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CHARITY AND INDEPENDENCE
1Th 4:9-12 (R.V.) WHEN the gospel first came abroad in the world, two characteristics
of its adherents attracted general attention, namely, personal
purity
and brotherly love. Amid the gross sensuality of heathenism, the
Christian stood out untainted by indulgence of the flesh; amid the
utter heartlessness of pagan society, which made no provision for
the
poor, the sick, or the aged, the Church was conspicuous for the
close
union of its members and their brotherly kindness to each other.
Personal purity and brotherly love were the notes of the Christian
and of the Christian community in the early days; they were the new
and regenerating virtues which the Spirit of Christ had called into
existence in the heart of a dying world. The opening verses of this
chapter enforce the first; those at present before us treat of the
second. "Concerning love of the brethren ye have no need that one
write unto you: for ye yourselves are taught of God to love one
another." The principle, that is, of brotherly love is of the
very essence of Christianity; it is not a remote consequence of
it which might easily be overlooked unless it were pointed out.
Every believer is taught of God to love the brother who shares
his faith; such love is the best and only guarantee of his own
salvation; as the Apostle John writes, "We know that we have
passed out of death into life, because we love the brethren."
It is perhaps not unnecessary to remark that, in the New
Testament, brethren means fellow Christians, and not fellow men.
We have duties to all men, which the Bible does not fail to
recognise and enforce; we are one with them in the nature God
has given us, and the great alternatives life sets before us;
and that natural unity is the basis of duties which all owe to
each other. Honour all men. But the Church of Christ creates new
relations between its members, and with these new relations
mutual obligations still more strong and binding. God Himself is
the Saviour of all, specially of them that believe; and
Christians in like manner are bound, as they have opportunity,
to do good unto all men, but specially to those who are of the
household of faith. This is not sufficiently considered by most
Christian people; who, if they looked into the matter, might
find that few of their strongest affections were determined by
the common faith. Is not love a strong and peculiar word to
describe the feeling you cherish toward some members of the
Church, brethren to you in Christ Jesus? yet love to the
brethren is the very token of our right to a place in the Church
for ourselves. "He that loveth not knoweth not God; for God is
love." These words of John give us the key to the expression "taught of God
to love one another." It is not likely that they refer to anything
so external as the words of Scripture, "Thou shalt love thy
neighbour as thyself." Even in the Old Testament, to be taught of
God was something more spiritual than this; it was the same thing as
to have the law written on the heart. That is what the Apostle has
in
view here. The Christian has been born again, born of God; he has a
new nature, with new instincts, a new law, a new spontaneity; it is
now native to him to love. Until the Spirit of God enters into men’s
hearts and recreates them, life is a war of all against all; man is
a
wolf to man; but in the Church that internecine strife has ended,
for
its members are the children of God, and "everyone that loveth Him
that begat loveth him also that is begotten of Him." The selfishness
of man’s nature is veiled, and to some extent repressed, in other
societies; but it is not, as a principle, exterminated except in the
Church and by the Spirit of Christ. A family ought to be an
unselfish
place, ruled only by love, and fostering the spirit of love; yet if
Christ be not there, what selfish passions assert themselves in
spite
of all restraint. Any association working for the common good—a town
council even—ought to be an unselfish body; yet how often, in such
places, is rivalry conspicuous, and self-seeking, and envy, and
detraction, and all that is unlike Christ. In the Church which has
been taught of God, or, in other words, which has learned of Christ,
we find at least some manifestations of a better spirit. It does
contain people who love one another because they are Christians; who
are unselfish, giving way to each other, esteeming each other,
helping each other; if it contained none such, it would not be a
Church at all. The brotherly love of the early Church was not only visible to the
world; it was its great recommendation in the world’s eyes. It had
brought a new thing into being, a thing for which the world was
pining, namely, vital society. The poor people in the cities of Asia
and Europe saw with wonder, joy, and hope, men and women united to
one another in a spiritual union, which gave scope to all their
gifts
for society, and satisfied all their desires for it. The early
Christian churches were little companies of people where love was at
a high temperature, where outward pressure very often tightened the
inward bonds, and where mutual confidence diffused continual joy.
