a The Commoner JULY, 191 15. The Inexorableness of Moral Law A selection from Dr. Charles E. Jefferson' recent volume, WHAT THE WAR IS TEACHING, copyrighted 1916, and reprinted by permission of the publishers, Fleming H. Revell Company. When one looks out upon a continent deluged with human blood, tho question leaps to his lips which Gideon asked centuries ago: "If the Lord be with us, why then is all this befallen us? and where be all His miracles which our fathers told us of?". The question "Why?" has been during tnese recent montns on our lips a thou sand times. We have punctuated our reading of the newspaper accounts of carnage with- Why? We have sighed it, and cried it, and moaned It. We have woven it into our praypfs. With us Christians it has been an agonizing question because we are committed to the be lief that God lives and reigns, and that He is a God of love But the heart keeps asking, Where is He? Where was He when the shells screamed and burst over the heads of tho multitude, or. men, women and children who streamed foiui , from falling Antwerp? WJiere was He when Poland was. swept with fire and sword? Where was He when the Lusitania sank? Where was He when the, Turkish butchers piled up the bodies .of the Armenian dead? The man of the world has also had his per plexity. He, too, has asked Why? Science has trained all of us to think of, the universe as be ing governed according to law. We can not easily think of any phenomenon without seek ing its cause. We can. not readily believe that events are unrelated. The sequence of things which happen is what it is, for a reason. When a planet refused to keep in the orbit which the astronomer had traced, he had no rest day or night until he had .found an explanation for this singular behavior. It was the perturbation of Uranus which led to the finding of Neptune Men had for, generations died of yellow fever at r Panama,: and when the scientist got on the field he proceeded fco; investigate the 'cause of the J fever. Cancer Continues to- slay its victims, and in laboratories nil over the world trained in vestigators, are 'zealously working, determined to find the- cause We can not allow anything in this Tvorld of ours to remain unexplained. We wrestle with it and refuse to let it go until it surrenders to us its secret. It is impossible to l stand before a phenomenon, so vast and appall ing as is this European War, without asking the question: "Why has. all this befallen us?" There are various possible explanations. We might say , that ., the war is due to chance.. , It happened. The' universe is a great wheel of for tune, and the' dice happened to come out in this particular way. History is a great gamble, and just now we are having a bad streak of luck: The world is a huge, kaleidoscope, kept turning ceaselessly in hands we do not see, and one can never tell one moment into what new combina tions the .human beads are going to f alL The r solar system began in a fortuitous concourse of . atoms, and the present war is another rillustnfc tion of the haphazard way in which thecosmos ' stumbles blindly along its way. That is a 'pos sible explanation, but it is so repugnant, to; the modern mind that we may dismiss it without serious consideration. " . r . -: PLTJNGING HEADLONG INTO ABSS; , Or we. may. say that the war is due io .accjK dent. Accidents do liappeh, and this is ojae.bf them. The European, nations were climbing the. slippery slope of the Matterhorn, of civilization, and the foot of one of thetn. slipping, ,it (fell dragging with it all the. others, .and so, now yon , behold eleven of them plunging headlong into the abyss! It is an explanation which ..will not commend itself to many of us. We might say that the war Is due to fate. All things are in. the grip of a mysterious law which compels all men to be what they are and all events to happen as they do. Nobody is respon sible for what he does, nobody can be justly censured for what comes to pass. This war was an irrepressible' conflict. There was no possible escape. Human wisdom and foresight could not have prevented it. Serbia had to be where she is and she had to do what she did. The same is true of all the other nations. They had to exist, they had to grow, they had to give offense, and finally they had to fight. -The destiny of nations is shaped by factors unforseen and incalculable. This was the old Greek idea. "Beyond and above tho Olympian gods," as Froudo says, "lay the silent, brooding fate, of which victim