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THE MINISTRY
So keenly alive is Paul to the danger and folly of party spirit in
the Church, that he has still one more word of rebuke to utter. He
has shown the Corinthians that to give their faith to one teacher,
and shut their ears to every other form of truth than that which he
delivers, is to impoverish and defraud themselves. All teachers are
theirs, and are sent, not to win disciples to themselves, who may
spread their fame and reflect credit on their talents, but to serve
the people, and be merged in self-obliterating toil. The preachers,
Paul tells them, exist for the Church: not the Church for the
preachers. The people are the primary consideration, the main end to
which the preachers are subordinate. The mistake often made in
things
civil, that the people exist for the king, not the king for the
people, is made also in things ecclesiastical, and has, in some
instances, attained such dimensions that the "Church" means the
clergy, not the laity, and that when a man enters the ministry he is
said to enter the Church, -as if already he were not in it as a
layman.
Paul now proceeds to demonstrate the futility of the judgment passed
upon their teachers by the Corinthians. Paul and the rest were
servants of Christ, stewards sent by Him to dispense to others what
He had entrusted to them. The question therefore was, were they
faithful, did they dispense what they had received in conformity
with
Christ’s purpose? The question was not, were they eloquent, were
they
philosophical, were they learned? Criticism no preacher need expect
to escape. Sometimes one might suppose sermons were of no other use
than to furnish material for a little discussion and pleasant
exercise of the critical faculty. Everyone considers himself capable
of this form of criticism, and once a sermon has been sorted and
labelled as of this, that, or the other quality, it is too often put
permanently, aside. In such criticism, Paul reminds us, it is a
great
matter to bear in mind that what has no great attraction for us may
yet serve some good purpose. The gifts dispensed by Christ are
various. The influence of some ministers is most felt in private,
while others are shy and stiff, and can only utter themselves freely
in the pulpit. In the pulpit again various gifts appear, some having
good nerve and a ready and felicitous address which reaches the
multitude; while others have more power of thought, and a finer
literary gift, or a sympathetic manner of handling peculiarities of
spiritual experience. Who shall say which of these styles is most
edifying to the Church? And who shall say which teacher is most
faithfully serving his Master? Who shall determine whether this
preacher or that is the better steward, most truly seeking his
Lord’s
glory, and careless of his own? May it not be expected that when the
things at present hidden in darkness, the motives and thoughts of
the
heart, are brought to light in Christ’s judgment, many that are
first
shall be last, and the last first?
He who is conscious that he is the servant of Christ and must give
account to Him, can always say with Paul, "It is a very small thing
that I should be judged of man’s judgment," whether for acquittal
and applause or condemnation and abuse. He who utters what is
peculiar to himself must expect to be misjudged by those who do not
look at things from his point of view. A teacher who thinks for
himself and is not a mere echo of other men, finds himself compelled
to utter truths which he knows will be misunderstood by many; but so
long as he is conscious that he is faithfully delivering what has
been made known to himself, the condemnation of the many can trouble
him very little or not at all. It is to his own Master he stands or
falls; and if he feels sure that he is doing his Master’s will, he
may regret the opposition of men, but he can neither be greatly
astonished nor greatly perturbed by it. And, on the other hand, the
approval and applause of men come to him only as a reminder that
there is no finality in man’s judgment, and that it is only Christ’s
approval which avails to give permanent satisfaction. A sympathetic
audience every teacher needs, but general approval will be his in
the
inverse ratio of the individuality of his teaching.
In his whole discussion of this subject Paul has named only. himself
and Apollos, but he means that what he has said of them should be
applied to all. "These things I have in a figure transferred to
myself and to Apollos for your sakes; that in us ye might learn not
to think of men above that which is written, that no one of you be
puffed up for one against another." But great difficulty has always
been experienced in tracing the similarities and distinctions which
exist between the Apostles and the ordinary ministry of the Church,
and had Paul been writing this epistle in our own day he would have
felt himself compelled to speak more definitely on these points. For
what makes union hopeless in Christendom at present is not that
parties are formed round individual leaders, but that Churches are
based on diametrically opposed opinions regarding the ministry
itself. The Church of Rome unchurches all the rest, and defends her
action by the simplest process of reasoning. There can be no true
Church, she says, where there are no forgiveness of sins and no
sacraments, and there can be no forgiveness and no sacraments where
there are no true ministers to administer them, and there are no
true
ministers save those who can trace their orders to the Apostles.