Men
were drawn to them irresistibly by the desire to share this life of
love. It is the very same force which at this moment draws those who
are outcasts from society into the Salvation Army. Whatever the
failings of that organisation may be, its members are as brothers;
the sense of union, of mutual obligation, of mutual confidence, in
one word, of brotherly love, is very strong; and souls that pine for
that atmosphere are drawn to it with overpowering force. It is not
good for man to be alone; it is vain for him to seek the
satisfaction
of his social instincts in any of the casual, selfish, or sinful
associations by which he is often betrayed: even the natural
affection of the family, pure and strong as it may be, does not
answer to the width of his spiritual nature; his heart cries out for
that society founded on brotherly love which only the Church of
Christ provides. If there is one thing more than another which
explains the Church’s failure in missionary work, it is the absence
of this spirit of love among her members. If men were compelled to
cry still, as in the early days of the gospel, "Behold these
Christians, how they love one another," they would not be able to
remain outside. Their hearts would kindle at the glow, and all that
hindered their incorporation would be burned up. The Apostle acknowledges the progress of the Thessalonians. They
show
this brotherly love to all the brethren that are in all Macedonia;
but he beseeches them to abound more and more. Nothing is more
inconsistent with the gospel than narrowness of mind or heart,
however often Christians may belie their profession by such vices.
Perhaps of all churches in the world, the church of our own country
is as much in need of this admonition as any, and more than most.
Would it not be higher praise than some of us deserve, to say that
we
loved with brotherly cordiality all the Christian churches in
Britain, and wished them God-speed in their Christian work? And as
for churches outside our native land, who knows anything about them?
There was a time when all the Protestant churches in Europe were
one,
and lived on terms of brotherly intimacy; we sent ministers and
professors to congregations and colleges in France, Germany, and
Holland, and took ministers and professors from the Continent
ourselves; the heart of the Church was enlarged towards brethren
whom
it has now completely forgotten. This change has been to the loss of
all concerned; and if we would follow the Apostle’s advice, and
abound more and more in this supreme grace, we must wake up to take
an interest in brethren beyond the British Isles. The Kingdom of
Heaven has no boundaries that could be laid down on a map, and the
brotherly love of the Christian is wider than all patriotism. But
this truth has a special side connected with the situation of the
Apostle. Paul wrote these words from Corinth, where he was busily
engaged in planting a new church, and they virtually bespeak the
interest of the Thessalonians in that enterprise. Christian
brotherly
love is the love which God Himself implants in the heart; and the
love of God has no limitations. It goes out into all the earth, even
to the end of the world. It is an ever advancing, ever victorious
force; the territory in which it reigns becomes continually wider
and
wider. If that love abounds in us more and more, we shall follow
with
live and growing interest the work of Christian missions. Few of us
have any idea of the dimensions of that work, and of the nature of
its successes. Few of us have any enthusiasm for it. Few of us do
anything worth mentioning to help it on. Not very long ago the whole
nation was shocked by the disclosures about the Stanley expedition;
and the newspapers were filled with the doings of a few profligate
ruffians, who, whatever they failed to do, succeeded in covering
themselves, and the country they belong to, with infamy. One would
fain hope that this exhibition of inhumanity would turn men’s
thoughts by contrast to those who are doing the work of Christ in
Africa. The national execration of fiendish wickedness is nothing
unless it passes into deep and strong sympathy with those who are
working among the Africans in brotherly love. What is the merit of
Stanley or his associates, that their story should excite the
interest of those who know nothing of Comber and Hannington and
Mackay, and all the other brave men who loved not their lives to the
death for Christ’s sake and Africa’s? Is it not a shame to some of
us
that we know the horrible story so much better than the gracious
one?
