Sermon 5. Personal Influence, the Means of
Propagating the Truth
"Out of weakness were made strong." Heb. xi. 34.
{75} THE history of the Old Testament Saints, conveyed in these few
words, is paralleled or surpassed in its peculiar character by the
lives of those who first proclaimed the Christian Dispensation.
"Behold, I send you forth as lambs among wolves," was the
warning given them of their position in the world, on becoming
Evangelists in its behalf. Their miraculous powers gained their cause
a hearing, but did not protect themselves. St. Paul records the
fulfilment of our Lord's prophecy, as it contrasts the Apostles and
mankind at large, when he declares, "Being reviled, we bless;
being persecuted, we suffer it; being defamed, we entreat; we are made
as the filth of the world, and are the offscouring of all things unto
this day." [1 Cor. iv. 12, 13.] Nay, these words apply not only
to the unbelieving world; the Apostle had reason to be suspicious of
his Christian {76} brethren, and even to expostulate on that score, with
his own converts, his "beloved sons." He counted it a great
gain, such as afterwards might be dwelt upon with satisfaction, that
the Galatians did not despise nor reject him on account of the
infirmity which was in his flesh; and, in the passage already referred
to, he mourns over the fickleness and coldness of the Corinthians, who
thought themselves wise, strong, and honourable, and esteemed the
Apostles as fools, weak, and despised.
2. Whence, then, was it, that in spite of all these impediments to
their success, still they succeeded? How did they gain that lodgment
in the world, which they hold down to this day, enabling them to
perpetuate principles distasteful to the majority even of those who
profess to receive them? What is that hidden attribute of the Truth,
and how does it act, prevailing, as it does, single-handed, over the
many and multiform errors, by which it is simultaneously and
incessantly attacked?
3. Here, of course, we might at once refer its success to the will
and blessing of Him who revealed it, and who distinctly promised that
He would be present with it, and with its preachers, "alway, even
unto the end." And, of course, by realizing this in our minds, we
learn dependence upon His grace in our own endeavours to recommend the
Truth, and encouragement to persevere. But it is also useful to
inquire into the human means by which His Providence acts in the
world, in order to take a practical view of events as they
successively come before us in the course of human affairs, and to
understand {77} our duty in particulars; and, with reference to these
means, it is now proposed to consider the question.
4. Here, first of all,—
It is plain that we cannot rightly ascribe the influence of moral
truth in the world to the gift of miracles, which was entrusted to the
persons who promulgated it in that last and perfect form, in which we
have been vouchsafed it; that gift having been withdrawn with the
first preaching of it. Nor, again, can it be satisfactorily maintained
that the visible Church, which the miracles formed, has taken their
place in the course of Divine Providence, as the basis, strictly
speaking, on which the Truth rests; though doubtless it is the
appointed instrument, in even a fuller sense than the miracles before
it, by which that Truth is conveyed to the world: for though it is
certain that a community of men, who, as individuals, were but
imperfectly virtuous, would, in the course of years, gain the
ascendancy over vice and error, however well prepared for the contest,
yet no one pretends that the visible Church is thus blessed; the
Epistle to the Corinthians sufficiently showing, that, in all ages,
true Christians, though contained in it, and forming its life and
strength, are scattered and hidden in the multitude, and, but
partially recognizing each other, have no means of combining and
cooperating. On the other hand, if we view the Church simply as a
political institution, and refer the triumph of the Truth, which is
committed to it, merely to its power thence resulting,— {78} then, the
question recurs, first, how is it that this mixed and heterogeneous
body, called the Church, has, through so many centuries, on the whole,
been true to the principles on which it was first established; and
then, how, thus preserving its principles, it has, over and above
this, gained on its side, in so many countries and times, the
countenance and support of the civil authorities. Here, it would be
sufficient to consider the three first centuries of its existence, and
to inquire by what means, in spite of its unearthly principles, it
grew and strengthened in the world; and how, again, corrupt body as it
was then as now, still it preserved, all the while, with such
remarkable fidelity those same unearthly principles which had been
once delivered to it.
