Tried by Its Fruits
J. C. Ryle
"Every tree is known by his own fruit." Luke 6:44
Our lot is cast in times when there is a tendency to try
all ancient institutions by their results. Schools, colleges, universities,
corporations, old endowed charities, all are successively put into the
crucible, and placed in the furnace. "Will an institution stand the fire? Is
the result of the operation, dross or good metal?" These are the only
questions which men require to be answered.
Now, I wish to apply this great principle to the religion
which our Lord Jesus Christ brought into the world nineteen hundred years
ago. Some men tell us that it is an effete and worn-out thing, utterly
unsuited to the twentieth century. Christianity, in short, is regarded with
contempt by many who call themselves leaders of thought in modern times.
Like an old almanac, its work is done, and it may be thrown aside! Its Bible
and its Sundays, its ministers and its worship, its prayers and its
sacraments, all are unworthy of the notice of intellectual men, and may be
safely neglected, smiled at, and handed over to the ignorant and the poor!
Such is the line of thinking, writing, and talking in too many quarters.
Now, my simple object in this paper is to point out the
unreasonableness, not to say dishonesty, of ignoring the enormous results
and effects which Christianity has produced in the world. I ask the sceptic
and the agnostic to try Christianity by its fruits. I defy them to
deny the existence of those fruits. I say that mankind owes a huge debt to
Christianity, whether mankind knows it or not, of which the amount can never
be calculated. In short, the fruits of Christianity are an unanswerable
proof to my own mind of its Divine origin, and a stupendous difficulty in
the way of infidelity, which has never been fairly grappled with or
explained away. They demand attention. They court investigation.
There are only two points to which I shall invite the
attention of my readers.
I. For one thing, let us consider briefly some of the
fruits which Christianity has produced in the world.
II. For another, let us consider the leading doctrines by
whose agency these fruits have been produced.
I do not for a moment pretend to bring forward anything
new or deep. I am going to speak of ancient, familiar things, which anyone
of average intelligence can understand. But it is precisely the simplicity
of my argument which makes many overlook it. We have so many great swelling
words in this day from the enemies of Christianity, about "laws of nature,
development, matter, germs, force," and the like, that we are apt to forget
the immense mass of evidence in favor of revealed religion which is lying
close by our side.
I. In the first place, what fruits has Christianity
produced in the world?
We are not fit to consider this question, unless we
realize the actual condition of the world when Christianity was introduced.
We must remember that the Augustan age, when the Lord Jesus Christ was born
and His Church founded, was the era when heathenism had carried art and
literature to the highest pitch of excellence. Even at this day the temples
of Luxor and Carnac, the Parthenon at Athens, and the Coliseum at Rome—are
among the most remarkable buildings in the world. The works of Homer, and
Herodotus, and Thucydides, and Eschylus, and Sophocles, and Euripides, and
Plato, among the Greeks—of Cicero, and Tacitus, and Virgil, and
Horace, among the Romans—are admired and read by almost all educated
men, and in their way are unsurpassed after nineteen centuries have passed
away. In short, if the education of mind, and reason, and intellect, and the
cultivation of art and literature, could make men holy and happy in this
life, and give them a good hope for the life to come, the world, before
Christ, did not need the introduction of Christianity.
But what was the world before Christ, even the most
polished and refined portion of it—in the matter of religion and morality?
That is the question. The answer may be given in the words of Paul, "The
world by wisdom knew not God" (1 Cor. 1. 21). Darkness, thick darkness,
covered the earth. Athens and Rome were full of magnificent temples, in
which men worshiped images of gold, and silver, and wood, and stone—the work
of their own hands. The greatest philosophers, such as Socrates, groped, as
in the night. The doctrine of the Being of the true God seems to have been
completely lost—and in its place the most debasing idolatry and groveling
superstition universally prevailed.