and tyrant were alike the instruments." The idea finds classic expression in the marble group of Laocoon and his two sons. Two serpents swim in from Tenedos, and encircling tho father and his sons crush them to death. It was easy for the ancients to believo in tho three goddesses by whose will one's character and career are deter mined. One of them spins the thread of life, the second determines its length, the third cuts it off. STRANGE FASCINATION OF HUMAN MIND This fancy of an inscrutable and irresistible fate has had a' strange fascination for the hu man mind. It has haunted tho imagination of many generations. Tho sonost thinkers of our modern world have repudiated it. Shakespeare tramples on it again and again in his plays. Lis ten to Casslus: "Men at some time are masters of their fates: The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, But in ourselves, that wo are underlings." Listen to Edmund in "King Lear": 4lThis is the excellent foppery of tho world, that,, when we are sick in fortune, (often the Bur felt of our own behaviour,) we make guilty of our disasters, the sun, the moon, and tho stars: as if we were villians by necessity; fools by heavenly comp.uls'on; knaves, thieves, and treachers by spherical predominance; drunk ards, liars, and adulterers by an enforced obedi ence of planetary influence; and all that wo are evil in, by a divine thrusting on." John Milton expressed the conviction of the best minds of tho seventeenth century when he said: "Necessity or chanco Approach not me, and what I will Is fate." Samuel Johnson spoke not only for the eighteenth century, but fr all centuries when he claimed: "I know I am free, and that is the end of it!" But while w.e have- outgrown thepagan su perstition of fatalism in our. own individual life, the-idea still .lingers in circles which discussion-, ternational relations. There are philosophers who still live In the twilight of the old Greek mythology. There are university professors so belated as to teach that this war came by fate, One finds occasionally in magazines such non sense; as this;.. "All great wars are fated." If ;they are, fated, then we are not responsible for them! This is the excellent foppery of .a benighted section of the learned world. If we should find a Teuton and Slav firing at one another in the street, and if on being asked to stop, both should reply that they were fated to do -just whatithey were doing, the policeman would promptly escort them to the jail In order that they might meditate on their absurd phil osophy. But when millions of Sla'.s and millions of Teutons fall to killing one another, men who have a reputation for sanity and the power of thpught, begin to telhus that such conduct could, not have beea avoided This is. the1 ex cellent foppery of befuddled professors, thatna tions become butchers by necessity, brigands and incendiaries by heavenly compulsion, perpetra tors ,of damnable atrocities, by a divine thrust ing on!' This war ls'not, a monster- serpent which has swum in from some infernal Tenedos hidden, in the mists of, t)ie dark and all-surrounding, sea. We must seek an explanation more ra tional.. We might say that war is a school, which God opens, from time to time for the education pf mankind in those virile and conqueriug virtues in wnich He delights. War is a feature of the educational program prescribed by the Almighty. It is not an elective, but belongs to the list of compulsory studies. No nation can escape it. It imparts a discipline to be obtained in no' other way. This is the teaching of a school of phil osophers who, disliking the terminology of Greek mythology, steal pbrasesr from the vocab ulary 4of religion. Some men are greatly im pressed when told that war is according to the will of God. But let us unroll this theory before the face of Jesus of Nazareth, the man who came into the world to teach men of a heavenly . Father who is infinite in tenderness and gentleness and love. Let us think of this "school of virtue" in the presence of the man who claimed to.haye in him the very spirit of God, so that he did not hesi tate to say: "He that hath seen -met hath seen the Father." Jesus burned like a furnace in the presence of injustice and cruelty.. His eyes flashed fire when He saw one man hurt another. even with words. He could not tee a womaa wronged, or a child mistreated, without His soul standing up In vehement protest. Ht was always sympathetic, affectionate, forgiving. His hands wero stretched out