<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[397]</SPAN></span></p>
<h3><SPAN name="THE_SOCIAL_BEARINGS_OF_THE_FIFTH_COMMANDMENT" id="THE_SOCIAL_BEARINGS_OF_THE_FIFTH_COMMANDMENT"></SPAN>THE SOCIAL BEARINGS OF THE FIFTH COMMANDMENT</h3>
<p class="c"><span class="smcap">By James Francis Gregory, B. D.</span></p>
<p class="c"><i>Vice Principal Manual Training and Industrial School, Bordentown, New
Jersey</i></p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"Honor thy father and thy mother that thy days may be long in the
land which the Lord thy God giveth thee."</p>
</div>
<p>While obedience to parents is the primary significance of this command,
its widening scope is seen in the comprehensive authority of the father
of the old Hebrew family. He was the ruler and the protector of the
family, and as human society enlarged and much of the original authority
of the parent passed from him, the child was prepared to give honor to
such authority and wisdom as he had recognized in the father. Thus
generically the command may cover the wide range suggested by the
Westminster Assembly: "The Fifth Commandment requireth the preserving
the honor and performing the duties belonging to every one in their
several places and relations as superiors, inferiors or equals." And
this honor idea in the home not only spreads out, but it climbs, and we
may say that as the Hebrew family contained the beginning of government,
all other authorities of this world wind up and out of the home,
ascending in spiral form until the little coil of the domestic circle
eventuates.</p>
<p class="c"> * * * * * </p>
<p>Last summer, while seated in a crowded train, my<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[398]</SPAN></span> attention was
attracted by a little family group. The heat-worn mother held a baby in
one arm, and the other hand was steadying a toddling boy. She had
repeatedly reproved her half-grown daughter and finally spoke sharply to
her, when the child suddenly lifted the heavy umbrella in her hand and
struck her mother!</p>
<p>These are the facts that impressed me: the unmasked powerlessness of the
mother, the cool unconcern of the father, but above all the apathetic
indifference of the passengers.</p>
<p>The modern family is without discipline, all of the elements in the home
having a tendency to wander from the hearth center. There is the father
whose absence, because of occupational absorption, is lengthened by many
extraneous interests. The mother, too, is receding from the home center
in her misguided enthusiasm for so-called equality in business,
professional, and political life. And the children? As one sad-faced
mother said to me the other day, "They get out of the home so early!"</p>
<p class="c"> * * * * * </p>
<p>All the reverence for parents in the world's history, is hallowed by the
lofty example of Jesus in his dutiful subjection to his earthly parents,
and in the marvelous solicitude of his dying words, "Son, behold thy
mother!"</p>
<p class="c"> * * * * * </p>
<p>A great light is thrown on this economic relation of the commandment by
the attitude of the Centurion pleading with the Master for his servant's
life. Here was an employer whose stretched-out arm of authority could be
transformed into a gesture of appeal, for his servant<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[399]</SPAN></span> lying sick at
home. Indeed only as the spirit of this commandment makes itself felt in
our business life will the clenched hands of capital and labor relax
from the hilts of their dripping blades and grasp each other with the
warm pressure of brotherly sympathy.</p>
<p class="c"> * * * * * </p>
<p>Then there are the mutual relations between the young and the aged. Oh,
for a return in our youth to that ancient bowing deference to old age a
beautiful instance of which Cicero preserves for us. Into the crowded
amphitheatre at Athens, with the multitudes' expectant hush, there
staggered an aged man, who made his tottering progress, beneath tier
after tier of indifferent or averted faces, looking in vain for a place,
until finally he came in front of the section occupied by the
Lacaedemonians, who rose as one man and offered him a seat!</p>
<p class="c"> * * * * * </p>
<p>Then there are the superiors and inferiors in wisdom. As we look back
through the mists of years to our student years, there stand out sharply
distinguished the kindly figures of our intellectual fathers. I recall
at this moment that man of infinite reserve behind the desk at Yale,
whose eye could flash with authority and yet kindle with concern at the
sight of the necessity of one of his boys—in Browning's thought, "As
sheathes a film the mother eagle's eye when her bruised eaglet
breathes!"</p>
<p class="c"> * * * * * </p>
<p>I need scarcely suggest the obvious pertinence of this command to the
relations of the pastor and his congregation.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[400]</SPAN></span> We cling very jealously
to the term, "Father," as it has been applied to the men of God in the
