<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>AN INTERLUDE</h2>
<p class='drop-cap'>WHEN a man conceives within his own mind
an image of God with the intent to worship
it, he does not, in worshipping it, really worship
a God who is alive; he does not worship a God
who made him and all mankind. That which he
worships is only an image of God which he himself
has created.</p>
<p>Let any man think of this fact for a little moment
and he will see that it is true.</p>
<p>Suppose, for an instance, that, instead of an
idea of God, you form in your mind an idea, say,
of Cromwell, or of Washington, or of Napoleon,
or of Lincoln. Is it not perfectly clear that that
image is not the real living Cromwell, Washington,
Napoleon, Lincoln, but only a mental picture
of one of those men? You may cause that
image–that mental picture–to seem to move
and to speak and to assume different aspects; you
may cause it apparently to will and to act, but it
is not the real hero-man who so moves and
speaks, wills and acts. It is only an imaginary
speech and action of an imagined hero.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The real man is exactly a different thing. He
is of real flesh and blood, and his speech and action
depend upon his own volition and not upon
your imagination. You may, if you choose, decorate
the image in your mind with the laurel
wreath of hero-worship, and you may cause the
most noble and exalted thoughts to seem to pass
through the imagined hero’s mind. But it is not
the living man whom you crown, nor do those
thoughts really pass through the brain of the living
man. That which you crown is only your
own idea–your own created image of the man;
and the thoughts which seem to pass through
his mind are, in reality, only your own thoughts
which you cause to pass through your own mind.</p>
<p>So it is exactly with the worship of God.</p>
<p>For let the mind form ever so exalted an
image of God, that image is, after all, only the
creation of the mind; it is only a dead thing, and
not the living fact.</p>
<p>When a man prays to such an image of God, he
prays not to the actual living Heavenly Father
who created him, but to an image of God which
he himself has created.</p>
<p>For that image of God is no more really alive
than the imagined hero is really a living man.</p>
<p>And as it is in the case of an imagined hero, so
it is with that image of God. For let that image<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</SPAN></span>
seem to move and to act ever so gigantically, it is,
after all, only an idea in your own mind–a thing
thinner and more unsubstantial than the thinnest
ether–a thought without any real potency or
any real life.</p>
<p>The actual and living God is exactly and perfectly
different from such an ideal image. He is
infinite, the idea in the mind is definite; He is
omnipotent, the idea in the mind is impotent to
create so much as a single grain of dust; He is
omniscient, the idea in the mind knows nothing
and thinks nothing excepting such knowledges
and thoughts that the man’s imagination is
pleased to place within its empty skull. He, the
Ancient of Days, exists forever and forever; the
idea in the mind continues to live only so long as
we kneel to pray, and it vanishes instantly we
arise from our knees and go about our earthly
business. He is the fountain-head of all human
intelligence, and has Himself created the rationality
of man; that idea of Him–it crumbles and
dissolves away before a five-minute argument
with any clever sceptic or agnostic who chooses
to assault it with the hard, round stones of reasoning
and of fact. He, the Heavenly Father, is
the fountain of all life; that idea of Him–what
power has it to give life to anything? Can it–such
an ethereal nothing, the creation of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</SPAN></span>
mind itself–lift up the soul into a resurrection of
life when the body of flesh shall grow cold and
die? Can it illuminate that black and empty
abyss of death with any radiance of life? What
power has it to turn aside those floods of doubt
which, now and then, bursting their bonds, sweep
down upon and overflow the soul, drowning out
even the faint little spark of hope which we all
so carefully cherish. That image, like the image
of the man-hero, is dead and impotent excepting
as the man’s own imagination makes it living
and potential. Pray to your imaginary God in
such times of black terror, and see how little that
empty image can help and aid you. It is as
powerless to save you from that flood of doubt
as the African’s fetich of wood is impotent to save
him from the deluge of water that bursts upon
and overflows the world about him. When that
black and awful torrent–the fear of annihilation–sweeps
down upon the man, it, the image,
is torn away from his grasp like a dead fragment
of wood and is swept away and gone, leaving
him to struggle alone and unaided in the overwhelming
flood.</p>
<p>And yet man continues to worship this dead,
self-created image. He says that God has this
imagined attribute and that imagined attribute;
that He thinks and feels thus and so, and does<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</SPAN></span>
this and the other thing, now being angry and
now pleased. But, after all, these things belong
only to the image in the mind. What God really
thinks and feels and intends is beyond the understanding
of the man whom He has created.</p>
<p>Why does man worship an image instead of the
reality? It is easy to see why he does so. He
worships that image, because in worshipping it
he worships himself, it being a part of himself.
He loves that image because he himself has made
it, and because he loves all the things of his own
creation. He is willing to do the supposed mandates
of that self-created fetich (provided they are
not too difficult of performance), because those
mandates spring fundamentally from his own
imagination, and because he likes to do as he
himself wills to do.</p>
<p>Just so we worship, not the real Christ, but
an imagined Christ that is not alive.</p>
<p>Christ entered into the city upon Palm Sunday.</p>
<p>This is the way we love to imagine that vast
and tremendous fact–the final entrance of divinely
human truth into the citadel of life.</p>
<p>We love to think of Him as a white-robed,
majestic figure crowned with glory, with smooth
hair and shining face–mild, benignant, exalted.
