"sane," except that they lift to a higher
excitement and fall to a
lower
depression, and that these extremer phases of mania or
melancholia slip the leash of
mentalconsistencyaltogether and take
ab
normal forms. They tap deep founts of
impulse, such as we of the
safer ways of mediocrity do but
glimpse under the influence of
drugs, or in dreams and rare moments of controllable
extravagance.
Then the
insane become "glorious," or they become
murderous, or they
become suicidal. All these letter-writers in
confinement have
convinced their fellow-creatures by some
extravagance that they are
a danger to themselves or others.
The letters that come from such types written during their sane
intervals, are entirely sane. Some, who are probably unaware--I
think they should know--of the offences or possibilities that
justify their incarceration, write with a certain
resentment at
their position; others are entirely acquiescent, but one or two
complain of the
neglect of friends and relations. But all are as
manifestly
capable of religion and of the religious life as any
other
intelligent persons during the lucid interludes that make up
nine-tenths perhaps of their lives. . . . Suppose now one of these
cases, and suppose that the
infirmity takes the form of some cruel,
disgusting, or
destructivedisposition that may become at times
overwhelming, and you have our
universal trouble with sinful
tendency, as it were magnified for
examination. It is clear that
the mania which defines his position must be the
primary if not the
cardinal business in the life of a
lunatic, but his problem with
that is different not in kind but merely in degree from the problem
of lusts, vanities, and weaknesses in what we call
normal lives. It
is an unconquered tract, a great rebel
province in his being, which
refuses to serve God and tries to prevent him serving God, and
succeeds at times in wresting his capital out of his control. But
his
relationship to that is the same
relationship as ours to the
backward and insubordinate parishes,
criminal slums, and disorderly
houses in our own private texture.
It is clear that the
believer who is a
lunatic is, as it were, only
the better part of himself. He serves God with this unconquered
disposition in him, like a man who,
whatever else he is and does, is
obliged to be the
keeper of an untrustworthy and
wicked animal. His
beast gets loose. His only
resort is to warn those about him when
he feels that jangling or
excitement of the nerves which precedes
its escapes, to limit its range, to place weapons beyond its reach.
And there are plenty of human beings very much in his case, whose
beasts have never got loose or have got caught back before their
essential
insanity was
apparent. And there are those uncertifiable
lunatics we call men and women of "
impulse" and "strong
passions."
If perhaps they have more
self-control than the really mad, yet it
happens oftener with them that the whole
intelligent being falls
under the
dominion of evil. The
passion scarcely less than the
obsession may
darken the whole moral sky. Repentance and atonement;
nothing less will avail them after the storm has passed, and the
sedulous
preparation of defences and palliatives against the return
of the storm.
This
discussion of the
lunatic's case gives us indeed, usefully
coarse and large, the lines for the
treatment of every human
weakness by the servants of God. A "weakness," just like the
lunatic's mania, becomes a particular
charge under God, a special
duty for the person it affects. He has to minimise it, to isolate
it, to keep it out of
mischief. If he can he must adopt preventive
measures. . . .
These
passions and weaknesses that get control of us
hamper our
usefulness to God, they are an
incessantanxiety and
distress to us,
they wound our self-respect and make us incomprehensible to many who
would trust us, they
discredit the faith we
profess. If they break
through and break through again it is natural and proper that men
and women should cease to believe in our faith, cease to work with
us or to meet us
frankly. . . . Our sins do everything evil to us
and through us except separate us from God.
Yet let there be no mistake about one thing. Here prayer is a
power. Here God can indeed work miracles. A man with the light of
God in his heart can defeat
vicious habits, rise again combative and
undaunted after a hundred falls, escape from the grip of lusts and
revenges, make head against
despair,
thrust back the very onset of
madness. He is still the same man he was before he came to God,
still with his libidinous, vindictive, boastful, or indolent vein;
but now his will to
prevail over those qualities can refer to an
exterior standard and an
external interest, he can draw upon a
strength, almost
boundless, beyond his own.
5. BELIEVE, AND YOU ARE SAVED
But be a sin great or small, it cannot damn a man once he has found
God. You may kill and hang for it, you may rob or rape; the moment
you truly
repent and set yourself to such atonement and reparation
as is possible there remains no
barrier between you and God.
Directly you cease to hide or deny or escape, and turn manfully
towards the consequences and the
setting of things right, you take
hold again of the hand of God. Though you sin seventy times seven
times, God will still
forgive the poor rest of you. Nothing but
utter
blindness of the spirit can shut a man off from God.
There is nothing one can suffer, no situation so
unfortunate, that
it can shut off one who has the thought of God, from God. If you
but lift up your head for a moment out of a stormy chaos of madness
and cry to him, God is there, God will not fail you. A convicted
criminal,
franklypenitent, and neither obdurate nor abject,
whatever the evil of his yesterdays, may still die well and bravely
on the
gallows to the glory of God. He may step straight from that
death into the
immortal being of God.
This
persuasion is the very
essence of the religion of the true God.
There is no sin, no state that, being regretted and
repented of, can
stand between God and man.
CHAPTER THE SEVENTH
THE IDEA OF A CHURCH
1. THE WORLD DAWN
As yet those who may be counted as belonging
definitely to the new
religion are few and scattered and unconfessed, their realisations
are still
uncertain and
incomplete. But that is no augury for the
continuance of this state of affairs even for the next few decades.
There are many signs that the
revival is coming very
swiftly, it may
be coming as
swiftly as the morning comes after a
tropical night.
It may seem at present as though nothing very much were happening,
except for the fact that the old familiar constellations of
theologyhave become a little pallid and lost something of their
multitude of
points. But nothing fades of itself. The deep
stillness of the
late night is broken by a
stirring, and the morning star of
creedless faith, the last and brightest of the stars, the star that
owes its light to the coming sun is in the sky.
There is a
stirring and a
movement. There is a stir, like the stir
before a
breeze. Men are
beginning to speak of religion without the
bluster of the Christian formulae; they have begun to speak of God
without any
reference to Omnipresence, Omniscience, Omnipotence.
The Deists and Theists of an older
generation, be it noted, never
did that. Their "Supreme Being" repudiated nothing. He was merely
the whittled stump of the Trinity. It is in the last few decades
that the
western mind has slipped loose from this absolutist
conception of God that has dominated the
intelligence of Christendom
at least, for many centuries. Almost
unconsciously the new thought
is
taking a course that will lead it far away from the moorings of
Omnipotence. It is like a ship that has slipped its anchors and
drifts, still
sleeping, under the pale and vanishing stars, out to
the open sea. . . .
2. CONVERGENT RELIGIOUS MOVEMENTS
In quite a little while the whole world may be alive with this
renascent faith.
For
emancipation from the Trinitarian formularies and from a belief
in an
infinite God means not merely a great revivification of minds
trained under the decadence of
orthodox Christianity, minds which
have
hitherto been
hopelessly embarrassed by the choice between
pseudo-Christian religion or
denial, but also it opens the way
towards the completest understanding and
sympathy and participation
with the
kindredmovements for
release and for an intensification of
the religious life, that are going on outside the
sphere of the
Christian
tradition and influence
altogether. Allusion has already
been made to the
sympathetic devotional
poetry of Rabindranath
Tagore; he stands for a
movement in Brahminism
parallel with and
assimilable to the
worship of the true God of mankind.
It is too often
supposed that the religious
tendency of the East is
entirely towards other-worldness, to a
treatment of this life as an
evil entanglement and of death as a
release and a
blessing. It is