This
theory of the ministry proceeds on the idea that the Apostles
received from Christ a commission to exercise the apostolic office,
and along with it a deposit of grace, with powers to communicate
this
to those who should succeed them. This deposit of grace derived from
Christ Himself has been handed down from generation to generation,
through a line of consecrated persons, each member of the series
receiving at his ordination, and irrespective of his moral
character,
both the commission and the powers which belonged to his predecessor
in office.
This theory of the efficacy of ministration in the Church, with its
entirely external account of its transmission, is but one
manifestation of the old superstition that confounds the outward
symbol of Christian grace with that grace itself. It is a survival
from a time in which religion was treated as a kind of magic, in
which it was only needful to observe the right words of incantation
and the right outward order. Even supposing that any priest now
alive
could trace his orders back to the Apostles, which no priest can, is
it credible that the mere observance of an outward form should
secure
the transmission of the highest spiritual functions to those who may
or may not have any spirituality of mind? However much grace the
ordaining bishop may himself possess, however many of the
qualifications of a good minister of Christ he may have, he can
transmit none of these by the laying on of his hands. He can confer
the external authority in the Church which belongs to the office to
which he ordains, but he cannot communicate that which fits a man to
use this authority. The laying on of hands is the outward symbol of
the bestowed of the Holy Spirit, but it does not confer that Spirit,
which is given, not by man, but by Christ alone. The laying on of
hands is a fit symbol to use at ordination when those who use it
have
satisfied themselves that the ordained person is in possession of
the
Spirit. It is the expression of their reasonable belief that the
Spirit is given.
In some Churches reaction against the theory of apostolical
succession has led men to distrust and repudiate ordination
altogether, and to maintain that any man may preach who can get
people to listen to him, and may administer the sacraments to any
who
apply for them. No outward recognition by the Church is deemed
necessary. The middle course is safer, which acknowledges not only
the supreme necessity of an inward call, but also the expediency of
an outward call by the Church. By an inward call it is meant that it
is the inward and spiritual fitness of any person which constitutes
his main right of entrance to the ministry. There are certain mental
and moral endowments, certain circumstances and educational
advantages, personal inclinations and leanings, which, when they
meet
in a boy or young man, point him out as suited for the work of the
ministry. The evidence that Christ means that anyone should take
office in His Church, -in other words calls him to office, -is the
fact that He bestows on that person the gifts which fit him for it.
But besides this inward persuasion wrought in the mind of the
individual, and which constitutes the inward call, there must be an
outward call also by the Church’s recognition of fitness and
communication of authority. Any man who, at his own instance and on
his own authority, gathers a congregation and dispenses the
sacraments is guilty of schism. Even Barnabas and Paul were ordained
by the Church. As in the State a prince though legitimate does not
succeed to the throne without formal consecration and coronation, so
in the Church there is needful a formal recognition of the title
which anyone claims to office. It is not the consecration which
constitutes the prince’s right; that he already possesses by birth:
so, neither is it the Church’s ordination which qualifies and
entitles the minister to his office; this he already has by the gift
of Christ; but recognition by the Church is needed to give him due
authority to exercise the functions of his office. It is a matter of
expediency and of order. It is calculated to maintain the unity of
the Church. Admission to the ministry being regulated by those
already in office, schisms are less likely to occur. Ordination has
been a bulwark against fanaticism, against foolish private opinions
and doctrines, against divisive courses in worship and in
organisation. If the Church was to be kept together and to grow as a
consistent whole, it was necessary that those already in office
should be allowed to scrutinise the claims of aspirants to office,
and should not have their order invaded, their work thwarted and
obstructed, their doctrine denied and contradicted by everyone who
might profess to have an inward call to the ministry.
It would therefore seem to be everyone’s duty to inquire, before he
gives himself to another profession or business, whether Christ is
not claiming him to serve in His Church. The qualifications which
constitute a call to the ministry are such as these: an interest in
men, in their ways, and habits, and character; a social disposition,
inclining you to mix with other people, to take pleasure in their
thoughts and feelings, to be of service to them, to talk frankly
with
them; a liking for reading, if not for hard study; some capacity for
thinking and arranging your thoughts and expressing them, which,
however, is to so great an extent the result of study and practice
that you may find it impossible to say whether you have it or not.
There are negative qualifications equally important, such as an
indifference to money making, a shrinking from the eager competition
and hurry of a business life. And, above all, there are the deeper
and essential qualifications which are the fruit of the Spirit’s
sanctifying energy: some genuine sense of your indebtedness to
Christ; a strong desire to serve Him; an ambition to preach Him, to
proclaim His worth, to invite men to appreciate and love Him. If you
have these desires, and if you would fain be of use in things
spiritual to your fellow men, then it would seem that you are called
by Christ to the ministry. I do not say that all ministers are so
qualified, but only that anyone who is so qualified should be
careful
how he chooses some other calling in preference to the ministry.
