Is the Word Enough?
By Eric D. Butler
A
Just Relationship - Problems of History - Biblical
Translations - The Test of Truth - The
Word Made Flesh -
Christ Denounces Pharisees - The
Spiritual Base of Civilsation - Prophecy
or Freewill - Science and Truth -
The Eternity of The Kingdom - The New
Christian Renaissance
There is an old saying that even the Devil can
quote Scripture in his own interest. Many Christians do likewise,
engaging in such earnest controversy about words that they obscure
the fact that words are man-evolved symbols for the purpose of reflecting
reality in a manner which enables the individual to make greater
use of that Reality. Reality would have still existed even if language
had never been developed.
Often there is such an unbalanced concentration upon words that attention
is directed away from Truths which exist independently of words. Perhaps
St. Paul had something like this in mind when he warned against "disputing
about words, " which does no good, but only ruins the hearers.Many
years ago the American writer Stuart Chase wrote a best-seller entitled The
Tyranny of Words, showing how the uncritical worship of words often
results in a distortion of the Truth which the words should be used
to reflect. Words are a means to an end, not an end in themselves.
Different word-symbols are used in different languages to describe
the same Reality. For example, "garcon" is the French equivalent of
"boy" in English. "Dieu" is the French symbol of what is "God" in English.Many
Christians have tended to become slaves to the "tyranny of words",
following the example of the Rabbis at the time of Christ, who slavishly
concentrated upon what was "written in law", spent endless time in
quibbling interpretations, fragmented into conflicting groups, with
such undue concentration upon "the word" that there was no action.
All symbols must be seen as but a means to describing Truth in such
a way that it can be applied to serve man. The chalk used to write
the formula concerning the law of gravity on the blackboard, does not
fall to the floor because of the writing; it falls because of the reality
of gravity itself, which always operates in the same way irrespective
of how it might be described. The nature of water has not changed because
man decided to use a formula, H2O to describe it. The symbol merely
reflected the discovery of the reality that water consists of two parts
of hydrogen and one part of oxygen. Appropriate action may one day
result in the hydrogen and the oxygen being separated and used in such
a way that the hydrogen can drive motor cars.
A
JUST RELATIONSHIP
The great Francis Bacon, one of the pioneers of
modern science, appealed for the establishment of a just relationship
between the mind and things. The correct use of word symbols, along
with other symbols, is essential for such a relationship. The question
is far from being merely academic.
The famous Chinese sage Confucius was once asked what he would do
first if it was left to him to administer a country. Confucius surprised
his listeners by saying that his first act would be to correct the
language. When asked what had this to do with the successful administration
of a country, Confucius elaborated:
"If language is not correct, then what is said is not
what is meant; if what is said is not what is meant, then
what ought to be done remains undone; if this remains undone,
morals and arts will deteriorate, justice will go astray;
if justice goes astray the people will stand about in helpless
confusion. Hence there must be no arbitrariness in what is
said. This matter above everything" .When there is
a deliberate perversion of the meaning of word symbols,
as practised by the Marxists with what can best be described
as semantic sabotage, the results are even more disastrous.The
Marxists use semantic sabotage as a tactic of warfare. "Peaceful
co-existence" means one thing to a non-Communist. Communists
and non-Communists agreeing to live together on the basis
of friendly disagreement, but to the trained Marxist "peaceful
co-existence" is a means of persuading the non-Communists
to lower their defences against various types of Marxist
attacks. Large numbers of people today unthinkingly use the
term "discrimination"
in a derogatory manner, as a type of swear-word. The truth is that
discrimination in one form or another is a natural law. Every form
of life discriminates in favour of its own kind The young man who
prefers blondes discriminates against brunettes and redheads! "A
person of discrimination" was at one time used widely as a term of
admiration. The traditional meaning of the word "gay" was rather
different to the current use of the term to describe sodomy.
Much
more important than the words used to describe Christianity are the
Truths of Christianity.
