelief of
the last century advanced with flashing epigrams and defiant songs.
With Byron it softened at times into a melancholy which was perhaps
partly affected. But with Amiel, and others of our own day, unbelief
assumes a sweet and dirge-like tone. The satanic mirth of the past
unbelief is exchanged for a satanic melancholy in the present. Many
currents of thought run into our hearts, and all are tinged with a
darkness before unknown from new substances in the soil which
colours
the waters. There is little fear of our not hearing enough, great
fear of our hearing too much, of the proposition—"the world passeth
away, and the lust thereof." All this may possibly serve as some explanation for the fact that
the
Christian Church, as such, has no fast for the last day of the year,
no festival for New Year’s Day except one quite unconnected with the
lessons which may be drawn from the flight of time. The death of the
old year, the birth of the new year, have touching associations for
us. But the Church consecrates no death but that of Jesus and His
martyrs, no nativity but that of her Lord, and of one whose birth
was
directly connected with His own
— John the Baptist. A cause of this has been found in the fact that
the day had become so deeply contaminated by the abominations of the
heathen Saturnalia that it was impossible in the early Church to
continue any very marked observation of it. This may well be so; but
it is worth considering whether there is not another and deeper
reason. Nothing that has now been said can be supposed to militate
against the observance of this time by Christians in private, with
solemn penitence for the transgressions of the past year, and
earnest
prayer for that upon which we enter—nothing against the edification
of particular congregations by such services as those most striking
ones which are held in so many places. But some explanation is
supplied why the "Water-night" is not recognised in the calendar of
the Church. Let us take our verse together as a whole and we have something
better than moralising over the flight of time and the
transitoriness
of the world; something better than vulgarising "vanity of
vanities" by vapid iteration. It is hard to conceive a life in which death and evanescence have
nothing that enforces their recognition. Now the removal of one dear
to us, now a glance at the obituary with the name of some one of
almost the same age as ourselves, brings a sudden shadow over the
sunniest field. Yet surely it is not wholesome to encourage the
perpetual presence of the cloud. We might impose upon ourselves the
penance of being shut up all a winter’s night with a corpse, go half
crazy with terror of that unearthly presence, and yet be no more
spiritual after all. We must learn to look at death in a different way, with new eyes. We
all know how different dead faces are. Some speak to us merely of
material ugliness, of the sweep of "decay’s effacing fingers." In
others a new idea seems to light up the face; there is the touch of
a
superhuman irradiation, of a beauty from a hidden life. We feel that
we look on one who has seen Christ, and say—"We shall be like Him,
for we shall see Him as He is." These two kinds of faces answer to
the two different views of life. Not the transitory, but the permanent; not the fleeting, but the
abiding; not death, but life, is the conclusion of the whole matter.
The Christian life is not an initial spasm followed by a chronic
dyspepsia. What does St. John give us as the picture of it
exemplified in a believer? Daily, perpetual, constant doing the will
of God. This is the end far beyond—somewhat inconsistent
with—obstinately morbid meditation and surrounding ourselves with
multiplied images of mortality. Lying in a coffin half the night
might not lead to that end; nay, it might be a hindrance thereto.
Beyond the grave, outside the coffin, is the object at which we are
to look. "The current of things temporal," cries Augustine,
"sweeps along. But like a tree over that stream has risen our Lord
Jesus Christ. He willed to plant Himself as it were over the river.
Are you whirled along by the current? Lay hold of the wood. Does the
love of the world roll you onward in its course? Lay hold upon
Christ. For you He became temporal that you might become eternal.
For
He was so made temporal as to remain eternal. Join thy heart to the
eternity of God, and thou shalt be eternal with Him." Those who have heard the Miserere in the Sistine Chapel describe the
desolation which settles upon the soul which surrenders itself to
the
impression of the ritual. As the psalm proceeds, at the end of each
rhythmical pulsation of thought, each beat of the alternate wings of
the parallelism, a light upon the altar is extinguished. As the wail
grows sadder the darkness grows deeper. When all the lights are out
and the last echo of the strain dies away, there would be something
suitable for the penitent’s mood in the words—"the world passeth
away, and the lust thereof." Upon the altar of the Christian heart
there are tapers at first unlighted, and before it a priest in black
vestments. But one by one the vestments are exchanged for others
which are white; one after another the lamps are lighted slowly and
without noise, until gradually, we know not how, the whole place is
full of light. And ever sweeter and clearer, calm and happy, with a
triumph which is at first repressed and reverential, but which
increases as the light becomes diffused, the words are heard strong
and quiet—a plain song now that wilt swell into an anthem
presently—"he that doeth the will of God abideth forever."
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