v-rawn?""- "y .y 7-'i?y -rfswfisr 'V- The Commoner : VOL.t15,- NO.- ;l 14 -' -j7rr'g!pWr- " o' W: (tv i t h k.t & r t -. "V A. The Nazarene's Program Not Ceremony, but Service Out of a Heart of Love (Sormon tlolivored at tho Foundry Methodist church, Washington, D. C August 2, 1914, by Rev. H. F. Huntington, of Pawnee City, Neb.). Botwoon tho Mediterranean sea and tho Ara bian desert lies a strip of land called Palestine, which in tho days of tho Christ, stretched from Dan to Boorshoba. This little country is isolated from tho rest of tho world by rugged mountains on tho north, tho desert on tho east,, tho wilder ness on tho south, and tho sea on tho west. Tho Jews, who claimed tho land as theirs, had been in bondage to Egypt, later in bondage in Baby lon, and in thQ days of tho Nazarono were sub ject to tho world power which had its center in Romo. v In tho northern part of this land, in the prov ince of Galileo, was a little town of no import ance, and, it seems, of bad repute. The Romans of that porlod would not have considered that any good could como out of Israel, and the Jews, In turn, thought that nothing good could come out of Nazareth. Nazareth was tho despised of the despised. Thero lived in Nazareth a pious and kindly Israelite by tho name of Joseph with Mary his wife, Although of tho lineage of David, they wore peasant folk who lived a simple life. We easily presume, and with no little reason, that their homo was in a' cabin, and that their fare was of a humblo sort. In that home, with no halo about his head, there grow up a lad who attracted no attention for precocity. From the day Joseph took Mary and thG young child and fled into Egypt, to the day he entered upon his public coreor at the age of thirty, we have but ono glimpse of him. That was at the age of twelve when hoTeasoned with the doctors in the temple. Returning to Nazareth tho son of Mary con tinued subject to his parents, ho played and worked, ran errands and attended school, and loarned tho traditions of his race, as did the other boys of tho village. What could be expected of one who came from uoh an insignificant country, from among de spised people, from a. village despised by that despised people, and from peasant parentage? Yos, the land was small, but it was the bridge between the civilizations of tho earth.; with Mes opotamia on the east, Egypt on the south and Europe on the west. The race was despised, and yet where waB there a bettor rwe, with richer traditions, and higher ideals? The Greeks con . trlbuted philosophy, tho Romans government, but the Jews contributed that which is of more value to the world than ajl else, they contrib uted the idea of Jehovah God. The parents of tho Nazarene wore peasants, but where could better blood and greater love be found? And these, good blood and true love, are a richer heritage than royal robes and jeweled crown. And tho town? Despised as the town was it afforded a better atmosphere for the growth of a world figure than did Jerusalem itself. The simple, unconventional life of Nazareth was in striking contrast to the complex, and stereotyped life of Jerusalem. Tho simple life in Nazareth, a life of thought and toil, prepared tho Naz arene to tear the husks of tradition from the germ of truth. Palestine was a world in a miniature. From tho tropical climate of the region about the Dead sea to tho snow clad summit of Mount Hormon, there was every variety of climate with a corresponding variety in vegetable and animal life. From this epitomized world came the Naz- arone with a universal religion suited to the needs of all men, in all lands, and for all times. Before the religion of Jehovah could be given to mankind as a world religion it had to be freed from the dead letter of Judaism. To do that Jesus broke with tho established order, and as a result died for the Truth. It is one thing to judge a man o tlie past who went against tho ideas and convictions of his day; it is quite another thing to judge such a man when he is a contemporary. We judge the times of the Nazarene In the light which the Nazarene brought, but it was not so with his contemporaries. They had not had that light. According to th0 religious standards of his day Jesus was a Sabbath breaker. Fidelity to the Sabbath was a Jewish virtue which was much boasted. Jewish spldiers had allowed them selves to bo slaughtered rather than resist an at tack on tho Sabbath. If men had died rather than break tho holy day, could not Jesus' dis ciples suffer tho inconvenience of hunger rather than break the day? Going through the grain field they plucked tho heads and rubbed out the grain in their hands. All food for tho Sabbath. should havo been prepared the day before, and this was equivalent to reaping and threshing. It was a gross violation of tho law. But man had mado tho traditions, whilo God had made nature, and the laws of nature which God made were higher than tho ceremonial laws which man had made. The Sabbath was made for man, and not, man for tho Sabbath. In tho synagogues ho broke again with the religionists by healing a man on the Sabbath, day. It was only a withered hand, and might have waited until the following day. But his critics would have hauled a sheep out ot the pit on tho Sabbath, and a man was worth more than a sheep. Life is of great value, and why should this man wait another day to have his hand re stored? , On tho Sabbath Jesus' saw in the synagogue a woman who had suffered for eighteen years. She was bent together. Jesus had compassion on her and laying his hand upon her, healed her. But instead of rejoicing to see the woman straighten up, the ruler of the synagogue was indignant because Jesus healed on the Sabbath. It was the spirit of tho prodigal's brother and of Jonah. On the Sabbath day by the pool at the sheep gate in Jerusalem Jesus found a man who had been "for . thirty-eight years in his infirmity." Jesus again broke tho Jewish law by healing a man. At Jesus' command the man carried his bed away with him, and thus ho too broke tho Sabbath. In spite of his great miracles there wer0 those who said that he was not of God because he did not keep the Sabbath (John 9: 16). It all resolves itself into this, that the Sabbath was nothing to Jesus except as it might minister to the needs of men. The Nazarene's concern was for man's welfare because he loved men, and that is why he clashed with the de fenders of tradition