Christ said, "By their fruits ye shall know them" . Not by what people
say, but by what they do. St. James warned that "faith without works
is dead". Also, "be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving
ourselves". Those who enter into never-ending disputation about words,
who never put their expressed faith to the test of action, render
Christianity a grave dis-service. Christ said He had come to "fulfil
the word", indicating that words should be regarded as a means to
an end, not an end in themselves.
PROBLEMS OF
HISTORY
All written history must be treated with caution as it
inevitably reflects the viewpoint of the writer. For example, words
are inadequate to describe a beautiful Spring morning, which can
only be fully appreciated by actually experiencing it. Words are
of limited value in conveying spiritual truth.
Again, actual experience is essential for an understanding. What
is termed insight is often very difficult to put into words. Artists
are said to have a feeling for their subject, which they seek to
express in their chosen medium. C.H. Douglas described true history
as "crystallised politics", policies of all kinds being a tangible
expression of underlying beliefs concerning the nature of reality.
A realistic assessment of Christianity is only possible by a study
of the results of nearly two thousand years of effort to implement
policies rooted in the Truths which Christ revealed. It is significant
that there is no record or suggestion that Christ felt that He should
leave a written record of His life. Unlike a Dr. Johnson with a Boswell
following him around everywhere recording faithfully every act and
word, Christ was content to go around preaching and
"doing good". The last verse of John tells us that "there are also
many other things which Jesus did; were everyone of them to be written,
I suppose that the world itself could not obtain the books that could
be written". In the brief record provided by the four Gospels selected
by the Early Christian Fathers as an authentic record of what Christ
had revealed, there is no reference to English Common Law, limited
constitutional government, trial by jury and similar matters. But
the Truths revealed by Christ, in the simplest of language, were
the seeds which, when treated appropriately, grew into a completely
different type of Civilisation compared with any of the previous
periods.Seeds or acorns possess within themselves the potential to
grow into beautiful flowers or a majestic oak tree. But that potential
will never be realised unless the proper conditions are provided.
In the field of human associations, appropriate action must be taken
by individuals.
The Word must be
made Flesh.
The world into which God manifest Himself in
the form of Christ was such that Christ had to speak the language
of His day. He was addressing a simple, unsophisticated people. And
so Christ also made extensive use of the technique of the Parable,
the telling of a story which conveyed His message. Some of the world's
most famous "fairy
stories"
are, of course, just that - stories. But, like Hans Anderson's
famous story about the Emperor's new clothes, they do convey great
truths. Many professing Christians have failed to seek the Truths
which the recorded words of Christ have sought to convey.
BIBLICAL
TRANSLATIONS
Up until recent times, when there has been a number of new translations
of The New Testament into what is termed modern English, English-speaking
Christians might well have thought that Biblical characters all
spoke in beautiful Elizabethan English. But as the student of Biblical
history knows, it was the King James version of The Bible, produced
by a committee of translators - perhaps the only committee in history
to produce anything of real value! - which was used for so long
throughout the English-speaking world.While many were understandably
upset by the change of style in the new translations, there was
comparatively little concern about whether there had been any distortion
of the original meaning of what Christ said. No serious student
disagrees that the King James version of The New Testament was
based upon a Greek text marred by a number of mistakes, containing
the accumulated errors of fourteen centuries of manuscript copying.
There are always problems with translations and there have been
many debates amongst students. But these debates only highlight
the importance of not becoming enslaved by the veneration of word
symbols. Those enslaved by the worship of words are also enslaved
by the type of rigidity imposed by the Pharisees. They ignore the
importance of historical Christianity, the progressive growth of
two thousand years and the prospects for still greater growth.
Christ specifically rejected the concept of bringing a system for
man. Christ challenged the Pharisaical attempt to systematise every
last detail of man's life. The Sabbath was made for man, not man
for the Sabbath.
And what was the purpose and destiny of man?
To
know and to love God and his fellow man. But to know God requires
freedom to discover God and God's truths. The truth shall make
ye free, said Christ. But truth be discovered. Tremendous technological
developments are often described as the product of Science, now
venerated as some type of new God, capable of providing an answer
to all man's problems. But Science of itself produces nothing.
