,"? '".'-!WftCTrxj., vrffwrff, ' V The-GomiftionrC QQT03ER, 1914- w V" . -r r r r8-rrr rw, ' . PEACE DAY - Abstract of , Mr. . Bryan's address, Sunday, October-4th, 1914, at New York prayer day exercises. Responding to petitions from the representa tives of all religious faitliB the president has, by solemn proclamation, set apart this day .as a day of prayer for peace, and we, by assembling on this occasion, indicate approval of his official act while we, in the spirit of worship, plead with the Almighty to so make known His sovereign will as to restore peace, complete and enduring, to the nations now at war. It is not necessary -that we should consider causes that led up to the conflict, or attempt to locate responsibility for the conditions that now exls.t. It is not only not necessary, but contrary to -the natural order. If a friend meets with an accident, we address ourselves first to his im mediate needs, and after we have relieved his sufferings, we seek the cause of his misfortune with a view to saving others from a similar fate. 'So today, when a number of nations, all our friends, have been drawn into the vortex of war, "our first duty is to use such influence as we may have to hasten the return of peaceT there will be ample time afterward to devisj ways and means for preventing future appeals to arms. Prayer Is a recognition of a power higher than ourselves and a confession that we believe in the existence of a force above and beyond man's control;' prayer expresses humility it is an acknowledgement of man's finiteness in the presence of the Infinite. It proclaims reliance upon a wisdom to which out minds cannot aspire and a willingness to abide by. the will of God, made manifest among men. As each individual life is influenced; even often controlled, by events which man does not foresee and which care can not avoid, so the tide of battle is sometimes turned by unexpected in cidents which no precaution can prevent, and which no preparedness can withstand. The be liever, however fixed his opinion and however positive his sympathies, should desire the tri umph of that whidh is right above that Which may accord--either with his seeming interest or his judgment. If tliis is our attitude tdWard those overruling events which indicate the pleasure or displeasure of the Heavenly Father, we can with more profit to ourselves consider the elements which enter into the establishment of peace remembering that we ourselves need enlightenment as to the course that will enable us to be helpful both to our own and to other nations. In this age our interests' are so e'ntwined with the interests of those who reside in other, lands that no nation can live or die unto itself alone. If we' had no higher' reason for encouraging con ditions conducive to" peace, we should find ample justification in the fact that the burdens of war are no longer borne entirely by those who are direct participants in it. . Today every neutral nation finds' itself greatly embarrassed by the disturbance which the European war has "wrought in every department of human activity; and we, therefore, appreciate more fully than ever before how numerous are the ties that bind us together and how far-reaching are the conse quences of war. We must not be discouraged if this, the great est of all wars breaks out just when we were most hopeful of the substitution of reason for force in the settlement of international disputes. It may be that the "world needed one more awful object-lesson to prove conclusively the fallacy of the doctrine that preparedness for war can give assurance of peace. This assumption is built upon the theory that peace rests upon fear, whereas all history proves the contrary. Love is the only foundation upon which permanent peace can rest; peace Is promoted, therefore by anything which promotes good will. Continuous preparation for war presupposes the existence of an enemy who must be hated until he can be overcome; but hatred begets hatred, and te venge is the heaviest load that man or nation Can carry, It is only occasionally that one has an opportunity to do hurt to an enemyf.but the desire to haTm another is a continuing source of injury to ones-self. And even if one could be completely avenged by the exercise of physical force, he could not escape the influence which the use of this force and the winning of a triumph by means of it are likely to exert upon himself. When the. Creator placed man upon the earth He so ar ranged the restraints Intended for the control of his life that lie is Impotent to escape from th.e. results of his own wrongdoing. No human court can suspend the decree pronounced in tho sentence "The wages of sin is death." As man's .happiness was placed in his own keeping when it was made dependent, not upon what tho world does for him, but upon what he does for tho world, bo his punishments wore committed In part to his own hands when the Makor with held from him the power to protect himself from the punishment which evil-doing inflicts upon tho evil-doer. The commandments that relate to man's con duct toward his fellows were given, not merely for the benefit of those who might without these commandments suffer injury at tho hands of others, but for tho benefit also of those who without the commandments might, while inflict ing injury upon others, bring still greater suf fering upon themselves. Likewise the doctrine of forgiveness was not promulgated for the ben efit of the forgiveness alone but that man, leav ing vengeance to the Lord, might occupy his time to better advantage. Most of the errors which man commits in in ternational affairs arise from a failure to under stand the fundamental truth that moral prin ciples are aB binding upon nations as upon in dividuals. The commandment: "Thou shalt not steal," covers grand hvrceny as well as petit lar-' ceny; "Thou shalt not kill," 'applies to nations as well as to individuals. A nation is but a group of individuals, and no group, however numerous, can expunge one syllable of the moral law though hand join In hand, the wicked shall not bo unpunished. We shall be alded in our efforts to promote peace if we fix in our minds certain propositions which embody pertinent and Important truths. Some of these propositions are directed against delusions; others express the conclusions drawn from the world's experience. JTirst: War is not to be judged by the appoar ance of soldier on parade. Tho regiment march ing through the stree J, with banners flying, keeping time to tho strains of inspiring music, is attractive to the eye; but this is not war. War is understood only when one visits the hospital, when disease 'is ravaging the camp of the battle field where men meet face to face, grimly deter mined to sell their lives at the highest possible price, paid in human blood; or when