Paul concludes this portion of his Epistle with a pathetic
comparison
of his condition as an Apostle with the condition of those in
Corinth
who were glorying in this or that teacher. They spoke as if they
needed his instructions no more, and as if already they had attained
the highest Christian advantages. "Already ye are full; already ye
are rich: ye have reigned as kings without us." They behave as if
all the trial of the Christian life were over. With the frothy
spirit
of young converts, they are full of a triumph which they despise
Paul
for not inculcating. By one leap they had attained, or thought they
had attained, a superiority to all disturbance, and to all trial,
and
to all need of teaching, which, in fact, as Paul’s own experience
taught him, could only be attained in another life. While they thus
triumphed, he who had begotten them in Christ was being treated as
the offscouring and filth of the world.
Paul can only compare himself and the other Apostles to those
gladiators who were condemned to die, and who came into the arena
last, after the spectators had been sated with other exhibitions and
bloodless performances. "I think that God hath set forth us the
Apostles last, as it were appointed to death. For we are made a
spectacle unto the world, and to angels and to men." They came into
the arena knowing they should never leave it alive, that they were
there for the purpose of enduring the worst their enemies could do
to
them. It was no fight with buttoned foils Paul and the rest were
engaged in. While others sat comfortably looking on, with curtains
to
shade them from the heat and refreshments to save them from
exhaustion or from faintness at the sight of blood, they were in the
arena, exposed to wounds, ill usage, and death. They had as little
hope of retiring to live a quiet life as the gladiators who had said
farewell to their friends and saluted the Emperor as those about to
die. Life became no easier, the world no kinder, to Paul as time
went
on. "Even unto this present hour of writing," he says, "we both
hunger and thirst, and are naked, and are buffeted, and have no
certain dwelling place." Here is the finest mind, the noblest
spirit, on earth; and this is how he is treated: driven from place
to
place, thrust aside as interrupting the proper work of men, passed
by
with a sneer at his rags, refused the commonest charity, paid for
his
loving words in blows and insolence. And yet he goes on with his
work, and lets nothing interrupt that. "Being reviled, we bless;
being persecuted, we suffer it; being defamed, we entreat." Nay, it
is a life which he is so far from giving up himself, that he will
call to it the easy-going Christians of Corinth. "I beseech you,"
he says, "be ye followers of me."
And if the contrast between Paul’s precarious and self-sacrificing
life and the luxurious and self-complacent life of the Corinthians
might be expected to shame them into some vigorous Christian
service,
a similar contrast candidly considered may accomplish some good
results in us. Already the Corinthians were accepting that
pernicious
conception of Christianity which looks upon it as merely a new
luxury, that they who are already comfortable in all outward
respects
may be comforted in spirit as well and purge their minds from all
anxieties, questionings, and strivings. They recognised how happy a
thing it is to be forgiven, to be at peace with God, to have a sure
hope of life everlasting. For them the battle was over, the conquest
won, the throne ascended. As yet they had not caught a glimpse of
what is involved in becoming holy as Christ is holy, nor had
steadily
conceived in their minds the profound inward change which must pass
upon them. As yet it was enough for them that they were called to be
God’s children, provided for by a heavenly Father; and Christ’s own
view of life and of men had not yet possessed or even dawned upon
their soul, causing them to feel that until they could live for
others they had no true life.
Are there none still who listen to Christianity rather as a voice
soothing their fears than as a bugle summoning them to conflict, who
are satisfied if through the Gospel they are enabled to comfort
their
own soul, and who do not yet respond to Christ’s call to live under
the power of that Spirit of His which prompted Him to all sacrifice?
Paul does not summon the whole Church to be homeless, destitute,
comfortless, outcast from all joy; and yet there is meaning in his
words when he says, "Be ye followers of me." He means that there is
not one standard of duty for him and another for us. All is wrong
with us until we be made somehow to recognise, and make room in our
life for the recognition, that we have no right to be lapping
ourselves round with all manner of selfish aggrandisement while Paul
is driven through life with scarcely one day’s bread provided, that
in some way intelligible to our own conscience we must approve
ourselves to be his followers, and that no right is secured to any
class of Christians to stand selfishly aloof from the common
Christian cause. If we be Christ’s, as Paul was, it must inevitably
come to this with us: that we cordially yield to him all we are and
have; our very selves, with all our tastes and aptitudes and with
all
we have made by our toil; our life, with all its fruits, we gladly
yield to Him. If our hearts be His, this is inevitable and
delightful; unless they be so, it is impossible, and seems
extravagant. It is vain to say to a man, Serve only yourself in
life,
seek only to make a reputation for yourself and gather comforts
round
yourself, and make it the aim of your life to be comfortable and
respectable—it is vain to bid a man thus limit and impoverish his
life if at the same time you show him a person so attracting human
allegiance as Christ does, and so opening to men wider and eternal
aims as He floes, and if you show him a cause so kindling every
right
ambition as Christ’s cause does.