Like Reason or Logic, Science is but a means of making use of God's
Truths.Logic can be compared to a slide rule, only capable of producing
the sum total of all the factors fed into it. The logic used concerning
a subject may be perfect, but if all factors are not considered,
the end result must be defective. True Science is an orderly arranging
of different aspects of Truth.
But Truth must first be discovered. Truth is not created by the
scientist or anyone else. It exists.But generally-used word symbols
often obscure this fact. For example, the term "generating electricity" obscures
the reality that electrical generators are really energy convertors,
changing the form of energy, but not the energy itself. There are
certain vital aspects of reality which cannot be adequately described
or measured, but only experienced. There is no mathematical formula
by which we can measure love or fear, or attempt to assess a work
of art. And yet both love and fear are tremendous forces in human
affairs. Fear is negative, destroying judgment. The Law of Love,
as proclaimed by Christ, was a major factor in the development
of a Christian Civilisation.
C.H. Douglas has described Integrity as the most irresistible of
social forces, referring to it as "single-mindedness - the mind
of a little child". We must become as little children, said Christ.
THE
TEST OF TRUTH
The root meaning of religion is a binding back
to what one believes to be real and true. The test of whether what
one believes is in fact true, can only be measured in the field
of action. The materialist who believes that there is no reality
beyond matter, that which he can see or hear or measure, acts accordingly
- with disastrous results.The famous Jewish writer, Dr. Oscar Levy,
said that the ideal is the enemy of the real. The idealist is one
who is convinced that he knows what "ought to be". The Marxists
are idealists. They believe that collective farming, with the individual
working for the common good", "ought to" produce better results
than where the individual
"selfishly" works for himself. The writer once had the experience
of being told that the failure of collectivised farming in the
Soviet Union was not because of collectivism, which was a "great
ideal", but because of the nature of the "stupid Russian peasants".
Like the Pharisees, the Soviet planners attempt to force human
nature into their neat blueprints. Christ taught that the Kingdom
of God was within each individual, that all were children of God,
and that freedom and personal responsibility were essential for
the life more abundant. There is a common saying that Christianity
has failed and cannot therefore be true, because of the state of
the world. If the state of the world were the result of applying
what Christ taught, then it could be said that Christianity was
not true. But where Christ's teachings have been applied, the satisfactory
results have been beyond all argument. Christ insisted that it
was impossible to get figs from thistles, grapes from thorns or
good fruit from bad trees.The realistic way to consider Christianity
is by its fruits. And these fruits have been the result of works
by individuals. Time and time again Christ stressed the importance
of works as the ultimate test of the Truth He brought.In St. John,
Christ is quoted as saying that
". . . the testimony which I have is greater than that
of John; for the works which the Father has granted me to
accomplish, these very works which I am doing, bear me witness
that the Father has sent me."The works, not the words,
were the evidence of Christ's divinity. Also in St. John
we read,
"If I am not doing the works of my Father, then do not
believe me, but if I do them, even though you do not believe
me, believe the works, that you may know and understand that
the Father is in me and I am in the Father".
Christ clearly did not believe that the word was enough, stating
that the Jews hated Him because He came to "fulfil the word".
THE
WORD MADE FLESH
Peter said of Christ that "He went about doing
good" . That is what the follower of Christ is also expected to
do, seeking to create a Christ-centred Civilisation. Over nearly
two thousand years there was an attempt to create such a Civilisation.
Countless people not merely expressed their belief in Christ as
the Son of God, but took appropriate action to give life and substance
to the Truths to be found in Christ's teachings. God's Truths of
themselves do not result in works. Faith can only move mountains
if God's resources and truths are used to build heavy earthmoving
equipment.
Christianity without the Doctrine of Incarnation - "the word
was made flesh" - is a faith without works. Just as the truths
of the laws concerning aerodynamics do not of themselves make
planes fly, but must be applied with the building of planes in
accordance with those laws, so must the Truths revealed by Christ
be "made flesh" . The central revelation by Christ was that every
individual could start to seek the Kingdom of God, which could
be found within, in the "here and now". Every individual was
unique and a child of God, and could make personal contact with
Him. The individual was taught that he must also love his neighbour
as himself. This teaching revolutionised the prevailing concept
of the nature of God and man's relationship to Him.It shattered
the view of God which in essence was one of being in man's own
image. Not surprisingly, this type of God was often seen as bloodthirsty,
a type of tribal deity who on occasions required sacrifices,
one who also favoured those who had been "chosen". Those supporting
this concept of God visualised the appearance of some type of
Messiah who would create a materialistic new order. The Pharisees
and other exponents of this viewpoint were dismayed when Christ
said that His Kingdom was not of this world, and that He had
no intention of leading a physical rebellion against the Romans.
