It is all very well for mischievous
writers to maintain that we cannot serve God and Mammon.
Granted that it is not easy, but nothing that is
worth doing ever is easy. Easy or difficult,
possible or impossible, not only has the thing got
to be done, but it is exactly in doing it that the
whole duty of man consists. And when the righteous
man turneth away from his righteousness that he hath
committed and doeth that which is neither quite lawful
nor quite right, he will generally be found to have
gained in amiability what he has lost in holiness.
If there are two worlds at all (and
that there are I have no doubt) it stands to reason
that we ought to make the best of both of them, and
more particularly of the one with which we are most
immediately concerned. It is as immoral to be
too good as to be too anything else. The Christian
morality is just as immoral as any other. It
is at once very moral and very immoral. How
often do we not see children ruined through the virtues,
real or supposed, of their parents? Truly he
visiteth the virtues of the fathers upon the children
unto the third and fourth generation. The most
that can be said for virtue is that there is a considerable
balance in its favour, and that it is a good deal
better to be for it than against it; but it lets people
in very badly sometimes.
If you wish to understand virtue you
must be sub-vicious; for the really virtuous man,
who is fully under grace, will be virtuous unconsciously
and will know nothing about it. Unless a man
is out-and-out virtuous he is sub-vicious.
Virtue is, as it were, the repose
of sleep or death. Vice is the awakening to
the knowledge of good and evil—without which
there is no life worthy of the name. Sleep is,
in a way, a happier, more peaceful state than waking
and, in a way, death may be said to be better than
life, but it is in a very small way. We feel
such talk to be blasphemy against good life and, whatever
we may say in death’s favour, so long as we
do not blow our brains out we show that we do not
mean to be taken seriously. To know good, other
than as a heavy sleeper, we must know vice also.
There cannot, as Bacon said, be a “Hold fast
that which is good” without a “Prove all
things” going before it. There is no knowledge
of good without a knowledge of evil also, and this
is why all nations have devils as well as gods, and
regard them with sneaking kindness. God without
the devil is dead, being alone.