The life
EVERLASTING
Let us now consider the life which
we can look forward to with certainty after death,
and the moral government of the world here on earth.
If we could hear the leaves complaining
to one another that they must die, and commiserating
the hardness of their lot in having ever been induced
to bud forth, we should, I imagine, despise them
for their peevishness more than we should pity them.
We should tell them that though we could not see
reason for thinking that they would ever hang again
upon the same-or any at all similar-bough as the
same individual leaves, after they had once faded
and fallen off, yet that as they had been changing
personalities without feeling it during the whole
of their leafhood, so they would on death continue
to do this selfsame thing by entering into new phases
of life. True, death will deprive them of conscious
memory concerning their now current life; but, though
they die as leaves, they live in the tree whom they
have helped to vivify, and whose growth and continued
well-being is due solely to this life and death of
its component personalities.
We consider the cells which are born
and die within us yearly to have been sufficiently
honoured [sic] in having contributed their quotum
to our life; why should we have such difficulty in
seeing that a healthy enjoyment and employment of
our life will give us a sufficient reward in that
growth of God wherein we may live more truly and
effectually after death than we have lived when we
were conscious of existence? Is Handel dead
when he influences and sets in motion more human
beings in three months now than during the whole,
probably, of the years in which he thought that he
was alive? What is being alive if the power to
draw men for many miles in order that they may put
themselves en rapport with him is not being so?
True, Handel no longer knows the power which he has
over us, but this is a small matter; he no longer
animates six feet of flesh and blood, but he lives
in us as the dead leaf lives in the tree. He
is with God, and God knows him though he knows himself
no more.
This should suffice, and I observe
in practice does suffice, for all reasonable persons.
It may be said that one day the tree itself must
die, and the leaves no longer live therein; and so,
also, that the very God or Life of the World will
one day perish, as all that is born must surely in
the end die. But they who fret upon such grounds
as this must be in so much want of a grievance that
it were a cruelty to rob them of one: if a man
who is fond of music tortures himself on the ground
that one day all possible combinations and permutations
of sounds will have been exhausted so that there
can be no more new tunes, the only thing we can do
with him is to pity him and leave him; nor is there
any better course than this to take with those idle
people who worry them selves and others on the score
that they will one day be unable to remember the
small balance of their lives that they have not already
forgotten as unimportant to them-that they will one
day die to the balance of what they have not already
died to. I never knew a well-bred or amiable
person who complained seriously of the fact that
he would have to die. Granted we must all some
times find ourselves feeling sorry that we cannot remain
for ever at our present age, and that we may die
so much sooner than we like; but these regrets are
passing with well-disposed people, and are a sine
qua non for the existence of life at all. For
if people could live for ever so as to suffer from
no such regret, there would be no growth nor development
in life; if, on the other hand, there were no unwillingness
to die, people would commit suicide upon the smallest
contradiction, and the race would end in a twelvemonth.
We then offer immortality, but we
do not offer resurrection from the dead; we say that
those who die live in the Lord whether they be just
or unjust, and that the present growth of God is the
outcome of all past lives; but we believe that as
they live in God-in the effect they have produced
upon the universal life-when once their individual
life is ended, so it is God who knows of their life
thenceforward and not themselves; and we urge that
this immortality, this entrance into the joy of the
Lord, this being ever with God, is true, and can
be apprehended by all men, and that the perception
of it should and will tend to make them lead happier,
healthier lives; whereas the commonly received opinion
is true with a stage truth only, and has little permanent
effect upon those who are best worth considering.
Nevertheless the expressions in common use among
the orthodox fit in so perfectly with facts, which
we must all acknowledge, that it is impossible not
to regard the expressions as founded upon a prophetic
perception of the facts.
Two things stand out with sufficient
clearness. The first is the rarity of suicide
even among those who rail at life most bitterly.