The following passage from Wilson's admirable Lectures on
Christian Evidences, contains a picture which I believe is not one bit
over-colored, "Whether you consider the barbarian nations, or those which
were most polished—whether you look back to the earliest times of which we
have any authentic history, or those nearer the birth of our Lord—all was
one thick, impenetrable mass of moral disorder and ruin. The most abject and
disgusting idolatry, the worship of the beasts and birds, of stocks and
stones, the deification of kings and warriors, of human virtues and vices,
of insects and creeping things, and even of that most disgusting of all
reptiles, the serpent, prevailed. The most atrocious practices were
interwoven with the histories and ceremonies of these wretched deities. From
this source, aided by the corrupt heart of man, flowed out a torrent of
vices and abominations in public and private life. Fraud, theft, rapine,
revenge, suicide, fornication, adultery, murder of infants, unnatural
crimes, the atrocious cruelties of war, the slavery and oppression of
captives, gladiatorial shows—not only abounded, but were patronized and
practiced by the great body of men."
Hear what Wilson says in another passage—"The heathen
were impure and abominable even in their religion. Their gods and goddesses
were profligate, impure, revengeful, odious. The very light that was in them
was darkness. For what could the histories of Jupiter, Juno, and Bacchus,
and Mercury, and Venus teach—but vice and drunkenness, and lewdness, and
theft, and fraud! How heinous were the Floralia, and Bacchanalia, and
Saturnalia! 'It is a shame,' observes the great Apostle, 'even to speak of
those things which are done of them in secret' (Ephes. v. 12). Christians,
as individuals, may be wicked and unjust, and, alas! often are so. But this
is notwithstanding their religion, and in spite of it, as Warburton has
fairly remarked, and therefore cases of the grossest iniquity are rare. The
heathen, on the contrary, were impure and abominable in consequence of their
religion, and because of it; and therefore a depravity of which we have
scarcely a conception prevailed—and virtue and purity were rare and
uncommon."
Now I believe this terrible picture of the world before
Christ is not one bit overdrawn. I believe it would be easy to confirm its
accuracy by reference to Greek and Latin authors. But it would be impossible
to do so without bringing forward things of which "it is a shame even to
speak." I only ask Christians to remember that the first chapter of the
Epistle to the Romans, which is often not read through in public, contains a
plain, unvarnished description of heathenism as it really was in the days of
Paul.
But what was the agency by which this awful state of
things in the heathen world was altered, amended, and gradually swept away
throughout all the Roman empire? That it has been swept away is a simple
historical fact. But what wrought the change? What was it that emptied the
heathen temples, destroyed the vocation of the idolatrous priesthood, raised
the whole standard of morality, and, to use the words of Scripture, "turned
the world upside down?" (Acts 17. 6). I answer, unhesitatingly, the
introduction and progress of Christianity! How vast, and wide, and deep the
change was we can hardly realize at this present day. What is before our
eyes in Europe we know. What was, when heathenism reigned supreme, we cannot
grasp and take in.
I ask your attention to the following eloquent passage
from the pen of a writer.
"The argument which meets us first in surveying the
history of Christianity, and in estimating the outstanding and singular
features of its success—is its early, wide, and within certain limits
absolutely irresistible diffusion. Other facts attest this: but I select one
as to which there can be no controversy, the extirpation by it of idolatry
such as existed in the old Roman world. That system, from the Euphrates to
the furthest shore of Britain, from the Nile to the forest of Germany, has
utterly passed away. The whole regions around the Mediterranean, to the
limits of civilization, and beyond them, 'have changed their gods;' and the
great decisive, all-prevailing impulses have come from Christianity. The
classic Paganism, Greek and Roman, the Assyrian, the Egyptian and North
African, the Druidic, and ultimately the Teutonic—have all fallen to rise no
more; and at this moment there is not on the face of the earth a single
worshipper of the 'great goddess Diana,' or, 'the image that fell down from
Jupiter,' of Baal or Dagon, of Isis or Serapis, of Thor or Odin. They are
preserved in imperishable literature, and in equally imperishable art. Homer
and the great tragedians have enshrined them. Virgil and Ovid record them,
and even Milton in his Paradise Lost; to say nothing of that wonderful Book,
which, in revealing their abominations, will be found to have carried
furthest and widest their memory. But not a single shrine remains to them in
the proper sense of the word, not even where the Apollo, or Venus, the
Minerva, or Hercules, enchain universal admiration. They are abolished as
idols, while immortalized as relics; and not even the exquisite beauty
lavished upon them can hide the moral deformity to which they owe their
downfall. It is long centuries since one simple soul regarded them with
anything of the feeling with which the African trembles before the rudest
fetish, or the Hindoo before the most unsightly of his divinities. Another
conquest so complete and absolute does not mark the history of the world.