5. Others there are who attempt to account for this prevalence of
the Truth, in spite of its enemies, by imagining, that, though at
first opposed, yet it is, after a time, on mature reflection, accepted
by the world in general from a real understanding and conviction of
its excellence; that it is in its nature level to the comprehension of
men, considered merely as rational beings, without reference to their
moral character, whether good or bad; and that, in matter of fact, it
is recognized and upheld by the mass of men, taken as individuals, not
merely approved by them, taken as a mass, in which some have influence
over others,—not merely submitted to with a blind, but true
instinct, such as is said to oppress inferior animals in the presence
of man, but literally advocated from an enlightened capacity for
criticizing it; and, in consequence {79} of this notion, some men go so far
as to advise that the cause of Truth should be frankly committed to
the multitude as the legitimate judges and guardians of it.
6. Something may occur to expose the fallacy of this notion, in the
course of the following remarks on what I conceive to be the real
method by which the influence of spiritual principles is maintained in
this carnal world. But here, it is expedient at once to appeal to
Scripture against a theory, which, whether plausible or not, is
scarcely Christian. The following texts will suggest a multitude of
others, as well as of Scripture representations, hostile to the idea
that moral truth is easily or generally discerned. "The natural
man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God." [1 Cor. ii.
14.] "The light shineth in darkness, and the darkness
comprehended it not." [John i. 5.] "Whosoever hath, to him
shall be given." [Matt. xiii. 12.] "Wisdom is justified by
her children." [Matt. xi. 19.]
7. On the other hand, that its real influence consists directly in
some inherent moral power, in virtue in some shape or other, not in
any evidence or criterion level to the undisciplined reason of the
multitude, high or low, learned or ignorant, is implied in texts, such
as those referred to just now:—"I send you forth as sheep in
the midst of wolves; be ye, therefore, wise as serpents, and
harmless as doves."
8. This being the state of the question, it is proposed to
consider, whether the influence of Truth in the world at large does
not arise from the personal influence, {80} direct and indirect, of
those who are commissioned to teach it.
9. In order to explain the sense in which this is asserted, it will
be best to begin by tracing the mode in which the moral character of
such an organ of the Truth is formed; and, in a large subject, I must
beg permission to be somewhat longer (should it be necessary) than the
custom of this place allows.
10. We will suppose this Teacher of the Truth so circumstanced as
One alone among the sons of Adam has ever been, such a one as has
never transgressed his sense of duty, but from his earliest childhood
upwards has been only engaged in increasing and perfecting the light
originally given him. In him the knowledge and power of acting rightly
have kept pace with the enlargement of his duties, and his inward
convictions of Truth with the successive temptations opening upon him
from without to wander from it. Other men are surprised and overset by
the sudden weight of circumstances against which they have not
provided; or, losing step, they strain and discompose their faculties
in the effort, even though successful, to recover themselves; or they
attempt to discriminate for themselves between little and great
breaches of the law of conscience, and allow themselves in what they
consider the former; thus falling down precipices (as I may say) when
they meant to descend an easy step, recoverable the next moment. Hence
it is that, in a short time, those who started on one line make such
different progress, and diverge in so many directions. Their
conscience still speaks, but having been trifled with, it does not
tell {81} truly; it equivocates, or is irregular. Whereas in him who is
faithful to his own divinely implanted nature, the faint light of
Truth dawns continually brighter; the shadows which at first troubled
it, the unreal shapes created by its own twilight-state, vanish; what
was as uncertain as mere feeling, and could not be distinguished from
a fancy except by the commanding urgency of its voice, becomes fixed
and definite, and strengthening into principle, it at the same time
developes into habit. As fresh and fresh duties arise, or fresh and
fresh faculties are brought into action, they are at once absorbed
into the existing inward system, and take their appropriate place in
it. Doubtless beings, disobedient as most of us, from our youth up,
cannot comprehend even the early attainments of one who thus grows in
wisdom as truly as he grows in stature; who has no antagonist
principles unsettling each other—no errors to unlearn; though
something is suggested to our imagination by that passage in the
history of our Blessed Lord, when at twelve years old He went up with
His parents to the Temple. And still less able are we to understand
the state of such a mind, when it had passed through the temptations
peculiar to youth and manhood, and had driven Satan from him in very
despair.