history of the Church. The picture is beautiful of the Roman Catholic
priest, conscious of the reluctance of her neighbors to bear to the poor
widow the evil news of the sudden death of her only son, walking quietly
up the gravel path, and covering with his healthy hands the two withered
ones as he met her at the doorway, answering her searching inquiry,
"Father?" with an unmistakable inflection of the words, "My child!" That
also of the American Protestant Episcopal bishop, leaving his little
birthday gathering already interrupted for three successive years, and
foregoing a breath of country air, after weary months of toil in the hot
city, to comfort a simple family hovering piteously about a little white
casket:—these are attitudes far more impressive than the ceremonious
exercise of their loftiest ecclesiastical functions.</p>
<p class="c"> * * * * * </p>
<p>Many lines of evidence from the side of reason converge on the Biblical
teaching that civil government is a divine institution. Perhaps one of
the most striking features of our later American growth is the colossal
selfishness of our people. The habit of freedom from restraint is fast
hardening into a lawlessness of character.</p>
<p class="c"> * * * * * </p>
<p>Listen to some of the palliating expressions with which our legal
atmosphere is permeated: "indiscreet and untactful," "the unwritten
law," "swift justice," "murder a fine art," and remember that these are
the terms that play around that triangle of corrupt judge,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[401]</SPAN></span> dallying
lawyer, and bribed and illiterate jury—all conspiring to "shove by
justice" with technicalities. And what are those sinister figures,
flitting and stalking through the land—the law-maker with his spoils,
the rioter with his rock, the anarchist with his bomb, the assassin
thrusting out his black hand, the lyncher with his battering ram, his
rope and his rifle; these are some of the outside lawless who conspire
with the inside lawless to make a scarecrow of American law, making it
the perch and not the terror of the birds of prey. And who knows how
soon all of these lawless ones may stand up together and, with a
monarch's voice cry, Havoc in the confines of this Republic!</p>
<p class="c"> * * * * * </p>
<p>But we must be conscious of our Heavenly Father behind the earthly type.
This unmistakably is the significance of the Biblical words: "To obey
your parents in the Lord"; "To be obedient unto your masters as unto
Christ"; "To fear God in honoring the face of the old man"; "To be
subject unto rulers as the ministers of God." And this leads us to the
great levelling truth, that we are all equally accountable to our
Heavenly Father, that we are nations and individuals, in the high
thought of Lincoln, "Under God."</p>
<p class="c"> * * * * * </p>
<p>This command carries with it the promise of a reward restated by Paul,
"Honor thy father and thy mother that it may be well with thee and that
thou mayest live long on the earth." In fact this is the logic of life.
This retributive justice is bound up in the laws of nature. Plants that
array themselves against these laws wither<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[402]</SPAN></span> and die. And higher up in
the animal kingdom, Kipling's verse tells us that this inexorable
sequence prevails:</p>
<p><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 4em;">"And these are the laws of the Jungle,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 5em;">And many and mighty are they;</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 4em;">But the head and the hoof of the law is,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 5em;">And the haunch and the hump is—obey."</span><br/>
<br/></p>
<p>And it is true that obedience in a human being conduces to a long and
prosperous life. The beautiful truth is gradually emerging in science
and theology that religion is healthful. As one of my discerning fathers
was often wont to say, "The whole Bible is a text-book of Advanced
Biology, telling men how they may gain the fuller life."</p>
<p class="c"> * * * * * </p>
<p>Here and there the obedient die early, you say.—Yes; and this fact
sounds the deeper spiritual import of this promise, for they, sooner
than we, enter upon that eternal life, and pass over into that greener
Canaan, to that inheritance incorruptible and undefiled.</p>
<p>Standing one afternoon in the Gallery of the Louvre in Paris, a vision
of the perfect adjustment of our seemingly conflicting relations to
Cæsar and to God shone forth to me, in the divine gesture of the Master
in Da Vinci's wonderful painting of the Last Supper, where the hand
turned downward lays hold of the things of earth, and the hand turned
upward grips the things which are eternal, both of which obligations are
glorified in those later words of the Saviour spoken out of the agony of
the Cross: "Son, behold thy mother! Father, into thy hands I commend my
spirit."</p>
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