All ranks and classes passed through the revolution. The farmer had to give
up his offerings to Liber and Ceres, the sailor his votive tablets to
Neptune, the soldier his chaplets to Mars. The youth had to forget his place
in the procession, the virgin her part in the dance, or secular games. The
senator had to forego his libation on entering the senate, the general his
search after the omens before battle, the very emperor the honor of his own
coins and titles of divinity. What but an immense and boundless power could
have wrought this change, and wrought it, not by constraint, but willingly,
through the force of persuasion?" (The Success of Christianity, by Cairns,
pp. 5, 6).
Will any of those who profess to deny the truth of
Christianity deny the facts which this passage contains? It is impossible.
He will find all history against him. But if he cannot deny the facts, he
ought to tell us how they can on his principles be accounted for. We say
they are irrefragable and unanswerable proofs that Christianity came down
from God.
Great, however, as the fruits of Christianity have been
in the overthrow and destruction of idolatry, they are fully equaled, if not
surpassed, by the enormous practical results which Christianity has
produced on the moral standard and social conduct of mankind. About
human life and property—about women, children, servants, and the poor—about
justice and equity between man and man—about decency, purity, and
charity—about all these subjects the standard of public opinion has been
entirely changed since the Gospel leavened the Roman world.
Once more I ask attention to a passage in which another
writer has ably summed up the practical results of Christianity.
"We fear no challenge when we affirm that in its purest
form Christianity has fostered the ideas, and encouraged the habits out of
which all true civilization springs. It has fostered regard for man
as essentially a noble being, having an immortal soul made in God's image,
with boundless capacities of expansion and improvement; regard for woman
as the helpmeet and companion of man—not his drudge, or slave, or
concubine; regard for marriage as a holy contract entered into before
God, not to be lightly set aside; regard for children as the heritage
of the Lord—not burdens or encumbrances, but lent by the Lord to be brought
up for Him; regard for the family as a divine institution, intended
to be a fountain of holy joys, and a nursery of all wholesome habits, and
all kindly affections: regard for the sick, the infirm, and
the aged, whose sorrows we are ever to pity, and whose privations we
are to make up in some measure from our more ample stores. The very word
Christian, in its true spirit, has been identified with all these ideas
and habits; in that sense it has a glory all its own." (Christianity and
Secularism, by Dr. Blaikie, p. 5).
It would be perfectly easy to add to the statements
contained in this passage, if time and space permitted. The difficulty in
the matter is not so much the discovery of evidence as the
selection of it. The mass of facts which might be adduced to show the
rich and blessed fruits of Christianity is simply enormous, and I pity the
sceptic who refuses to look at it. To those who care to investigate the
subject more fully I strongly recommend two volumes which have recently been
published. One is called "Gesta Christi," by an American writer named Brace.
The other is called Modern Missions and Culture, by Dr. Werneck, a German.
Each of these volumes contains a vast quantity of valuable information which
is accessible to few English readers, and will richly repay perusal.
I admit, most fully, that there have been periods during
the last nineteen centuries, when the fruits of Christianity have been
miserably scanty and poor, and the tree which bore them has seemed rotten
and only fit to be cut down. I do not forget the corruption of faith and
practice in the dark ages—the hideous immorality of many bishops of Rome—the
vile doings of many monasteries and nunneries—the ignorance and superstition
of priests—the groveling superstition of laymen. These are things I do not
pretend to deny. I grant that the tide of truth sometimes ebbed so low that
it was almost out of sight, and the light was so dim that it was well-near
extinguished. But it must be remembered that in the worst times, there were
always some men who protested loudly against the wickedness around them,
such as Bradwardine, and Grostete, and Wycliffe, and John Huss, and Jerome
of Prague, and Savonarola. And there were always some scattered bodies of
Christians who, by life and doctrine, witnessed faithfully against
corruption, such as the Valenses and Albigenses, the Waldensian Churches,
and the Lollards. And, after all, if the state of the Roman world in the
days of the Apostle, and the state of the world at this day could be fairly
compared, there is not the slightest doubt what the verdict would be. The
change for the better would be found so vast—that no words could describe
it. The fruits of Christianity are such, in spite of all failures and
defects, that the moral difference between the world before Christ and the
world after Christ is the difference between gold and dross, sweet and
bitter, white and black, darkness and light!