11. Concerning the body of opinions formed under these
circumstances,—not accidental and superficial, the mere reflection
of what goes on in the world, but the natural and almost spontaneous
result of the formed and finished character within,—two remarks may
be offered. (1.) That every part of what may be called {82} this moral
creed will be equally true and necessary; and (if, as we may
reasonably suppose, the science of morals extends without limit into
the details of thought and conduct) numberless particulars, which we
are accustomed to account indifferent, may be in fact indifferent in
no truer sense, than in physics there is really any such agent as
chance; our ignorance being the sole cause of the seeming variableness
on the one hand in the action of nature, on the other in the standard
of faith and morals. This is practically important to remember,
even while it is granted that no exemplar of holiness has been
exhibited to us, at once faultless yet minute; and again, that in all
existing patterns, besides actual defects, there are also the
idiosyncrasies and varieties of disposition, taste, and talents, nay
of bodily organization, to modify the dictates of that inward light
which is itself divine and unerring. It is important, I say, as
restraining us from judging hastily of opinions and practices of good
men into which we ourselves cannot enter; but which, for what we know,
may be as necessary parts of the Truth, though too subtle for our dull
perceptions, as those great and distinguishing features of it, which
we, in common with the majority of sincere men, admit. And
particularly will it preserve us from rash censures of the Primitive
Church, which, in spite of the corruptions which disfigured it from
the first, still in its collective holiness may be considered to make
as near an approach to the pattern of Christ as fallen man ever will
attain; being, in fact, a Revelation in some sort of that Blessed
Spirit in a bodily shape, who was promised to us as a second {83} Teacher
of Truth after Christ's departure, and became such upon a
subject-matter far more diversified than that on which our Lord had
revealed Himself before Him. For instance, for what we know, the
Episcopal principle, or the practice of Infant Baptism, which is
traceable to Apostolic times, though not clearly proved by the
Scripture records, may be as necessary in the scheme of Christian
truth as the doctrines of the Divine Unity, and of man's
responsibility, which in the artificial system are naturally placed as
the basis of Religion, as being first in order of succession and time.
And this, be it observed, will account for the omission in Scripture
of express sanctions of these and similar principles and observances;
provided, that is, the object of the Written Word be, not to unfold a
system for our intellectual contemplation, but to secure the formation
of a certain character.
12. (2.) And in the second place, it is plain, that the gifted
individual whom we have imagined, will of all men be least able (as
such) to defend his own views, inasmuch as he takes no external survey
of himself. Things which are the most familiar to us, and easy in
practice, require the most study, and give the most trouble in
explaining; as, for instance, the number, combination, and succession
of muscular movements by which we balance ourselves in walking, or
utter our separate words; and this quite independently of the
existence or non-existence of language suitable for describing them.
The longer any one has persevered in the practice of virtue, the less
likely is he to recollect how he began it; what were his difficulties
on starting, {84} and how surmounted; by what process one truth led to
another; the less likely to elicit justly the real reasons latent in
his mind for particular observances or opinions. He holds the whole
assemblage of moral notions almost as so many collateral and
self-evident facts. Hence it is that some of the most deeply-exercised
and variously gifted Christians, when they proceed to write or speak
upon Religion, either fail altogether, or cannot be understood except
on an attentive study; and after all, perhaps, are illogical and
unsystematic, assuming what their readers require proved, and seeming
to mistake connexion or antecedence for causation, probability for
evidence. And over such as these it is, that the minute intellect of
inferior men has its moment of triumph, men who excel in a mere
short-sighted perspicacity; not understanding that, even in the case
of intellectual excellence, it is considered the highest of gifts to
possess an intuitive knowledge of the beautiful in art, or the
effective in action, without reasoning or investigating; that this, in
fact, is genius; and that they who have a corresponding insight
into moral truth (as far as they have it) have reached that especial
perfection in the spiritual part of their nature, which is so rarely
found and so greatly prized among the intellectual endowments of the
soul.
13. Nay, may we not further venture to assert, not only that moral
Truth will be least skilfully defended by those, as such, who are the
genuine depositories of it, but that it cannot be adequately explained
and defended in words at all? Its views and human language are
incommensurable. For, after all, what is language but {85} an
artificial system adapted for particular purposes, which have been
determined by our wants? And here, even at first sight, can we imagine
that it has been framed with a view to ideas so refined, so foreign to
the whole course of the world, as those which (as Scripture expresses
it) "no man can learn," but the select remnant who are
"redeemed from the earth," and in whose mouth "is found
no guile"? [Rev. xiv. 3, 5.] Nor is it this heavenly language
alone which is without its intellectual counterpart. Moral character
in itself, whether good or bad, as exhibited in thought and conduct,
surely cannot be duly represented in words. We may, indeed, by an
effort, reduce it in a certain degree to this arbitrary medium; but in
its combined dimensions it is as impossible to write and read a man
(so to express it), as to give literal depth to a painted tablet.