It was Christ’s own self-sacrifice that threw such a spell over the
Apostles and gave them so new a feeling towards their fellow men and
so new an estimate of their deepest needs. After seeing how Christ
lived, they could never again justify themselves in living for self.
After seeing His regardlessness of bodily comfort, His superiority
to
traditional necessities and customary luxuries, after witnessing how
veritably He was but passing through this world, and used it as the
stage on which he might serve God and men, and counted His life best
spent in giving it for others, they could not settle down into the
old life and aim only at passing comfortably, reputably, and
religiously through it. That view of life was made forever
impossible
to them. The life of Christ had made a new way for itself into a new
region, and the horizon rent by the passage never again closed to
them. That life became the only spiritual reality to them. And it is
because we are so sunk in self-seeking and worldliness, and so
blinded by the customs and traditional ideas about spending life,
about acquitting ourselves well and making a name, about earning a
competence, about everything which turns the regard in upon self
instead of outwards upon objects worthy of our exertion—it is
therefore that we continue so unapostolic, so unprofitable, so
unchanged.
It might encourage us to bring our life more nearly into the line of
Paul’s were we to see clearly that the cause he served is really
inclusive of all that is worth working for. We can scarcely
apprehend
this with any clearness without feeling some enthusiasm for it. The
kind of devotedness expected of the Christian is illustrated in
the lives of all men of any force of character; the Christian’s
devotedness is only given to a larger and more reasonable object.
There have been statesmen and patriots, and there still are such,
who, though possibly not absolutely devoid of some taint of selfish
ambition, are yet in the main devoted to their country; its
interests
are continually on their mind and heart, their time is given wholly
to it, and their own personal tastes and pursuits are held in
abeyance and abandoned to make room for more important labour. You
have seen men become so enamoured of a cause that they will
literally
sell all they have to forward it, and who obviously have it on their
hearts by night and by day, who live for that and for nothing else;
you can detect as often as you meet them that the real aim and
object
of their life is to promote that cause. Some new movement, political
or ecclesiastical, some literary scheme, some fresh enterprise of
benevolence, some new commercial idea, or no matter what it is, you
have seen again and again that men throw themselves so thoroughly
into such causes that they cannot be said to be living for
themselves. They will part with time, with property, with other
important objects, with health, even with life itself, for the sake
of their cherished, chosen cause. And when such a cause is worthy,
such as the reformation of prison discipline, or the emancipation of
slaves, or the liberating of an oppressed nation, the men who adopt
it seem to lead the only lives which have some semblance of glory in
them; and the sacrifices they make, the obloquy they incur, the
toils
they endure, make the heart burn and swell as we hear of them.
Everyone instinctively acknowledges that such self-forgetful and
heroic lives are the right and model lives for all. What a man does
for himself is jealously examined, criticised, and passed at the
most
with an exclamation of wonder; but what he does for others is
welcomed with acclamation as an honour to our common humanity. So
long as a man labours merely for himself, to win himself a name, to
get for himself a possession, he makes no valuable contribution to
the world’s good, and only by accident effects anything for which
other men are thankful; but let a man even with small means at his
command have the interests of others at his heart, and he sets in
motion endless agencies and influences that bless whatever they
touch.
It is this then that our Lord does for us by claiming our service;
He
gives us the opportunity of sinking our selfishness, which is in the
last analysis our sin, and of living for a worthier object than our
own pleasure or our own careful preservation. When He tells us to
live for Him and to seek the things that are His, He but tells us in
other words and in a more attractive and practical form to seek the
common good. We seek the things that are Christ’s when we act as
Christ would act were He in our place, when we let Christ live
through us, when we, by considering what He would have us do, let
His
influence still tell on the world and His will still be done in the
world. This should be so done by each and every Christian that the
result would be the same as if Christ had personally at command all
the resources for good that are possessed by His people, as if He
were Himself spending all the money, energy, and time that are being
expended by His people, so that at every point where there is a
Christian Christ’s purposes might be being forwarded. This is the
devotedness we are called to; this is the devotedness we must
cultivate until we do make some considerable attainment in it.
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