The plain truth is, that we are all so familiar with the
public blessings which Christianity has insensibly conferred on the world,
that we cannot realize the condition of things from which it has delivered
us. Few men take the trouble to read or think about anything except eating,
drinking, dressing, business, politics, recreation, money, and
temporalities. The many never reflect on the enormous debt which they daily
owe to the effects of Bible religion, and the very Christianity which so
many pretend to despise. Does the infidel, who lies in some hospital for
weeks, tenderly nursed and cared for—ever reflect that without Christianity
there would have been no hospital at all? I doubt it. Does the British
workman, who never goes to a place of worship, and never reads his Bible,
and often sneers at parsons—ever reflect that without Christianity he would
never have been sure of his wages, and would have often been treated as a
slave and a serf? I doubt it. Does the high-born woman of fashion, who makes
a god of dress and amusement, and regards "religious people" with
ill-disguised contempt—ever reflect that without Christianity she would have
enjoyed little liberty of action, little independence of thought or choice,
and her very honor would have been little respected. I doubt it. Does the
scientific agnostic, who sits at home at ease, and despises churches,
clergymen, and Bibles, and ignores his soul—does he ever fairly and honestly
reflect that without Christianity he would have had little safety for
property, home, or person, little liberty of thought, and little chance of
justice if he came in collision with the ruling power? Does he, I say, think
of all this? Once more, I say, I doubt it. In short, I am firmly convinced
that of all the debts which have been repudiated since creation, there never
was one so shamefully ignored and repudiated as the debt which the world
owes to Christianity! If revealed religion could only be fairly tried by its
fruits, there is no doubt what the verdict would be. Secularism,
agnosticism, scepticism, and infidelity would be confounded and silenced
forever. I will now turn to the other point which I undertook to consider.
II. Let us inquire what were the leading doctrines of
Christianity by the agency of which its fruits have been produced.
I regard this point as one of great importance. It is
certain that not everything called Christianity, is the
Christianity which was taught by Christ and His Apostles. It is equally
certain that nothing but "the tree" that they planted, will ever bear good
fruit. To expect good fruit from the grossly unscriptural religion of
pre-Reformation days, or from the vague, hazy, broad, boneless,
jelly-fish teaching, which many call religion in the twentieth century,
is unreasonable and absurd. Such religions never yet bore good fruit—they
never can and they never will.
Fruit-bearing Christianity has never been a mere
vicarious religion. By that I mean a religion which teaches men to put
their souls in the hands of a priest, and to leave him to settle
matters between them and God. Nor yet has it been a mere formal and
ceremonial religion. By that I mean a religion which teaches men to
rest in the observation of times and seasons, and gestures and postures, and
bodily acts, in which the heart and soul have nothing to do. Nor yet has it
been a religion of mere asceticism. By that I mean a religion which
teaches men and women that the way to please God is to shut ourselves up in
monasteries and nunneries, and leave the world to itself. Nor yet has it
been a mind-cramping religion. By that I mean a religion which
teaches men that they must not think and read for themselves, but must shut
their eyes, and hear the Church, and believe whatever they are told.
Christianity of these kinds, I repeat emphatically, has never borne good
fruit. Whenever and wherever it has prevailed, in any country or at any era,
such religion has done little or no good to the world. It has made no mark
on lives or characters. It has been no better than a refined and polished
heathenism, a stuffed carcass, a whitened sepulchre, a body without life. It
has certainly supplied no evidence to silence the sceptic, or to prove the
truth of Divine revelation.
The Christianity which I call fruit-bearing—which shows
its Divine origin by its blessed effects on mankind—the Christianity which
you may safely defy infidels to explain away—that Christianity is a very
different thing. Let me show you some of its leading marks and features.
(1) True Christianity has always taught the inspiration,
sufficiency, and supremacy of Holy Scripture.
It has told men that "God's written Word" is the only trustworthy rule of
faith and practice in religion; that God requires nothing to be believed
that is not in this Word; and that nothing is right which contradicts it. It
has never allowed reason, or the voice of the Church, to be placed above, or
on a level with Scripture. It has steadily maintained that, however
imperfectly we may understand it, the Old Book is meant to be the only
standard of life and doctrine.