14. With these remarks on the nature of moral Truth, as viewed
externally, let us conduct our secluded Teacher, who is the embodied
specimen of it, after his thirty years' preparation for his office,
into the noise and tumult of the world; and in order to set him fairly
on the course, let us suppose him recommended by some external gift,
whether ordinary or extraordinary, the power of miracles, the
countenance of rulers, or a reputation for learning, such as may
secure a hearing for him from the multitude of men. This must be
supposed, in consequence of the very constitution of the present
world. Amid its incessant din, nothing will attract attention but what
cries aloud and spares not. It is an old proverb, that {86} men profess a
sincere respect for Virtue, and then let her starve; for they have at
the bottom of their hearts an evil feeling, in spite of better
thoughts, that to be bound to certain laws and principles is a
superstition and a slavery, and that freedom consists in the actual
exercise of the will in evil as well as in good; and they witness
(what cannot be denied) that a man who throws off the yoke of strict
conscientiousness, greatly increases his producible talent for the
time, and his immediate power of attaining his ends. At best they will
but admire the religious man, and treat him with deference; but in his
absence they are compelled (as they say) to confess that a being so
amiable and gentle is not suited to play his part in the scene of
life; that he is too good for this world; that he is framed for a more
primitive and purer age, and born out of due time. [Makarisantes
humon to apeirokakon],
says the scoffing politician in the History, [ou
zeloumen to aphron];—would not the great
majority of men, high and low, thus speak of St. John the Apostle,
were he now living?
15. Therefore, we must invest our Teacher with a certain gift of
power, that he may be feared. But even then, how hopeless does this
task seem to be at first sight! how improbable that he should be able
to proceed one step farther than his external recommendation carries
him forward! so that it is a marvel how the Truth had ever been spread
and maintained among men. For, recollect, it is not a mere set of
opinions that he has to promulgate, which may lodge on the surface of
the mind; but he is to be an instrument in {87} changing (as Scripture
speaks) the heart, and modelling all men after one exemplar; making
them like himself, or rather like One above himself, who is the
beginning of a new creation. Having (as has been said) no sufficient
eloquence—nay, not language at his command—what instruments can he
be said to possess? Thus he is, from the nature of the case, thrown
upon his personal resources, be they greater or less; for it is plain
that he cannot commit his charge to others as his representatives, and
be translated (as it were), and circulated through the world, till he
has made others like himself.
16. Turn to the history of Truth, and these anticipations are
fulfilled. Some hearers of it had their conscience stirred for a
while, and many were affected by the awful simplicity of the Great
Teacher; but the proud and sensual were irritated into opposition; the
philosophic considered His doctrines strange and chimerical; the
multitude followed for a time in senseless wonder, and then suddenly
abandoned an apparently falling cause. For in truth what was the task
of an Apostle, but to raise the dead? and what trifling would it
appear, even to the most benevolent and candid men of the world, when
such a one persisted to chafe and stimulate the limbs of the inanimate
corpse, as if his own life could be communicated to it, and motion
would continue one moment after the external effort was withdrawn; in
the poet's words,
[thrasos akousion
andrasi thneskousi komizon] .
Truly such a one must expect, at best, to be accounted {88} but a
babbler, or one deranged by his "much learning "—a
visionary and an enthusiast,—
[kart' apomousos estha gegrammenos],
fit for the wilderness or the temple; a jest for the Areopagus, and
but a gladiatorial show at Ephesus, [epithanatios],
an actor in an exhibition which would finish in his own death.
17. Yet (blessed be God!) the power of Truth actually did, by some
means or other, overcome these vast obstacles to its propagation; and
what those means were, we shall best understand by contemplating it,
as it now shows itself when established and generally professed; an
ordinary sanction having taken the place of miracles, and infidelity
being the assailant instead of the assailed party.
18. It will not require many words to make it evident how impetuous
and (for the time) how triumphant an attack the rebellious Reason will
conduct against the long-established, over-secure, and but
silently-working system of which Truth is the vital principle.
