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CHAPTER
XXIII
LOVE AS A PRINCIPLE AND LOVE AS A PASSION
The
author of this book after passing his eightieth birthday was
so violently prostrated by pneumonia that he and all his
neighbors thought the time of his departure had come. He
knows not for what purpose his life on the earth has been
extended, unless it is to publish a view of Christian
experience in the sick chamber which may enable some other
"forlorn and shipwrecked brother, seeing, to take heart
again."
In common
with many, I may say a majority of Christian teachers, I
have taught that nothing but sin of commission or omission
can obstruct communion with our heavenly Father; that the
pure in heart may always "see God" by apprehending His
presence and favor. I have supposed that when the poet Keble
penned this couplet he deprecated sin only:
"O may
no earthborn cloud arise
To hide Thee from Thy servant's eyes."
I have
made the discovery that there is at least one earthborn
cloud that does not arise from guilt or inward impurity, a
certain kind or degree of physical debility destroying, or
for a time suspending, the power of spiritual perception.
There are disabilities which may be utilized for
intensifying and prolonging communion with God; such as
insomnia, which I have both suffered and enjoyed during the
past twenty-five years. The enjoyment is in the undisturbed
fellowship with Christ which midnight sleeplessness affords.
But when sickness was added this fellowship was utterly
destroyed, though my intellect was unclouded. I, who for
scores of years had been "on speaking terms with God"
(Father Taylor), was greatly surprised and saddened to be
thus deserted by my best Friend in this hour of my supreme
need. In vain did I plead the promises so precious and so
effectual in former years. In vain, when I wished to soar
heavenward, did I mount my customary vehicle of devotion,
the memorized hymns of the Wesleys, said by Dr. James
Martineau to "have a quickening and elevating power which I
very rarely feel in the books on our Unitarian shelves.
After the Scriptures the Wesley Hymn Book appears to me the
grandest instrument of popular religious culture that
Christendom has ever produced." No voice responded to my
cry:
"Leave,
O leave me not alone,
Still support and comfort me."
For this
experience, so contrary to my theory, my busy mind devised
various reasons, seeing that I had no consciousness of
having sinned. One suggestion was that it was disciplinary.
Of course, this sickness may be disciplinary, but why is the
Great Physician absent after having promised that He will be
with me to the end of the world? Is He hiding Himself to
test my faith? That seems derogatory to His character as
both wise and good. I remembered Wesley's remark, "Our
heavenly Father does not play bo-peep with His children."
Then came the dreadful suggestion of materialism, that there
is no spirit, human or divine, and Christian experience is
all an illusion which certain physical changes dispel. That
change has now come to disillusion me, about to die without
God's comforting rod and staff. How did I answer this
atheistic suggestion? Though there was no warm and cheering
ray of light streaming directly from the face of Jesus
Christ, the Light of the world, I had the reflected light of
a past definite manifestation of Christ as a bright reality
affording a certitude transcending that of the solid earth
beneath my feet and of the starry heavens nightly rolling
over my head. This was the sure ground of my faith during
that long search of my soul for an absent Saviour.
Philosophy also came to the help of faith. It may be that
Christ is as near as He ever has been, and is speaking words
of comfort which I do not hear because my mental telephonic
receiver is damaged by sickness. Can this be true? Then,
though I may die making no sign of victory over the last
enemy, all will be well with me, but my friends may be
grieved. Such were my perplexing reasonings during the
wakeful hours of twenty-five days and nights, while the
heavens seemed as if made of brass, when, lo, suddenly I was
ensphered in love:
"Plunged
in the Godhead's deepest sea,
And lost in its immensity!"
The
explanation of this unexpected experience of God's oceanic
love is not difficult when it is known that this was ten
days after the favorable crisis of my sickness, and my
convalesence had advanced far enough to remove the film
which the disease had spread over my spiritual eye, so that
I could not realize the presence of the divine Paraclete.
This
experience teaches me several lessons: 1. Do not discount
the piety of those godly people who do not die shouting
"Victory! victory!" but who calmly meet the last enemy,
trusting in Christ. When Bishop Janes, eminent for his
devoutness and most intimate fellowship with his Saviour,
was on his deathbed some of his clerical friends visiting
him, expecting to hear ringing words of triumph in answer to
the question, "How do you feel?" were greatly disappointed
to hear him hesitantly reply, "I am not disappointed." How
different was the exit of Bishop Gilbert Haven, whose
remarkable characteristic was the breath and intensity of
his human sympathies and his lofty ethical ideals, who when
dying I heard shouting aloud, "There is no death, there is
no river here. Glory, glory, glory!"
2. The
idea that conscious fellowship with God is dependent on
right physical conditions explains the utterance of Jesus on
the cross, "My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?"