Let brotherly love abound more and more; let Christian sympathy go
out with our brethren and sisters in Christ who go out themselves to
dark places; let us keep ourselves instructed in the progress of
their work; let us support it with prayer and liberality at home;
and
our minds and hearts alike will grow in the greatness of our Lord
and
Saviour. Brotherly love in the early Church, within the limits of a small
congregation, often took the special form of charity. Those who were
able helped the poor. A special care was taken, as we see from the
Book of Acts, of widows, and no doubt of orphans. In a later epistle
Paul mentions with praise a family which devoted itself to
ministering to the saints. To do good and to communicate, that is,
to
impart of one’s goods to those who had need, is the sacrifice of
praise which all Christians are charged not to forget. To see a
brother or a sister destitute, and to shut up the heart against
them,
is taken as proof positive that we have not the love of God dwelling
in us. It would be difficult, one might think, to exaggerate the
emphasis which the New Testament lays on the duty and the merit of
charity. "Sell all that thou hast, and give to the poor," Christ
said to the rich young man, "and thou shalt have treasure in
heaven." "Give alms," He cried to the Pharisees, "of such things
as ye have and behold, all things are clean unto you." Charity
sanctifies. Nor have these strong sayings been without their due
effect. Charity, both organised and private, is characteristic of
Christendom, and of Christendom only. The pagan world made no
provision for the destitute, the sick, the aged. It had no
almshouses, no infirmaries, no orphanages, no convalescent homes.
The
mighty impulse of the love of Christ has created all these, and to
this hour it sustains them all. Acknowledged or unacknowledged, it
is
the force which lies behind every effort made by man for the good of
his fellows; wherever this disinterested love burns in a human
bosom,
it is the fire which Christ cast upon the earth, and He rejoices at
its kindling. As a recent example, look at the great scheme of
General Booth: it is the love of Christ which has inspired it; it is
the love of Christ that must provide all the subordinate agents by
whom it is to be administered, if it is ever carried into effect; it
is on the public conviction that he is animated by the love of
Christ, and has no by-ends of his own to secure, that General Booth
depends for his funds. It is only this Christ-enkindled love which
gives charity its real worth, and furnishes any sort of guarantee
that it will confer a double blessing, material and spiritual, on
those who receive it. For charity is not without its dangers, and the first and greatest
of
these is that men learn to depend upon it. When Paul preached the
gospel in Thessalonica, he spoke a great deal about the Second
Advent. It was an exciting subject, and some at least of those who
received his message were troubled by "ill-defined or mistaken
expectations," which led to moral disorder in their lives. They were
so anxious to be ready for the Lord when He came, that they
neglected
their ordinary duties, and became dependent upon the brethren. They
ceased working themselves, and so became a burden upon those who
continued to work. Here we have, in a nutshell, the argument against
a monastic life of idleness, against the life of the begging friar.
All men must live by labour, their own or some other’s; and he who
chooses a life without labour, as the more holy, really condemns
some
brother to a double share of that labouring life to which, as he
fancies, the highest holiness is denied. That is rank selfishness;
only a man without brotherly love could be guilty of it for an hour. Now in opposition to this selfishness, -unconscious at first, let us
hope, -and in opposition to the unsettled, flighty, restless
expectations
of these early disciples, the Apostle propounds a very sober and
humble plan of life. Make it your ambition, he says, to be quiet,
and
to busy yourselves with your own affairs, and to work with your own
hands, as we commanded you. There is a grave irony in the first
words—make it your ambition to be quiet; set your honour in that.