(2) True Christianity has always taught fully the
sinfulness, guilt and corruption of human nature.
It has told men, that they are born in sin, deserve God's wrath and
condemnation, and are naturally inclined to do evil. It has never allowed
that men and women are only weak and pitiable creatures, who can become good
when they please, and make their own peace with God. On the contrary, it has
steadily declared man's danger and vileness, and his pressing need of a
Divine forgiveness and atonement for his sins, a new birth or conversion,
and an entire change of heart.
(3) True Christianity has always set before men, the Lord
Jesus Christ as the chief object of
faith and hope in religion--as the Divine Mediator between God and men, the
only source of peace of conscience, and the root of all spiritual life. It
has never been content to teach that He is merely our Prophet, our Example,
and our Judge. The main things it has ever insisted on about Christ--are the
atonement for sin He made by His death, His sacrifice on the cross, the
complete redemption from guilt and condemnation by His blood, His victory
over the grave by His resurrection, His active life of intercession at God's
right hand, and the absolute necessity of simple faith in Him. In short, it
has made Christ the Alpha and the Omega in Christian theology.
(4) True Christianity has always honored the Person of
God the Holy Spirit, and magnified His
work. It has never taught that all professing Christians have the grace of
the Spirit in their hearts, as a matter of course--because they are
baptized, or because they belong to the Church. It has steadily maintained
that the fruits of the Spirit are the only evidence of having the Spirit,
and that those fruits must be seen! It has always taught, that we must be
born of the Spirit, led by the Spirit, sanctified by the Spirit, and feel
the operations of the Spirit—and that a close walk with God in the path of
His commandments, a life of holiness, love, self-denial, purity, and zeal to
do good--are the only satisfactory marks of the Holy Spirit.
Such is true Christianity. Well would it have been for
the world if there had been more of it during the last nineteen centuries!
Too often, and in too many parts of Christendom, there has been so little of
it--that Christ's religion has seemed extinct, and has fallen into utter
contempt! But just in proportion as such Christianity as I have described
has prevailed--the world has benefitted, the infidel been silenced, and the
truth of Divine revelation been acknowledged. The tree has been known by its
fruit.
This is the Christianity which, in the days of the
Apostles, "turned the world upside down." It was this that emptied the idol
temples of their worshipers, routed the Greek and Roman philosophers, and
obliged even heathen writers to confess that the followers of the "new
superstition," as they called it, were people who loved one another, and
lived very pure and holy lives!
This is the Christianity which, after dreary centuries of
ignorance, priestcraft, and superstition, produced the Protestant
Reformation, and changed the history of Europe. The leading doctrines which
were preached by Luther and Zwingli on the Continent, and by Latimer and his
companions in England, were precisely those which I have briefly described.
That they bore rich fruit, in an immense increase of general morality and
holiness, is a simple fact which no historian has ever denied.
This is the Christianity which, in the middle of last
century, delivered our own Church from the state of deadness and darkness
into which she had fallen. The main truths on which Whitfield, and Wesley,
and Romaine, and Venn, and their companions, continually insisted, were the
truth about sin, Christ, the Holy Spirit, and holiness. And the results were
the same as they were in the primitive days, and at the era the Reformation.
Men persecuted and hated all who taught these truths. But no one could say
that they did not make men live and die well.
This is the Christianity which is doing good at this day,
wherever good is done. Search the missionary stations in Africa, India, or
China. Visit the great over-grown, semi-heathen parishes in colliery
districts or manufacturing towns in our own land. In every case you will
find the same report must be made. The only religious teaching which can
show solid, positive results, is that which gives prominence to the
doctrines which I have endeavored to describe. Wherever they are rightly
taught, Christianity can point to fruits which are an unanswerable proof of
its Divine origin.
So much for fruit-bearing Christianity. I leave the
subject with one remark about it. Let it never be forgotten, that its
leading principles are those which are least likely to please the natural
man. On the contrary, they are precisely those which are calculated to be
unpopular and to give offence. Proud man does not like to be told that he is
a weak, guilty sinner—that he cannot save his own soul, and must trust in
the work of another—that he must be converted and have a new heart—that he
must live a holy, self-denying life, and come out from the world. Surely the
mere fact that this kind of unpopular teaching characterizes successful
Christianity, and bears fruit in the world, is a strong evidence that
Christianity is a Divine revelation, and really comes from God.