19. (1.) First, every part of the Truth is novel to its opponent;
and seen detached from the whole, becomes an objection. It is only
necessary for Reason [Note 1] to
ask many questions; and, while the other party is investigating the
real answer to each in detail, to claim the victory, which spectators
will not be slow to award, {89} fancying (as is the manner of men) that
clear and ready speech is the test of Truth. And it can choose its
questions, selecting what appears most objectionable in the tenets and
practices of the received system; and it will (in all probability),
even unintentionally, fall upon the most difficult parts; what is on
the surface being at once most conspicuous, and also farthest removed
from the centre on which it depends. On the other hand, its objections
will be complete in themselves from their very minuteness. Thus, for
instance, men attack ceremonies and discipline of the Church,
appealing to common sense, as they call it; which really means,
appealing to some proposition which, though true in its own province,
is nothing to the purpose in theology; or appealing to the logical
accuracy of the argument, when every thing turns on the real meaning
of the terms employed, which can only be understood by the religious
mind.
20. (2.) Next, men who investigate in this merely intellectual way,
without sufficient basis and guidance in their personal virtue, are
bound by no fears or delicacy. Not only from dulness, but by
preference, they select ground for the contest, which a reverent Faith
wishes to keep sacred; and, while the latter is looking to its
stepping, lest it commit sacrilege, they have the unembarrassed use of
their eyes for the combat, and overcome, by skill and agility, one
stronger than themselves.
21. (3.) Further, the warfare between Error and Truth is
necessarily advantageous to the former, from its very nature, as being
conducted by set speech or treatise; and this, not only for a reason
already assigned, {90} the deficiency of Truth in the power of eloquence,
and even of words, but moreover from the very neatness and
definiteness of method required in a written or spoken argument. Truth
is vast and far-stretching, viewed as a system; and, viewed in its
separate doctrines, it depends on the combination of a number of
various, delicate, and scattered evidences; hence it can scarcely be
exhibited in a given number of sentences. If this be attempted, its
advocate, unable to exhibit more than a fragment of the whole, must
round off its rugged extremities, and unite its straggling lines, by
much the same process by which an historical narrative is converted
into a tale. This, indeed, is the very art of composition,
which, accordingly, is only with extreme trouble preserved clear of
exaggeration and artifice; and who does not see that all this is
favourable to the cause of error,—to that party which has not faith
enough to be patient of doubt, and has just talent enough to consider
perspicuity the chief excellence of a writer? To illustrate this, we
may contrast the works of Bishop Butler with those of that popular
infidel writer at the end of the last century, who professed to be the
harbinger of an "Age of Reason."
22. (4.) Moreover, this great, though dangerous faculty which evil
employs as its instrument in its warfare against the Truth, may
simulate all kinds of virtue, and thus become the rival of the true
saints of God, whom it is opposing. It may draw fine pictures of
virtue, or trace out the course of sacred feelings or of heavenly
meditations. Nothing is so easy as to be religious {91} on paper; and thus
the arms of Truth are turned, as far as may be found necessary,
against itself.
23. (5.) It must be further observed, that the exhibitions of
Reason, being complete in themselves, and having nothing of a personal
nature, are capable almost of an omnipresence by an indefinite
multiplication and circulation, through the medium of composition:
here, even the orator has greatly the advantage over the religious
man; words may be heard by thousands at once,—a good deed will be
witnessed and estimated at most by but a few.
24. (6.) To put an end to these remarks on the advantages accruing
to Error in its struggle with Truth;—the exhibitions of the Reason,
being in their operation separable from the person furnishing them,
possess little or no responsibility. To be anonymous is almost their
characteristic, and with it all the evils attendant on the unchecked
opportunity for injustice and falsehood.
25. Such, then, are the difficulties which beset the propagation of
the Truth: its want of instruments, as an assailant of the world's
opinions; the keenness and vigour of the weapons producible against
it, when itself in turn is to be attacked. How, then, after all, has
it maintained its ground among men, and subjected to its dominion
unwilling minds, some even bound to the external profession of
obedience, others at least in a sullen neutrality, and the inaction of
despair?
26. I answer, that it has been upheld in the world not as a system,
not by books, not by argument, nor by temporal power, but by the
personal influence of such {92} men as have already been described, who are
at once the teachers and the patterns of it; and, with some
suggestions in behalf of this statement, I shall conclude.