Christ's essential teachings were a complete repudiation of the
religion of what came to be described as Judaism, particularly
as upheld by the Pharisees, and yet the legend has been fostered
over the centuries, that Christ's teachings are an extension
of Judaism. The commonly repeated statement that "Christ was
a Jew" is but one more example of the danger of words losing
their original meaning as a result of faulty translation or for
other reasons. No greater damage has been done to Christianity
than the false teaching that Christ was a Jew, the inference
being that Christ professed and practised a form of religion
now known as Judaism.As pointed out by authorities like Rabbi
Louis Finkelstein of the Jewish Theological Seminar of America,
Judaism is an extension of Pharisaism.
Christ's complete opposition to Pharisaism as a religious system
is beyond dispute.
CHRIST DENOUNCES PHARISEES
Christ
denounced the Pharisees in the strongest possible language:
"Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for
ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men, for ye neither
go in yourselves neither suffer ye than that are entering
to go in . . . ye compass sea and land to make one proselyte,
and when he is made, ye make him twofold more the child of
hell than yourselves . . . ye pay tithe of mint and ansine
and cummin, and have omitted the weightier matters of the
law, judgment, mercy and faith . . . ye make clean the outside
of the cup and of the platter, but within are full of extortion
and excess . . . ye are like unto whited sepulchres, which
indeed appear beautiful outward, but are within full of dead
men's bones, and of all uncleanness . . . ye build the tombs
of the prophets, and garnish the sepulchres of the righteous,
and say, if we had been in the days of our fathers, we would
not have partaken with them in the blood of prophets. Wherefore
ye be witnesses unto yourselves that ye are the children
of them which killed the prophets. Fill ye up then the measure
of your fathers. Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers". The
term "Judaism" was completely unknown at the time of Christ.
It was first coined by the Jewish historian Flavius Josephus
to describe the faith of those who were adherents of Pharisaism.
The term "Jew"
is derived from "Judea", this being the English of the Latin "Iudaea"
. During His lifetime on Earth Christ was generally known as "Jesus
of Nazareth". The words which Pontius Pilate had inscribed upon
the Cross, probably sarcastically as he could not have meant
them to be taken literally, read, "Iesus Nazarenus Rex ludeorum",
Pontius Pilate used Latin as it was the official language of
Roman administrators. The English translation of the Latin is "Jesus
the Nazarene Ruler of the Judeans". Pontius Pilate knew that
Christ was rejected by the great majority of Judeans at the time
of His Crucifixion, so his infamous inscription must be regarded
as a type of mockery. But, irrespective of the Roman Administrator's
motives, the meaning of his words are beyond dispute: he was
describing Christ as the Nazarene ruler of the Judeans.
A study of the Gospel of St. John in the original Greek makes
it clear at the time of the Crucifixion the spiritual leaders
in Judea protested to Pontius Pilate that Christ was "not the
ruler of the Judeans", but only "had said He was the ruler of
the Judeans". During Christ's lifetime no religion was practised
anywhere described by the name of "Judaism". This term derived
from the political subdivision of the Roman Empire known as "Judea".
The English term "Jew" was first used by the English writer Sheridan
in 1775, this being derived from the term "Iewe", itself being
a corrupted and contracted English word for the Latin "Iudaeus" as
found in the 4th century St. Jerome translation of The New Testament
from the original into Latin. The modern use of the term "Jew" no
longer even remotely refers to the primary meaning of the original
Latin.
No one in the English-speaking world today believes
that a "Jew"
is a "Judean".
The general belief is that a Jew is a certain
type of religious person, a member of a certain race, or both.
