The Church and Modern Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 158 pages of information about The Church and Modern Life.

The Church and Modern Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 158 pages of information about The Church and Modern Life.
or conscience, for the existence of so many sorts and kinds and classes of Christian disciples.  Even if we could admit the wisdom of the larger divisions, what excuse can be offered for the endless subdivisions?  What possible need can there be for thirteen different kinds of Baptists, and twelve kinds of Mennonites, and eleven kinds of Presbyterians, and seventeen kinds of Methodists, and twenty-three kinds of Lutherans?  Could any rational man maintain that these multitudinous variations on a single string represent distinctions that are useful?

The rivalries and competitions which these sectarian divisions promote are the scandal and the curse of Christendom.  The sectarian procedure habitually and brazenly sets aside the Golden Rule and pushes partisan interest, with very slight regard for fairness or equity.  Churches are all the while doing to other churches what they would not like to have other churches do to them.  “Every church for itself, and the angels take the hindmost,” is the sectarian motto.  The competition which exists in the ecclesiastical realm is almost always cutthroat competition; it destroys property and crowds out rivals with merciless purpose.

No argument should he needed to show that the existence of such a spirit and tendency in the church must cripple its power and impede its growth.  The sect spirit is the antithesis of the Christian spirit; the sectarian propaganda is an attack upon the fundamental principle of Christianity, which is unity through love.  The superior loyalty of every true Christian is due to the kingdom of God.  “Seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness!” What makes a man a sectarian is the fact that he loves his sect more than the kingdom of God, and is willing that the kingdom of God should suffer loss in order that his sect may make a gain.  Sectarians are doing this very thing, all over the land, every day.

How great have been the injuries suffered by the Christian church through the existence of this antichristian spirit of sect it would be difficult to estimate.  How alien it is to the spirit of Jesus Christ one does not need to point out.  It is simply amazing that the followers of him who prayed, in his last prayer, that his disciples might all be one, in order that the world might believe in his divine commission, should imagine that they can be pleasing Christ while they persist in these childish divisions.

Some sense of the shame and sin of sectarianism has, of late years, been getting possession of the mind of the church, and the tendencies toward unity are stronger now than the tendencies toward division.  Splits and secessions are rare in these times; movements toward unity are multiplying.  All this is hopeful, but many generations of toil and sacrifice will be required to recover for the church the ground she has lost by the ravages of sectarianism.

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The Church and Modern Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.