27. (1.) Here, first, is to be taken into account the natural
beauty and majesty of virtue, which is more or less felt by all but
the most abandoned. I do not say virtue in the abstract,—virtue in a
book. Men persuade themselves, with little difficulty, to scoff at
principles, to ridicule books, to make sport of the names of good men;
but they cannot bear their presence: it is holiness embodied in
personal form, which they cannot steadily confront and bear down: so
that the silent conduct of a conscientious man secures for him from
beholders a feeling different in kind from any which is created by the
mere versatile and garrulous Reason.
28. (2.) Next, consider the extreme rarity, in any great perfection
and purity, of simple-minded, honest devotion to God; and another
instrument of influence is discovered for the cause of Truth. Men
naturally prize what is novel and scarce; and, considering the low
views of the multitude on points of social and religious duty, their
ignorance of those precepts of generosity, self-denial, and
high-minded patience, which religion enforces, nay, their scepticism
(whether known to themselves or not) of the existence in the world of
severe holiness and truth, no wonder they are amazed when accident
gives them a sight of these excellences in another, as though they
beheld a miracle; and they watch it with a mixture of curiosity and
awe.
29. (3.) Besides, the conduct of a religious man is quite {93} above
them. They cannot imitate him, if they try. It may be easy for the
educated among them to make speeches, or to write books; but high
moral excellence is the attribute of a school to which they are almost
strangers, having scarcely learned, and that painfully, the first
elements of the heavenly science. One little deed, done against
natural inclination for God's sake, though in itself of a conceding or
passive character, to brook an insult, to face a danger, or to resign
an advantage, has in it a power outbalancing all the dust and chaff of
mere profession; the profession whether of enlightened benevolence and
candour, or, on the other hand, of high religious faith and of fervent
zeal.
30. (4.) And men feel, moreover, that the object of their
contemplation is beyond their reach—not open to the common
temptations which influence men, and grounded on a foundation which
they cannot explain. And nothing is more effectual, first in
irritating, then in humbling the pride of men, than the sight of a
superior altogether independent of themselves.
31. (5.) The consistency of virtue is another gift, which gradually
checks the rudeness of the world, and tames it into obedience to
itself. The changes of human affairs, which first excited and
interested, at length disgust the mind, which then begins to look out
for something on which it can rely, for peace and rest; and what can
then be found immutable and sure, but God's word and promises,
illustrated and conveyed to the inquirer in the person of His faithful
servants? Every day shows us how much depends on firmness for
obtaining {94} influence in practical matters; and what are all kinds of
firmness, as exhibited in the world, but likenesses and offshoots of
that true stability of heart which is stayed in the grace and in the
contemplation of Almighty God?
32. (6.) Such especially will be the thoughts of those countless
multitudes, who, in the course of their trial, are from time to time
weighed down by affliction, or distressed by bodily pain. This will be
in their case, the strong hour of Truth, which, though unheard and
unseen by men as a body, approaches each one of that body in his own
turn, though at a different time. Then it is that the powers of the
world, its counsels, and its efforts (vigorous as they seemed to be in
the race), lose ground, and slow-paced Truth overtakes it; and thus it
comes to pass, that, while viewed in its outward course it seems ever
hastening onwards to open infidelity and sin, there are ten thousand
secret obstacles, graciously sent from God, cumbering its
chariot-wheels, so that they drive heavily, and saving it from utter
ruin.
33. Even with these few considerations before us, we shall find it
difficult to estimate the moral power which a single individual,
trained to practise what he teaches, may acquire in his own circle, in
the course of years. While the Scriptures are thrown upon the world,
as if the common property of any who choose to appropriate them, he
is, in fact, the legitimate interpreter of them, and none other; the
Inspired Word being but a dead letter (ordinarily considered), except
as transmitted from one mind to another. While he is unknown to the
{95} world, yet, within the range of those who see him, he will become the
object of feelings different in kind from those which mere
intellectual excellence excites. The men commonly held in popular
estimation are greatest at a distance; they become small as they are
approached; but the attraction, exerted by unconscious holiness, is of
an urgent and irresistible nature; it persuades the weak, the timid,
the wavering, and the inquiring; it draws forth the affection and
loyalty of all who are in a measure like-minded; and over the
thoughtless or perverse multitude it exercises a sovereign compulsory
sway, bidding them fear and keep silence, on the ground of its own
right divine to rule them,—its hereditary claim on their obedience,
though they understand not the principles or counsels of that spirit,
which is "born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor
of the will of man, but of God."