We love to picture to ourselves how young men<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</SPAN></span>
and maidens and little children ran before His
coming and spread their garments or fragrant
branches of trees in His triumphal way, shouting
with multitudinous cadence, “Hosannah in the
highest!” How splendid it is to think thus of
the King of Glory coming into His city of holiness.
Thus imagined, it is a grand and beautiful
picture, and we wonder how those scribes and
pharisees, those priests and Levites, blinded with
their own wickedness, should not have seen the
splendor of it all–should have denied and crucified
One who came thus gloriously into their
city.</p>
<p>But in so depicting that divine coming we
bow in submission, not to the living fact, but to
a picture of that fact which we ourselves have
created in the imagination. That is how we
would have liked to see the Messiah of Jehovah-God
come into His glory. That is how we would
have arranged it if we had had the shaping of
events, and we can bow before that image easily
enough. But, alas! for us it is not the way in
which He really comes. For God does not shape
His events as we would have them shaped; He
shapes them exactly different.</p>
<p>Read for yourself the truth as it stands written
in the Divine Word of Jehovah-God, and
then ask your own heart whether you would not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</SPAN></span>
have rejected Him as the scribes and pharisees
of that day rejected Him.</p>
<p>For in the actuality of fact there could have
been and there was no such glory of coming.
That which the intelligent, thoughtful men of that
day saw was, apparently, a common man, a journeyman
carpenter, travel-stained, weary, footsore,
riding upon a shaggy little ass, surrounded
by a knot of rough fishermen and followed by
a turbulent multitude gathered from the highways
and the byways. For He had chosen for
His associates, not the good and the virtuous, the
reputable and the law-abiding citizen; He had
chosen the harlot, the publican, the sinner, the
outcast. For He proclaimed with His own lips
that He was the Saviour of the sinners and not
of the righteous. Read for yourself of the multitude
that followed Him! How they stripped
the clothes from their backs to throw in His path;
how they rent and tore the branches from the
trees, mutilating and dismembering God’s created,
shady things, they knew not why. That
mob believed that He was coming to overthrow
existing law and order, so that the rich and the
powerful might be cast down, and that they, the
poor and the destitute, might be set up in their
stead. They believed (for He had demonstrated
it to them) that He possessed a supernatural<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</SPAN></span>
power to perform miracles, and that He could
and would use that power to overturn existing
order. For did He Himself not say with His
own very lips that He could overturn the Temple
of the Lord and could build it up again in
three days. Such was the ignorant mob that
shouted and raved when He entered the city
riding on an ass. They expected to see something
supernatural done, and, when He showed no
miracles, they presently, in a day or two, turned
against Him like wild beasts and gave Him over
to mortal agony and death. Such as that was
the crowd that really followed Him, and it was
not beautiful and exalted.</p>
<p>There the story stands written in the Book of
Books–a Gospel so divine that every single word–yea,
every jot and tittle written within it–is
holy. There it stands terrible and stern for us
scribes and pharisees of intelligent respectability
to read. We cannot accept it in its reality;
for even now we would deny it as we, scribes
and pharisees, priests and Levites, did of old.
For, alas! we cannot accept Him in His reality.</p>
<p>We pharisees of old preferred to see their
Messiah come according to their idea of order
and of righteousness, and when He did not come
thus, we could not acknowledge Him. We of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</SPAN></span>
to-day build up a beautiful picture of Him, but,
in reality, we would deny and revile the living
fact as we did before. It could not be otherwise,
for God has made us as we are.</p>
<p>You of to-day ought not to blame us because
we were afraid when we beheld that Christ of
publicans and sinners bursting into our Temple,
and, with fury in His voice and in His aspect,
thrash those who sat there upon business doing
no harm. What wonder when we heard Him
say He could tear down our beautiful Temple
(the fruit of so much reverential labor) and build
it up again in three days–what wonder that we
should have been afraid lest the mob, taking Him
at His word, should rend and tear down all our
sacred things with an insane fury. What wonder
that Bishop Caiaphas, seeing all the terrors
of violence that threatened the peace of the community,
should have said: “It is better that this
one Man should perish rather than all of us should
die.”</p>
<p>We scribes and pharisees–we are the bulwarks
of law and order and of existing religion.
Let Christ come to-day and we would crucify
Him–if the law allowed us to do so–just as
we scribes and pharisees did nineteen hundred
years ago. For is it not better, indeed, that one
man should die rather than that all existing order<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</SPAN></span>
should be overturned, and that law and religion
should perish?</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Go ye down, scribes and pharisees, into the
secret, hidden places of your city where the immortal
and living image of God lies with its face
in the dust of humility. There alone you will
find the living Christ, and if you, finding Him in
His rags and poverty, can truly take Him by the
hand and lift Him up, then will He also raise you
up into a life that shall be everlasting. For there
is no other God of humanity than that poor and
lowly image–no, not in heaven or on the earth
or in the abyss beneath the earth.</p>
<p>For out of the dust of misery and of sin He
lifts the lowly up and makes him new so that in
a life hereafter he shall shine with a glory that is
of God’s creating, and not of man’s.</p>
<p>He who has ears to hear let him hear, let him
hear; only God be merciful to us poor hypocrites
and sinners, who deny His living presence. Happy,
indeed, is it for us that His mercy is infinite
and endures forever, else we would perish in our
own pride of lawfulness and virtue, and be forever
lost to any hope of salvation.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
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