This is not merely a question of academic interest to scholars
and students of history. The practical implications concern
the fate of what is left of Christian Civilisation. For example,
if Christ was Crucified as "King of the Jews", as is often
claimed, and the people called Jews today are descendants of
a "chosen race", then it is not surprising that large numbers
of well-meaning Christians attempt to justify the establishment
and expansion of the Zionist State of Israel, even if this
means expelling the original owners from the land in which
they have lived for thousands of years, and the use of violence
and terror, which is diametrically opposed to traditional Christian
behaviour. The future of the Middle East and the whole world
is related to the Middle East crisis. Never was there a greater
need than to search for that Truth which is the way to freedom.
Never was it more important that the correct meaning of words
be more widely understood. As demonstrated by the Jewish writer
Arthur Koestler in his book The Thirteenth Tribe, the great
majority of people who today call themselves Jews cannot even
trace their origins back to the Judeans who practised the religion
which later became known as Judaism; they are descendants of
the Asiatic Khazars, converted to Judaism in the seventh century.
They are not one of the "lost tribes" returning to their promised
homeland. The truth about the origin of most Jews and Judaism
is so clear to those prepared to face it, that the widely accepted
view that Christ was a Jew practising Judaism must be seen
as a manifestation of the blind worship of word symbols without
any consideration of the realities. There is also little doubt
that the descendants of the Pharisees have skilfully fostered
the concept of "JudeaoChristianity", a religion with a common
origin.
The New Testament record shows that during His lifetime Christ
denounced in the strongest possible language the form of religious
worship, then known as Pharisaism. So far from accepting Christ
as one who was extending this type of religion, the Pharisees
saw Him as a deadly threat and planned to have Him crucified.
It is blasphemous to suggest that Christ's teachings had anything
in common with that of the Pharisees.
Christ said that those who were not for Him were against Him.
THE
SPIRITUAL BASE OF CIVILISATION
Once Christians can grasp the
truth of the origins of Christianity, they can move on to a consideration
of how Christ's truths were progressively incarnated. A Civilisation
is not merely a physical creation; it is the incarnation of undergirding
intangible values. Death starts when belief and understanding
of those values are shattered and eroded. The decaying of the
body takes place long after the soul has gone. No one believes
that because remnants of the famous Acropolis can still be seen
in Athens, the Greek Civilisation is still alive. When Christ
was confronted with the trick question about how one should regard
Caesar, He gave what was regarded as an amazing answer
: "Render unto Caesar the things which belong to Caesar,
but render unto God those things which belong to God."
In that one short statement Christ resolved a problem which
had baffled the Greek and other philosophers concerning government.
How could man have government without becoming enslaved by
government? Christ, the Son of God, gave government a legitimacy
it had never had before, but He also said that it must ensure
that the individual had an area of freedom upon which government
could not encroach. The result was a long process of evolving
a Christian concept of constitutional government.
Both Caesar and the individual were subject to a higher law,
that of God. It is surprising how few professing Christians
have any understanding of the impact of Christianity upon government
as well as social behaviour in Western Civilisation. Some are
amazed when told that the English concept of Trinitarian government,
with power divided and balanced, was a practical outcome of
applied Christianity. They have been so consumed with studying
the word that they have overlooked the relationship of the
Truth behind the word, to the making real of God's will over
thousands of years of Christian history.
Even the system of law was affected by the Christian stress
on the value and dignity of each and every individual. In his
Merchant of Venice, the great Christian artist Shakespeare
brought out the cleavage between English Common Law, reflecting
Christianity, and the rigid Judaic law. Shylock had legality
on his side in demanding his pound of flesh. But what about
the spirit of charity? Shylock could not see it written in
the bond. Portia's mercy speech is one of the finest expositions
of the Christian approach to law to be found in the English
language.