34. And if such be the personal influence excited by the Teacher of
Truth over the mixed crowd of men whom he encounters, what (think we)
will be his power over that select number, just referred to, who have
already, in a measure, disciplined their hearts after the law of
holiness, and feel themselves, as it were, individually addressed by
the invitation of his example? These are they whom our Lord especially
calls His "elect," and came to "gather together in
one," for they are worthy. And these, too, are they who are
ordained in God's Providence to be the salt of the earth,—to
continue, in their turn, the succession of His witnesses, that heirs
may never be wanting to the royal line though death sweeps away each
successive {96} generation of them to their rest and their reward. These,
perhaps, by chance fell in with their destined father in the Truth,
not at once discerning his real greatness. At first, perhaps, they
thought his teaching fanciful, and parts of his conduct extravagant or
weak. Years might pass away before such prejudices were entirely
removed from their minds; but by degrees they would discern more and
more the traces of unearthly majesty about him; they would witness,
from time to time, his trial under the various events of life, and
would still find, whether they looked above or below, that he rose
higher, and was based deeper, than they could ascertain by
measurement. Then, at length, with astonishment and fear, they would
become aware that Christ's presence was before them; and, in the words
of Scripture, would glorify God in His servant [Gal. i. 24.]; and all
this while they themselves would be changing into that glorious Image
which they gazed upon, and be in training to succeed him in its
propagation.
35. Will it be said, This is a fancy, which no experience confirms?
First, no irreligious man can know any thing concerning the hidden
saints. Next, no one, religious or not, can detect them without
attentive study of them. But, after all, say they are few, such high
Christians; and what follows? They are enough to carry on God's
noiseless work. The Apostles were such men; others might be named, in
their several generations, as successors to their holiness. These
communicate their light to a number of lesser luminaries, by whom, in
its turn, it is distributed through the {97} world; the first sources of
illumination being all the while unseen, even by the majority of
sincere Christians,—unseen as is that Supreme Author of Light and
Truth, from whom all good primarily proceeds. A few highly-endowed men
will rescue the world for centuries to come. Before now even one man [Note
2] has impressed an image on the Church, which, through God's
mercy, shall not be effaced while time lasts. Such men, like the
Prophet, are placed upon their watch-tower, and light their beacons on
the heights. Each receives and transmits the sacred flame, trimming it
in rivalry of his predecessor, and fully purposed to send it on as
bright as it has reached him; and thus the self-same fire, once
kindled on Moriah, though seeming at intervals to fail, has at length
reached us in safety, and will in like manner, as we trust, be carried
forward even to the end.
36. To conclude. Such views of the nature and history of Divine
Truth are calculated to make us contented and resigned in our
generation, whatever be the peculiar character or the power of the
errors of our own times. For Christ never will reign visibly upon
earth; but in each age, as it comes, we shall read of tumult and
heresy, and hear the complaint of good men marvelling at what they
conceive to be the especial wickedness of their own times.
37. Moreover, such considerations lead us to be satisfied with the
humblest and most obscure lot; by showing us, not only that we may be
the instruments {98} of much good in it, but that (strictly speaking) we
could scarcely in any situation be direct instruments of good to any
besides those who personally know us, who ever must form a small
circle; and as to the indirect good we may do in a more exalted
station (which is by no means to be lightly esteemed), still we are
not absolutely precluded from it in a lower place in the Church. Nay,
it has happened before now, that comparatively retired posts have been
filled by those who have exerted the most extensive influences over
the destinies of Religion in the times following them; as in the arts
and pursuits of this world, the great benefactors of mankind are
frequently unknown.
38. Let all those, then, who acknowledge the voice of God speaking
within them, and urging them heaven-ward, wait patiently for the End,
exercising themselves, and diligently working, with a view to that day
when the books shall be opened, and all the disorder of human affairs
reviewed and set right; when "the last shall be first, and the
first last;" when "all things that offend, and they which do
iniquity," shall be gathered out and removed; when "the
righteous shall shine forth as the sun," and Faith shall see her
God; when "they that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the
firmament, and they that turn many to righteousness as the stars, for
ever and ever." 
(Preached on Sunday afternoon, January 22, 1832, in his turn as
Select Preacher.)
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Notes
1. [Here, as in the foregoing Discourse, by Reason is meant the
reasoning of secular minds, (1) explicit, (2) à posteriori,
and (3) based on secular assumptions. Vide Preface.]
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2. Athanasius.
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