| A
recent writer opens his book with the words: "The present generation
is impatient of theological distinctions." He lets the cat out
of the bag when he begins the next paragraph with the words:
"There is a good deal of common sense in this reaction against
the theological hairsplitting of former times." He has, perhaps
not unnaturally, mistaken his own opinion for the general judgment
of the day. The truth is that the world, even in this generation,
is made up of a good many people; and a good many varying points
of view may be found represented among them. Some are very impatient
of theological distinctions, and some are very patient of them:
the most are patient to a fault with those they themselves wish
to make, and quite impatient of those made by others. The fact
is, of course, that everybody makes and must make theological
distinctions. Men differ only as they make sound or unsound
distinctions, and through these distinctions embrace and live
by truth or error.
It is easy
to say: "We refuse to believe that a man's opinions on the
minute details of history or metaphysics are sufficient either
to admit or to exclude him from the Kingdom of grace and glory."
But when we have said that, we have already expressed a portentous
opinion. We have also made a tremendous theological distinction;
we have made it most unsoundly; and, as a consequence, we
have cast ourselves into the arms of the grossest error, which
must mar all our life. The truth is that a man's opinions
on matters of historical fact or of metaphysical truth-call
them opinions on minute details or not, as you choose-are
absolutely determinative of his whole life. It is a matter
of metaphysical opinion whether there is a God or not; or
whether there is such a thing as right or such a thing as
wrong. We cannot adopt even so simple a maxim as David Crockett's
famous "Be sure you are right and then go ahead," without
having committed ourselves to many very deeply cutting metaphysical
opinions, and many of these are capable of being represented
as opinions on very minute details. It is a matter of metaphysical
opinion whether we worship a fragment of bone or the God of
heaven and earth; what separates the fetish-worshipper from
the Christian here is a little matter of metaphysical opinion.
It is a matter of historical opinion whether such a person
as Jesus Christ ever existed, and surely whether any given
man ever existed or not is a very small historical detail.
And if we are of the opinion that he existed, it is still
a matter of historical opinion whether he was the Son of God
who came into the world on a mission of mercy to lost men,
and died for our sins and rose again for our justification;
or was merely a man who suggested to us as his opinion, which
it was his opinion it would be well that we also should adopt,
that God is a good fellow, and it is all right with the world.
We cannot get along without metaphysical delimitations and
historical judgments. We cannot go one step without them.
And what we call Christianity is bound up with a very definite
set of both.
He who adopts
this definite set of metaphysical and historical opinions
is so far on his way to being a Christian. He who rejects
them, or treats them as indifferent, is not even on his way
to being a Christian. This is not to say that Christianity
is just a body of metaphysical and historical opinions. But
it is to say that Christianity is, among other things, a body
of metaphysical and historical opinions. It is absurd to say
that a man can be a Christian who is of the opinion that there
is no God; or that no such person as Jesus ever lived: or
who does not believe very many very definite things about
the really existing God and the actually living Jesus. Some
of these things may be represented as very "minute details."
Gibbon, for example, made himself merry, or made himself miserable,
as the case may have been, over the spectacle of Christianity
split to its foundations in violent dispute over a mere diphthong-whether
Christ should be said to be homo- ousios or only homoiousios
with God: whether, that is, he should be conceived as all
that God is, or only in some greater or less degree, more
or less like God. The whole substance of Christianity was
involved, however, in this controversy; the issue was nothing
less than whether the world should be Christian or heathen.
To represent it as a dispute over a "minor detail," a mere
diphthong, were as sensible as to say that as "gold" and "god"
differ in but a single letter, it cannot be of importance
whether we serve God or mammon;; and there surely can be no
reason (despite what Jesus says) why we should not serve both.
No less a
man than John Wesley is appealed to, however, to support this
minimizing of the value of truth. And certainly John Wesley
did say-he surely was speaking unadvisedly with his lips-something
which lends itself too readily to this bad use. "I am sick
of opinions," he writes; "I am weary to bear them; my soul
loathes the frothy food. Give me solid substantial religion;
give me a humble gentle lover of God and man, a man full of
mercy and good fruits, a man laying himself out in the work
of faith, the patience of hope, the labor of love. Let my
soul be with those Christians wheresoever they be and whatsoever
opinions they are of." John Wesley's righteous soul had evidently
been vexed by men who had nothing but "opinions" to show for
their Christianity. But did he ever see such a man as he here
paints for us: "a humble gentle lover of God and man, a man
full of mercy and good fruits, a man laying himself out in
the work of faith, the patience of hope, the labor of love,"
who was without the opinion that there is a God to love? No
man can have faith, or hope, or love, who is not consciously
in the presence of an object on which his faith and hope and
love can rest. He must be of the opinion that the object exists,
and that it is such as to justify or even to command his faith,
hope, or love. It sounds very well to rail at "opinions" in
contrast with "solid substantial religion." Did "solid substantial
religion" ever exist apart from the "opinions" which lie at
its basis? A man who is of the opinion that there is no God
will not manifest "solid substantial religion" in his life.
A man who is of the opinion that Christ, if he ever existed-which
he may doubt or deny-was a mere man among men, a peasant of
Galilee of the first century of the era absurdly called Christian,
who still sleeps his unbroken sleep beneath the Syrian sky,
will not entrust his soul's welfare to his keeping. "Faith"
in Jesus-in his blood (Rom. iii. 37) and his righteousness
(2 Pet. i. 1) -cannot possibly get itself born except on the
basis of quite a body of very definite and very definitely
held "opinions." No man can live a Christian life who is not
first of "the Christian persuasion."
That is the
reason why Christianity is propagated by preaching. There
may be other ways in which other religions are spread. The
propagation of Christianity has been very definitely committed
to "the foolishness of preaching" - not to foolish preaching,
however, which is something very different. It is fundamentally
"faith"; and faith implies something to be believed and therefore
comes of hearing; while hearing implies something presented
to the apprehension of the intelligence- the "Word of God."
Whatever we may say of a so-called Christianity which is nothing
but "opinions," there is no Christianity which does not begin
with opinions, which is not formed by opinions, and which
is not the outworking of these opinions in life. Only we would
better call them "convictions." Convictions are the root on
which the tree of vital Christianity grows. No convictions,
no Christianity. Scanty convictions, hunger-bitten Christianity.
Profound convictions, solid and substantial religion. Let
no man fancy it can be otherwise. Ignorance is not the mother
of religion, but of irreligion. The knowledge of God is eternal
life, and to know God means that we know him aright.
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