Strict insistence on the application of the letter of the law
at all times and under all conditions can lead to the death
of the spirit. A Christian system of law exists to serve every
individual. Traditional Christian philosophy has always insisted
that God reveals Himself through history. History did not stop
when God became man and the word became flesh. A great signpost
was erected, showing man the way forward, where and how God
could be discovered and how to follow Him. If we believe that
God only speaks to man in words, then we may be inclined to
believe that words are all important in establishing a deep
relationship with God. But God speaks to man in many different
ways. Shakespeare wrote of "Tongues in trees, books in the
running brook, Sermons in stones, and good in everything".
Shakespeare also wrote that a rose by any other name would
smell as sweet. Reality is not changed by different descriptions.
Does not God speak to man when man violates God's laws concerning
the correct use of his body, "the temple of God"? Most illness
is the result of violating God's truths as they apply to nutrition.
Words obscure reality when it is said that a physician has
cured a patient. Only God cures, when the correct action is
taken to ensure that God's laws can operate. The self-healing
capacity of the human body is one of the most amazing of truths.When
man was created in God's image he was given freedom either
to fulfil his Divine destiny or to destroy himself and the
world. Men cannot be made moral or perfect through acts of
parliament. A Christian society can only grow as individuals
work towards establishing right relations with God in all spheres.
In teaching his disciples how to pray, Christ said that they
must ask God that His will be done on earth as it is in
heaven. If God's will for man is freedom and personal responsibility,
then man must work to ensure that all aspects of human affairs
come within the scope of Christian principles. Those who claim
to follow Christ cannot therefore ignore politics or economics.And
what about education? Should Caesar be left with a near monopoly
of instructing the young, much of this brainwashing to fit
the young into a society increasingly based on "scientific
humanism". Christ said, suffer the little children to come
unto me. Far too many calling themselves Christians have abdicated
from their responsibilities, often attempting to justify their
attitude by verbal expressions of their professed faith. They
ignore that they must be "doers of the word" .
PROPHECY
OR FREE WILL?
Perhaps nothing has so sidetracked many professing
Christians as their fascination with prophecy. A prophet can
be described in two ways, one who because of his intimate knowledge
in a given area, can predict what will happen under certain
conditions, or as one who claims to know that certain happenings
will inevitably take place because of "Divine will". However,
a prophet may point out that what he is predicting under certain
conditions need not necessarily happen if individuals take
appropriate action to ensure that those conditions do not arise.In
the main, the Prophets of The Old Testament were men attempting
to raise the spiritual perceptions of their fellows, warning
them of the disasters which would overtake them if they did
not mend their ways. The record indicates that they had little
success with what were obviously rather stiff-necked types
of people. Those who claim to have discovered that there are
prophecies in Isaiah, Daniel and Revelation which make it possible
to interpret when the "end of the world" will take place, are
flatly contradicting the Christian doctrine of free will. There
are many schools of thought which in essence say that mankind
is moving towards inevitable disaster; that this is all predicted. Acceptance
of this point of view tends to paralyse individual initiative. Many
calling themselves Christians stand on the sidelines of the
battle for the world, justifying their stance by claiming that
as the plight of the world has been predicted, the individual
can do nothing about it. Some even take the view that those
attempting to challenge events are not only foolish, but are
acting contrary to God! Which makes God responsible for the
fate of the world. This is a most convenient belief for those
who do not want to accept personal responsibility, or become
involved in the battle against the anti-Christ. Christ said
He was the Truth, the way. He said that it was the Truth which
makes the individual free. Free will and free choice are essential
if individuals are to learn to know God and to serve Him. Christ
warned of the corruption of power when tempted on the mount.
Nearly two thousand years later, the wise Lord Acton, Christian
philosopher and historian summarised the truth concerning power
with his famous statement,
"All power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts
absolutely". The reality of the nature of power cannot
be changed by using different words to describe it. Centralised
power can be, and often is, described as democracy. Genuine
democracy is derided by Marxist and other totalitarians
because it conceives of the will of the individual prevailing
over his own affairs. Centralised power makes expression
of the individual will almost impossible. Irrespective
of how it is labelled, centralised power always kills the
spirit. The concept of power centralised on a world scale,
a World Government, is one of the anti-Christ. And yet
it is accepted by large numbers who would describe themselves
as Christians.
SCIENCE
AND TRUTH
C.H. Douglas said, that which works best is
moral. The true scientist is one who is constantly seeking Truth.