who loved traditions more than they loved men. It may be that we have spent more time and energy as the champion defenders of a day than w0 have spent as the champions of tho highest Interests of men. The Nazarene was interested in men, not in institu tions, except as they ministered to men. Fol lowing his example we will seek for all men the Sabbath rest for tho sake of men. Jesus broke with the traditions of the elders in the matter of the ceremonial washing of hands, and charged the hypocrites who accused him with a more serious dffense. The command ment of, God said, "Honor thy father and thy mother"; but when a needy parent came asking for help, they put their religion before the claims of parents and declared that their prop erty had been pledged to God. But the washing of hands was nothing compared with honor and love for parents. The ceremonial washing of hands was swept aside because it contributed nothing to life, and man was not made for cere mony. The Pharisees bathed after returning from the market place. In fact it required so much time to keep them from being defiled that only those with leisure could be holy. The man who had to toil from early to late must be defiled much of the time and that idea is not yet elim inated from tho religious conceptions of some A certain priest is spending his life delivering a great message to multitudes of people through out this country. Another priest speaking of him declared that ho was doing more good than if he remained in his parish, yet it was a mistake so far as the good of the priest was concerned, because traveling about all tho while, he did not havo time to load a priestly life. But Jesus' teaching leads us to the conclusion that holiness which is incompatible with a busy, useful life is not holiness at all. The Nazarene, himself a toiler, loved toilers. Tho religionists of the Nazareno's day were too holy to associate with sinners, and when Jesus ate with publicans and sinners he was se verely criticised. The ceremonial holiness of tho religious leaders put them in a class by themselves, but Jesus was not ceremoniously lioly, his holiness was tho holiness of love and he loved tho sinner as much as the saint. The sinners needed him, so ho mingled with the sinners and actually ate with them, talked with them, and let them know that ho loved them. In declaring that he desired mercy and not sacrifice, he was in line with Hosea (6:6) who represented God as saying, "I desire good ness, and not sacrifice; and the knowledge of God more than burnt-offerings." . Because Jesus ate with sinners and did not observe the system of fasting, they called him a friend, of publicans and sinners, a glutton and a wine bibbler. It is easily seen that to havo added Christian ity to Judaism would havo been like putting new cloth' on an old garment. Judaism stood for ceremonialism, Christianity stands for life. The danger which threatens any religion is that it may become stereotyped and formal. Ono won ders if Jesus were to appear in America as he did in Judea, whether he would not causo as great consternation among the religionsists of today as he did among the religionists then. One denomination can not mingle with another be cause that other denomination sings hymns in stead of psalms, and singing psalms is a vital part of life; ono denomination can not unite with another on account of the modo of baptism, and baptism, especially a given mode of baptism, is a vital part of life; or they are kept apart because of th6 difference of attitude assumed in time of prayer, as if striking an attitude was prayer; or they are kept apart because of a dif ference in name, as if vital religion was con tained in a name. About the middle of the six teenth century a denomination split on the ques tion of buttons and pockets, and nine-tenths of the issues which keep the evangelical churches apart today have as little to do with the religion of the Nazarene. What a spectacle we must pre sent before a Christ who made mercy, lustice, service, and love the requirements of God! Fivo church spires in a town of as many hundred people, and three of those churches partially supported by missionary money. Wo build altar against altar while great areas of our country are , wholly without tho church, while hundreds of thousands of foreigners in our own land do not have the gospel, to say nothing of millions living in total ignorance of the fact that the Christ lived and revealed a loving God to a sin sick world. Not only that, but the greatest obsta cle to the federation of the church in the foreign field is the "traditions of the elders" in the church at home. A religion 'in which ceremony is the prominent thing makes it possible for a man to be a good religionist and at tho same time a thief and a murderer. Witness the money changers in the temple, and the mob before the house of Pilate. That was long ago. Yes, that was long ago, but the tendency to put law for life is the same in every age. . If the following story is not a true one, it is, nevertheless, within the realm- of possibility, and the like of it happens daily: A robber was holding up a train. The passengers wero lined ap'in the aisle With their arms above their heads, the bold outlaw was going through their pock ets. He came to onQ who said, "Yon would not rob a clergyman, would you?" "To what church do you belong?" asked the bandit. Arid when he was told, he said, "You make take your arms down, I belong to tho same church." Whenever a church overshadows love for God and man with requirements which are outside of life, it entourages men to be religious rather than. Christian. When a man can cheat his fel low man on Saturday, and crowd his way up to the communion table on Sunday, there is something radically wrong with his conception of the teachings of the Nazarene. Wo need moro of the spirit of Him who swept ceremon ialism aside and put in its place service " that flows out of a heart of love. Jesus' program was a program of service. This is what he-said when he stood up in tho syna gogue in Nazareth to read: "The spirit of tho Lord is upon me, because he anointed me to preach good tidings to the poor; he hath sent mo. to proclaim release to the captives, and re covering ,of sight to tho blind, to set at liberty them that ar0 bruised, to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord." And then he startled his old I ' o jK tJ&i