The ordinary ambition seeks to make a noise in the world, to make
itself visible and audible; and ambition of that type is not unknown
even in the Church. But it is out of place there. No Christian ought
to be ambitious of anything but to fill as unobtrusively as possible
the place in life which God has given him. The less notorious we
are,
the better for us. The necessities of our situation, necessities
imposed by God, require most of us to spend so many hours a day in
making our daily bread. The bulk of most men’s strength, by an
ordinance of God that we cannot interfere with, is given to that
humble but inevitable task. If we cannot be holy at our work, it is
not worth taking any trouble to be holy at other times. If we cannot
be Christians and please God in those common activities which must
always absorb so much of our time and strength, the balance of life
is not worth thinking about. Perhaps some of us crave leisure, that
we may be more free for spiritual work; and think that if we had
more
time at our disposal, we should be able to render many services to
Christ and His cause which are out of our power at present. But that
is extremely doubtful. If experience proves anything, it proves that
nothing is worse for most people than to have nothing to do but be
religious. Religion is not controlled in their life by any contact
with realities; in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred they do not
know how to be quiet, but are vain, meddlesome, impracticable, and
senseless. The man who has his trade or his profession to work at,
and the woman who has her household and social duties to attend to,
are not to be condoled with; they are in the very place in which
religion is at once necessary and possible; they can study to be
quiet, and to mind their own business, and to work with their own
hands, and in all this to serve and please God. But those who get up
in the morning with nothing to do but to be pious or to engage in
Christian works, are in a position of enormous difficulty, which
very
few can fill. The daily life of toil, at the bench or the desk, in
the shop, the study, or the street, does not rob us of the Christian
life; it really puts it within our reach. If we keep our eyes open,
it is easy to see that this is so. There are two reasons assigned by the Apostle for this life of quiet
industry, both of which are noticeable. First, "That ye may walk
honestly toward them that are without." Honestly is too colourless a
word in modern English; the corresponding adjective in different
places is translated honourable and comely. What the Apostle
signifies is, that the Church has a great character to sustain in
the
world, and that the individual Christian has that character, to some
extent, in his charge. Idleness, fussiness, excitability, want of
common sense, these are discreditable qualities inconsistent with
the
dignity of Christianity, and to be guarded against by the believer.
The Church is really a spectacle to the World; those who are without
have their eye upon it; and the Apostle would have it a worthy and
impressive spectacle. But what is there so undignified as an idle
busybody, a man or woman neglecting duty on the pretence of piety,
so
excited by an uncertain future as to disregard the most crying
necessities of the present? Perhaps there is none of us who does
anything so bad as this; but there are some in every church who are
not careful of Christian dignity. Remember that there is something
great in true Christianity, something which should command the
veneration of those who are without; and do nothing inconsistent
with
that. As the sun breaks through the darkest cloud, so honour peereth
in the meanest habit; and the lowliest occupation, discharged with
diligence, earnestness, and fidelity, gives scope enough for the
exhibition of true Christian dignity. The man who does his common
duties as they ought to be done will never lose his self-respect,
and
will never discredit the Church of Christ. The second reason for the life of quiet industry is, "That ye may
have lack of nothing." Probably the truer interpretation would be,
That ye may have lack of no one. In other words, independence is a
Christian duty. This is not inconsistent with what has been said of
charity, but is its necessary supplement. Christ commands us to be
charitable; He tells us plainly that the need for charity will not
disappear; but He tells us as plainly that to count upon charity,
except in the case of necessity, is both sinful and shameful. This
contains, of course, a warning to the charitable. Those of us who
wish to help the poor, and who try to do so, must take care to do it
in such a way as not to teach them to depend on help; that is to do
them a serious wrong. We are all familiar with the charges brought
against charity; it demoralises, it fosters idleness and
improvidence, it robs those who receive it of self-respect. These
charges have been current from the beginning; they were freely
brought against the Church in the days of the Roman Empire. If they
could be made good, they would condemn what passes for charity as
unchristian. The one-sided enforcement of charity, in the sense of
almsgiving, in the Romish Church, has occasionally led to something
like a glorification of pauperism; the saint is usually a beggar.
One
would hope that in our own country, where the independence of the
national character has been reinforced by the most pronounced types
of Protestant religion, such a deformed conception of Christianity
would be impossible; yet even among us the caution of this verse may
not be unnecessary. It is a sign of grace to be charitable; but
though one would not speak an unkind word of those in need, it is
not
a sign of grace to require charity. The gospel bids us aim not only
at brotherly love, but at independence. Remember the poor, it says;
but it says also, Work with your hands, that you may preserve a
Christian dignity in relation to the world, and have need of no one. |