And now I will conclude this paper with four words of
PRACTICAL APPLICATION, which I shall address to four different
classes of people.
1. In the first place, I have a word for those who are
tempted to give way to scepticism and unbelief, and are half disposed to
throw overboard Christianity altogether.
What shall I say to you?
Listen, and I will tell you.
I entreat you, before you go any further, to deal
honestly with the Christian religion and those who profess it, and try it by
its fruits. That there is such a religion in the midst of us, and that there
are thousands who profess it, are simple facts which nobody can deny. These
thousands believe certain great truths of Christianity, and live and die in
their belief. Let it be admitted that, in some points, these men of faith do
not agree—such as the Church, the ministry, and the sacraments. But after
every deduction, there remains an immense amount of common theology, about
which their faith is one. On such points as sin, and God, and Christ, and
the atonement, and the authority of the Bible, and the importance of
holiness, and the necessity of prayer, and self-denial, and the value of the
soul, and the reality of heaven and hell, and judgment, and eternity—on such
points as these, I say, all Christian men are very much of one mind.
Now, I ask all sceptics and agnostics, is it honest to
turn away from this Christian religion with contempt, because those who
profess it have many weaknesses and infirmities? Is it fair to despise their
religion, and wrap yourself up in unbelief, because of their controversies
and strifes, their feeble literature and their party spirit? Is it fair to
ignore the fruits of peace, and hope and comfort, which they enjoy? Mark the
solid work which, with all their faults, they do in the world—in lessening
sorrow and sin, and increasing happiness, and improving their fellow-men.
What fruits and work can unbelief show which will bear comparison with the
fruits of faith? What good has secularism, or agnosticism, or deism, done to
mankind? What missions have they sent forth to the world? What cities or
countries on earth have they civilized, purified, and made more holy and
happy? What have the gods which some despisers of revelation seem to
worship—evolution, development, matter, force, destiny—what have they done
to enable men to meet the many ills to which all flesh is heir? What aching
consciences have they relieved? What broken hearts have they bound up? What
sick-beds have they cheered? What bereaved parents and widows have they
comforted? We ask in vain! We shall get no answer! Look these facts in the
face—and deal honestly with them. Systems ought to be judged by their
"fruits" and results. When the so-called systems of modern unbelief and
scepticism, and free thought, can point to as much good done in the world by
their adherents as Christianity has done by the hand of its friends, we may
give them some attention. But until they do that, I boldly say that the
simple, old-fashioned Christianity has a just claim on our respect, esteem,
and obedience, and ought not to be lightly esteemed, ridiculed, or
despised.
2. In the second place, I have a word for those
professing Christians who have no life or reality in their religion, and are
only nominal members of Christ's Church.
I need hardly say there
are myriads of people in this condition. They are not sceptics, and would be
justly offended if you called them infidels or agnostics. Yet, if truth must
be spoken, except going to church or chapel on Sundays, they give no
evidence of true Christianity. If you mark their daily life, they seem
neither to think, nor feel, nor care for their souls, or God, or eternity.
Now, I warn any readers of this paper who are in this
state, and I say it with pain, that you are the true cause of a vast
proportion of infidelity! I remember a careless sceptic saying—"Do you think
I am going to believe your Christianity when I see so many of your
church-goers behaving as they do? Do you mean to tell me that they think
their creed is true, and that they really believe in a resurrection and a
judgment to come? It will be time enough for me to believe—when I see your
people really believing. At present your Christianity seems a great
sham and a mere form." Alas! such talk as this is only too much justified by
facts. Nothing, nothing, I am convinced, does so much to help the progress
of modern infidelity—as the utter absence of reality and earnestness among
professing Christians. Men and women who crowd churches on Sundays—and then
live worldly selfish lives all the week—are the best and most efficient
allies of the devil. "If you believed what you repeat under the pulpit," the
sceptic says, "you would never live as you live at home." Oh! that people
would think of the mischief done by inconsistency. "Awake, you who sleep—and
arise from the dead." It is bad enough to ruin your own soul. But do not add
to your sin by ruining others.