one enters the fatherless home from which the bread-winner has been taken, and measures the value of the protection withdrawn from the children and the added cares Imposed upon the mother. Weight must also be given to the aftermath of prejudice and ill-will, for each war sows the seeds of future wars. Second: The good that man's ingenuity may be able to extract from war, must not be used to justify recourse to arms. Such advances in civilization as have been credited to war could have been secured in larger measure and at less cost by peaceful means. Man has been rowing upstream and it is necessary to subtract the speed of the war-current before we can estimate tho progress which he would have made had he not been compelled to pull against the swift cur rents of human passion. Third: Man need not stain his hands with his brother's blood in order to qualify himself for worthy deeds. We could not worship God as we do "if we believed that He had so constituted man as to make war necessary to man's eleva tion. If war were a moral necessity it would be planned for, not deploretL If it were a recog nized human need, men would claim credit for it, not deny responsibilities as they do today. One of the encouragements to be drawn from the present European conflict is to be found In the fact that the governments involved vie with each other In refusing to admit, that they began it. We have taken a long step In advance when no civilized nation will either admit a' desire for war or confess an intention to inaugurate it. Fourth: Man is normal when he is calm, not when he is angry; and his plans must therefore be perfected and carried out when his conscience and his judgment are free to act. When a man is angry he boasts of what he CAN do; when ho is calm he considers what he OUGHT to do. Our nation not only largely profits by the peace policy which it has pursued, but it has put itself in a position to render a larger service to the World than it otherwise could and with na tions, as with individuals, service is the meas ure of greatness. By promptly accepting the me diation generously offered by the representa tives of three" great Republics of South America, Brazil. Argentina and Chita. Prfr1fnt Wfli not only secured a peaceful solution of a Uta&' tion that throatenod war, but ho gavo a stroll' impetus to tho cause of conciliation, ft will be easier than beforo to proaorvo peace In the westorn hemisphere, and more 'dffflcult to (kfclfe" war. '" In Its dealings with other countries our'go ornmont has found It wise to discourage the;' em ployment of tho ultimatum and to substitute a continuation df negotiations, on tho theory that nothing is final botwoon friends. Our government, stoadlly advancing toward tho goal of univorsal peace, has also found it, possible to make rnoro remoto the possibility of war by tho negotiation of treaties which pro vldo for the investigation of all disputes before tho employment of force. Twonty-sovon of those treaties have already been signed, and tho gov- -ornments which they ropresent embrace consid erably more than two-thirds of tho population of tho world. In fact, almost every nation of importance has endorsed the principle, and near ly all have concluded ebnventions. Thcso trek ties loavo nothing which can become a causo of war until after an International tribunal has in vestigated the matter In dispute. Tho commlg slon provided for is a permanent one, ready to bo Invdkod at a moment's notice, and the period allowed for examination Into tho difference? is a year long enough to pormlt passions to sub sldo and questions of honor to bo soparatod from questions of fact. In ordor to secure tho inves tigation of all questions, without any exception whatever, it is necessary to reserve to tho con tracting partios tho right to act independently upon the subject-matter after tho investigation has been made; but this right, while important, Is not likely to bo exercised since the Investiga tion Is quite certain to result in agreement. Fifth: Tho plane of existence will not be low ered, neither will the field of endeavor bo nar rowed when, as foretold in prophesy, tho sword , shall bo beaten Into plough-shares and tho spearg into prunlng-hooks whon nation shall not lift up sword against nation and whon people shall learn war no moro. Man has spent a consider able portion of his time in the work of -destruction; in tho day that is dawning, ho can devote all his efforts to production. Already we have learned that it is more ad vantageous to expand tho land wo have' by doubling its productiveness than it would be to add an equal area by conquest; tho sacrifice mado In altruistic work prove how limitless is the field of noblo effort when men rival each other In doing good. There Is as much inspira tion In a noble life as In a heroic death. Sixth: "No question Is ever sott'ed until it Is settled right." Force is important to fasten upon mankind a single falsehood. There is in every righteous cause an inherent power by which it Is able to overcome opposition. As the Invisible germ of life in the grain of wheat takes from earth and air that which it needs for its growth and perfection, so tho Invisible germ'JB) in truth gathers nourishment from tho deaafcings about it, and grows until it be comes an irresistible force, bringing victory to those who dare to stand for it One with God shall chase a thousand, and two, put ten thou sand to flight. Seventh: Tho goal of humanity is universal ' brotherhood and each' individual is destined to find that the commandment "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself," Instead of diminishing his share of the proceeds of the general toll of the world, will give the largest assurance of perma nent prosperity and advancement. He who im pressed upon man His imago and who holds in His hand tho destinies of nations, has ordained that man's welfare shall be dependent upon obedience to tho Divine law, and mankind Is drawn together In the indissoluble bonds of common brotherhood as man sees this Jaw with increasing clearness. At tho close of the civil war one of the sad experiences of that great conflict was described In verse. Tho story runs like this: "Two brothers, reared at the same fireside, had enlisted, one In the Union army and one ia the Confederate ranks. During a battle, one of these thrust his bayonet Into the breast of a soldier in the opposing line. When he stooped to withdraw the weapon, he found that he had killed his brother," and then the poet In touch ing words described the sorrow that overwhelm ed him. It is not too much to hope that in the days which are before us we shall feel more and more the binding influence of that tie that links eack human being to every other until we shall fully recognize th claim of each, upon all. God speed the day! t