He may produce a theory, but knows that the truth can only
be discovered in the field of action. Christ not only claimed
to be the Son of God; he demonstrated the truth of His
claim by going about "doing good". The Gospels record how
time and time again Christ stressed the importance of works.
The man who had his sight restored on the Sabbath told
the Pharisees, "If this man were not from God, he could
do nothing".
Two thousand years of history have demonstrated that when
the Truths enunciated by Christ are applied to human affairs,
they work, demonstrating that they are of God. One of the
greatest tragedies in the history of Christian Civilisation
has been the clash between the Church and many scientists.
Worshippers of "the word", far too many Church leaders
feared that advances in discovering truths in the field
of physical sciences would undermine Christianity. Like
the Pharisees before them, they were enslaved by a belief
that "holy writ" was literally true, that if, for example,
The Old Testament said that God actually made the world
in seven days, any suggestion by scientists that this could
not be possibly true was anti-Christian. The "literalists" have
in fact played into the hands of the anti-Christ by failing
to stress that every new discovery of truths about the
Universe by the physical scientists, is in fact a revelation
of the unlimited scope of God's Truths, and that Christ's
message concerning the nature and purpose of man directs
how those discoveries should be used. The true role of
the Christian Church is to pronounce with proper authority
on spiritual and moral realities. Discovery and application
of the truths of the physical universe is not of itself
progress, so often claimed today. Advanced technology may
enable the individual to travel a given distance in less
time. From the Christian viewpoint true progress can only
be moral progress, and in this case should therefore be
concerned with what the individual is able to do with the
time saved in travelling. God's Truths can be used either
to further enslave the individual, or to free him. The
teachings of Christ were clear: God's Truths should, as
they are discovered, make freedom a greater reality.
THE
ETERNITY OF THE KINGDOM
While the Christian realist
must face the fact that he is living in the post-Christian
era, this is not a time for pessimism. The Kingdom of God
still remains within each individual, waiting to be discovered.
The regeneration of Christian Civilisation and culture
must start with the regeneration of individuals, making
use of their most Divine attribute, creative initiative.
Christ compared the Kingdom of God with a
"grain of mustard-seed which, when it is sown in the
earth, is less than all the seeds that be in the earth.
But when it is sown, it groweth up and becometh greater
than all the herbs, and shooteth out great branches;
so that the birds of the air may shelter under the
shadow of it". Christ also described the Kingdom
of God as being "like unto leaves, which a woman
took and hid in three measures of meal, till the whole
was leavened". Those who over the centuries acted
upon Christ's teaching gradually started to leaven
the whole of society. Every form of art was dedicated
to the greater glory of God. Through the works of those
who sought the Kingdom, God's will was being progressively
made real on earth. But, as explained in The Root
of All Evil, when the results of the Industrial
Revolution opened the door to the fulfilment of Christ's
teaching that there was no need to be concerned about
the question of "what ye shall eat; or what ye shall
drink", that the search for the Kingdom of God
had ensured that "all these things shall be added
unto you", the Christian Church failed to provide
appropriate guidance. The Pharisaical philosophy re-emerged
in an even more deadly form. Thus the plight of the
world today.
A
NEW CHRISTIAN RENAISSANCE
The regeneration of Christian
Civilisation will start when sufficient individuals
heed Christ's advice to look within and behold the
Kingdom of God.
"Fear not, little flock, for it is your Father's
good pleasure to give you the Kingdom". Seeking
the Kingdom requires creative activity, a new Renaissance.
If God's Kingdom is of the spirit, then he who would
truly know God must accept personal responsibility
for that Divine gift which has been entrusted to him,
and seek to give substance to the spirit by deeds,
not by debates concerning words.No great artist has
ever appeared merely by reading books on art, or by
studying the rules concerning art. Those who seek to
march in the vanguard of a new Christian advance must
demonstrate the depth of their faith by works which
make Truth a living reality. Christ left the inspiring
message that ". . . he who believes in me will also
do the works that I do; and greater works than these
will he do".
Christ clearly did not believe that the word
was enough.
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