not to harm but to heal. His life was given not to destroy but to save. He assured men that He did always the things which wore pleasing to God. He de clared that Ho was the way to God. Ho stood before them saying: "I have given you an ex ample." With the figure of Jesus Christ before us, how dare any man say that war is a school of virtue established by God? How dare ho say that hu- . man butchery is a divine ordinance for tho pur pose of building up in men tho dispositions of Jesus Christ? Go through tho hospitals of Eu ropo and look on tho scones which they present: ,. boys with their legs and arms torn off; other boys with they eyes jabbed out; other boys with their skulls broken and their brains oozing out; other boys with their abdomen ripped open and their bowels protruding; stand in tho presence of human beings beaten Into pujp by tho instruments of war, and say If you can: "This is.dlvlnely foreordained. This is the approved method of our Heavenly Father." Tho man who says that war is a dovico choson by tho Almighty for the education of man tramples on tho Christian religion. Ho Is a ; blasphemer. He Is worse than an atheist. Bet-', ter bolieve in no God at all than in ono who has the mind of a fiend. If there Is a rovelatlon of God in Jesus Christ, then we can bo certain that God hates the mailed fist, He despises shining armor, He loathes .all tho pomp and circum stance of war. Tho Hebrew prophet told his countrymen that God despised their feast days, and took no interest In the incense of their sol emn assemblies. Ho would not accept any of, their sacrificial offerings. 'Their religious songs V . wero an abomination to Him. What Ho wanted' was righteousness. If God really speaks to ug" In Christ, then we may bo certain that Ho says. to the nations of our day: "I hate your target practice, I despise your bayonet drills, your mil itary efficiency. is an abomination to me. Take away tho gilded foolery of the barracks and the ... What, shall wo say thenof war? It it is. not ., due to' chanco or to accident or to fate or to:the.x good pleasure of God, lfowjAre we to account for,.r it? Why riot think it is 'retribution? Why not consider it as penalty', f oit ;violated law? Whyj not meditate upon It as the content of one -df U the vials of, the wrath of God? Jesus Chrjstu speaks of weeping and gnashing of teeth. v'Heoj says that certain persons will bo beaten vrUlio many stripes. He pictures a fire into which transgressors are thrown. May it not Tjo 'that Europe has been brought to judgment to answer for the deeds done in the body, and that1 the " warring nations. a,re now in what the New Tea-t tament calla Gehenna,? . .' ' MOST RATIONAL INTERPRETATION,. ,: ,' To my mind this is tho most rational of all' the interpretations of the war, and also the most comforting- If this war came by chance then I am discouraged.' If we are living' In 'a universe In which things are so loosely ' mail- aged that an -avalanche like this can fall upon'" us without cause, then life is not worth HVirig Why gd ori arid make p'lars for the future?'.1 nte If the war is due t5 a'ce'dent, then the same accident might "happen again. If it Is due totw fate, then why struggle, any longer? If we arV doomed to undergo sucH a catastrophe by ";a ' pow'er which weefcn neither' understand 'nor5 overcome, then th'e outlook is disheartening.' -We; aro Without hope ln! tho world. '" ' '! if , the wat Is the1 wise provision of Qodritig' tho "cultivation .of vjr,tues and graces, then how1-, can "wo WjO'rsjiip Hip?. If Ho can deViso no ' better wy for the feflhing of the humeri heart . tha.h the periodic slaughtering of multitudes 'qX ; young, men, then for ono refuse to bend my knee to Him. How can the heart adore a God who employs the methods of a savage? ' But If the war is the consequence of freedom which has been abused, If it is the natural con sequence of long-continued and outrageous sin ning, if It Is the harvest of seeds which men have long been sowing, then, however we may be pained and horrified by the tragedy in which Europe writhes, we can hold up our head and face the future undaunted. If tho present dis tress is the result of sinning, then Europe can repent and sin no more. We Christians have long believed that the Lord God is merciful and gracious, long-suffering in goodness and truth, . keeping -mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and- transgression .and sin, and It we are now. finding out in a fresh and terrible way thai Ht 5 J J