After the incarnation, the intercourse of the Son of God
with His Father was subject to physical conditions, the same
as that of any other human being. His divine personality
never interposed to relieve Him from bodily suffering when
hungry in the wilderness and thirsty on the cross. Nor was
there any such interposition to prevent or relieve the
unspeakable mental pain of the new experience of the sudden
interruption of that communion which the Son had enjoyed
with the Father from the time when He shared His glory
before the world was down to the sad moment when through
debilitating pain and loss of blood, His faculty of
spiritual perception ceased to report spiritual realities.
To say that this inability to hear the Father's voice
speaking comforting words in this hour of His supreme need
was a surprise to the Son of man, who construed it as the
dereliction of the Father, may seem to some people as
derogatory to His omniscience. Our reply is that when He
disclaimed a knowledge of the day of His own second coming
He disclaimed omniscience while on the earth.
The
difficulty which exegetes encounter in this scripture has
hitherto been insurmountable. Martin Luther, after
meditating upon it several hours, exclaimed, "God forsaken
by God! I cannot understand it, I cannot understand it."
What a relief it would have been to him to regard this
outcry of our dying Redeemer, not as the declaration of a
fact, but as the expression of a feeling. This is a view
which my recent sickness has suggested. If it is heresy let
orthodoxy not roast me, for I will recant if convinced of
error, but not before. If the Father's love for His Son was
capable of increase, it certainly reached its climax when He
saw His only begotten Son nailed to the cross a willing
sacrifice for the redemption of a fallen race. These words
of Jesus strongly sustain this idea, "Therefore doth the
Father love me, because I lay down my life, that I may take
it again." This verse is inconsistent with a real objective
dereliction. Hence the interrupted companionship must have
been a subjective experience, and not a reality.
3. This
discussion would not be complete without the presentation of
a germane topic, the difference between love as a passion,
or feeling, and love as a principle. Love as a feeling, the
source of Christian joy, being simple, is incapable of an
analytical definition. It must be experienced in order to be
known. Hence the homely phrase, "It is better felt than
told." It is not originated by volition, but it arises in
the believer's sensibilities through the agency of the Holy
Spirit by the inward revelation of Christ as altogether
lovely. It is not constant but variable in its presence and
intensity; hence it is called an emotion, because it is
always moving. The most spiritual person may at times be
without any consciousness of this sensibility and of the joy
which accompanies it. At other times he may realize a love
divine burning in his heart like a furnace glowing with
sevenfold intensity. These spiritual phenomena do not seem
to be regulated by any law other than this, that they occur
only in those who have the most intimate knowledge of Christ
and are the most surrendered to His will. The purpose of
love as a feeling awakening joy, and sometimes ecstatic
bliss and rapture, is not only to cheer and encourage the
believer amid his conflicts, but also to strengthen love as
a principle which is absolutely essential to Christian
character. This cannot be said of emotional love, although
no true Christian is a stranger to this emotion. "No man can
render Satan a better service than by preaching that one may
be a Christian and have no feeling" (Whitefield). Christian
love as a principle seems to be a composite embracing an
intellectual assent to the truth of Christ's claims, an
admiration of the stainless purity of His character, and an
irreversible self-surrender of the will to His authority as
a sovereign, to His infallibility as a teacher, and to His
sufficiency as the only Saviour from the guilt of sin and
the love of sin. The will is the chief component of love as
a principle, when in the attitude of obedience it adheres to
Christ. Hence it is the object of the divine command, "Thou
shalt love the Lord thy God." All men have the gracious
ability to obey this command. They have no ability to
immediate volition to create in themselves the emotion of
love and the joy which attends it. They are, therefore,
responsible for the constant principle of love, and not for
the occasional passion. Hence they are to be judged in the
last day by the strength of this principle, and not by the
number of glad hallelujahs they have uttered. In our
judgement of one another we should remember this. But, as
the principle of love in another person is to us
inscrutable, we must refrain from saying which of the two
episcopal brethren just named, the saintly Janes or the
genial Haven, was the greater favorite with his heavenly
Father.
4. Our
last lesson is the great value of a sharply defined
Christian experience with a date, standing forth in the
memory as Mont Blanc above the other Alps, showing his crown
of whiteness to all spectators, far and near. In the days of
mental and spiritual depression, to which we are all more or
less subject, because of "this mortal" which is our earthly
abode, with its skyward window liable to be darkened, so
that no direct ray of the Sun of righteousness can cheer us
amid the gloom, such a memory is of inestimable value to
keep us from blank despair. This is one of the reasons
assigned by Wesley in his advocacy of instantaneousness in
the initiation of the spiritual life and in the completion
of progressive sanctification. He insists that there are two
opportunities for memorable experiences in the spiritual
life. These, he alleges, are valuable safeguards in times of
mental depression, being careful to say that salvation does
not depend on knowing the day and hour of our spiritual
transitions, whether regeneration or entire sanctification.
Dateless conversions are most numerous among those who are
brought into the spiritual life through Christian nurture in
the warm atmosphere of home religion, around the family
altar and the open Bible. These should, for their own
safety, be urged to seek first the direct witness of the
Spirit to their holiness or perfect love. |