The other is the little eagerness with which those
who cry out most loudly for a resurrection desire
to begin their new life. When comforting a
husband upon the loss of his wife we do not tell
him we hope he will soon join her; but we should
certainly do this if we could even pretend we thought
the husband would like it. I can never remember
having felt or witnessed any pain, bodily or mental,
which would have made me or anyone else receive a
suggestion that we had better commit suicide without
indignantly asking how our adviser would like to
commit suicide himself. Yet there are so many
and such easy ways of dying that indignation at being
advised to commit suicide arises more from enjoyment
of life than from fear of the mere physical pain of
dying. Granted that there is much deplorable
pain in the world from ill-health, loss of money,
loss of reputation, misconduct of those nearest to
us, or what not, and granted that in some cases these
causes do drive men to actual self-destruction, yet
suffering such as this happens to a comparatively
small number, and occupies comparatively a small
space in the lives of those to whom it does happen.
What, however, have we to say to those
cases in which suffering and injustice are inflicted
upon defenceless [sic] people for years and years,
so that the iron enters into their souls, and they
have no avenger. Can we give any comfort to such
sufferers? and, if not, is our religion any better
than a mockery-a filling the rich with good things
and sending the hungry empty away? Can we tell
them, when they are oppressed with burdens, yet that
their cry will come up to God and be heard?
The question suggests its own answer, for assuredly
our God knows our innermost secrets: there is
not a word in our hearts but He knoweth it altogether;
He knoweth our down-sitting and our uprising, He
is about our path and about our bed, and spieth out
all our ways; He has fashioned us behind and before,
and “we cannot attain such knowledge,”
for, like all knowledge when it has become perfect,
“it is too excellent for us.”
“Whither then,” says David,
“shall I go from thy Spirit, or whither shall
I go, then, from thy presence? If I climb up
into heaven thou art there; if I go down into hell
thou art there also. If I take the wings of
the morning and remain in the uttermost parts of
the sea; even there also shall thy hand lead me,
and thy right hand shall hold me. If I say peradventure
the darkness shall cover me, then shall my night
be turned into day: the darkness and light to
thee are both alike. For my reins are thine;
thou hast covered me in my mother’s womb.
My bones are not hid from thee: though I be
made secretly and fashioned beneath in the earth,
thine eyes did see my substance yet being unperfect;
and in thy book were all my members written, which
day by day were fashioned when as yet there was none
of them. Do I not hate them, O Lord, that hate
thee? and am I not grieved with them that rise up
against thee? Yea, I hate them right sore, as
though they were mine enemies.” (Psalm CXXXIX.)
There is not a word of this which we cannot endorse
with more significance, as well as with greater heartiness
than those can who look upon God as He is commonly
represented to them; whatever comfort, therefore,
those in distress have been in the habit of receiving
from these and kindred passages, we intensify rather
than not. We cannot, alas! make pain cease
to be pain, nor injustice easy to bear; but we can
show that no pain is bootless, and that there is
a tendency in all injustice to right itself; suffering
is not inflicted wilfully, [sic] as it were by a
magician who could have averted it ; nor is it vain
in its results, but unless we are cut off from God
by having dwelt in some place where none of our kind
can know of what has happened to us, it will move
God’s heart to redress our grievance, and will
tend to the happiness of those who come after us,
even if not to our own.
The moral government of God over the
world is exercised through us, who are his ministers
and persons, and a government of this description
is the only one which can be observed as practically
influencing men’s conduct. God helps
those who help themselves, because in helping themselves
they are helping Him. Again, Vox Populi vox
Dei. The current feeling of our peers is what
we instinctively turn to when we would know whether
such and such a course of conduct is right or wrong;
and so Paul clenches his list of things that the
Philippians were to hold fast with the words, “whatsoever
things are of good fame”-that is to say, he falls
back upon an appeal to the educated conscience of his
age. Certainly the wicked do sometimes appear
to escape punishment, but it must be remembered there
are punishments from within which do not meet the
eye. If these fall on a man, he is sufficiently
punished; if they do not fall on him, it is probable
we have been over hasty in assuming that he is wicked.