3. In the third place, I have a word for those sincere
but weak-minded Christians who are surprised and frightened at the unbelief
of these latter days, and live in a constant state of panic and alarm.
What shall I say to you? Listen, and I will tell you.
I ask you, then, to look to your Bibles, and lay aside
your fears. There is nothing in unbelief which ought to surprise you.
Search the Scriptures, and you will find that the unbelief of the twentieth
century is only an old enemy in a new dress—an old disease in a
new form. Since the day when Adam and Eve fell, the devil has never
ceased to tempt men not to believe God, and has said, directly or
indirectly, "You shall not die even if you do not believe." In the latter
days especially we have warrant of Scripture for expecting an abundant crop
of unbelief: "When the Son of Man comes, shall he find faith on the earth?"
"Evil men and seducers shall wax worse and worse." "There shall come in the
last days scoffers." (Luke 18. 5; 2 Tim. 3. 13; 2 Peter 3. 3). Here in
England, scepticism is that natural rebound from semi-popery and
superstition, which many wise men have long predicted and expected. It is
precisely that swing of the pendulum which far-sighted students of human
nature anticipated—and it has come.
But as I tell you not to be surprised at the widespread
scepticism of the times, so also I must urge you not to be shaken in mind by
it, or moved from your steadfastness. There is no real cause for alarm. The
ark of God is not in danger, though the oxen seem to shake it. Christianity
has survived the attacks of Hume and Hobbes and Tindal—of Collins and
Woolston and Bolingbroke and Chubb—of Voltaire and Payne and Holyoake. These
men made a great noise in their day, and frightened weak people—but they
produced no more effect than idle travelers produce, by scratching their
names on the pyramid of Egypt. Depend on it, Christianity in like manner
will survive the attacks of the clever writers of these times! The startling
novelty of many modern objections to Revelation, no doubt, makes them seem
more weighty than they really are. It does not follow, however, that hard
knots cannot be untied—because our fingers cannot untie
them; or that formidable difficulties cannot be explained—because our
eyes cannot see through or explain them. When you cannot answer a sceptic,
be content to wait for more light; but never forsake a great
principle. In religion, as in many scientific questions, said Faraday, "the
highest wisdom is often a judicious suspense." We can afford to wait.
4. In the last place, I have a word for all true
believers who lament the spread of unbelief, though their own faith is
unshaken.
What shall I say to them? What advice shall I offer?
Listen, and I will tell you.
I must plainly say, and I say it with sorrow, that we who
profess the Christian faith, and are never troubled with unbelief, are not
altogether free from blame. Too often our faith is little better than a mere
"mental assent" to certain theological propositions, but not a living,
burning, active principle, which works by love, purifies the heart,
overcomes the world, and brings forth much fruit of holiness and good works.
It is not the faith which made primitive Christians rejoice under Roman
persecution, and made Luther stand up boldly before the Diet of Worms, and
made Ridley and Latimer "love not their lives to the death," and made Wesley
give up his position at Oxford to become an evangelist of England. We are
truly guilty in this matter. If there was more real living faith on earth—I
suspect there would be less unbelief. Scepticism, in many a case, would
shrink, and dwindle, and melt away—if it saw faith more awake, and alive,
and active, and stirring. Let us, for Christ's sake, and the sake of souls,
amend our ways in this matter. Let us pray daily, "Lord, increase our
faith." Let us live, and move, and have our being, and deal with men, as if
we really believed every jot and tittle of Scripture, and as if a dying,
risen, interceding, and coming Christ were continually before our eyes! We
may depend on it the old saying is true—"the inconsistency of believers is
the infidel's best argument."
This, I am firmly convinced, is the surest way to oppose
and diminish unbelief. Let the time past suffice us to have lived content
with a cold, tame assent to creeds. Let the time to come find us
living, active believers. It was a solemn saying which fell from the lips of
an eminent minister of Christ on his death-bed, "We are none of us more than
half awake!" If believers were more thorough, and real, and whole-hearted in
their belief, there would be far less unbelief in the world.
The words at the head of this paper contain a mine of
truth—"Every tree is known by his own fruit." If the tree of Christianity
bore more fruit, the axe of infidelity would never harm it—and would be laid
to its root in vain!