Some Christian Convictions eBook

Henry Sloane Coffin
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 152 pages of information about Some Christian Convictions.

Some Christian Convictions eBook

Henry Sloane Coffin
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 152 pages of information about Some Christian Convictions.

Christianity has a social order of its own—­the Kingdom of God.  It is not an economic system, nor a plan of government, but a religious ideal—­society organized under the love of God revealed in Christ.  This ideal it holds up in contrast with the existing social order in any age as a protest, a program and a promise.

The Kingdom protests against any features in prevailing conditions that do not disclose Christlike love.  It scans the industrial world of today, and finds three fundamental evils in it:  competition as a motive, arraying man against man, group against group, nation against nation, in unbrotherly strife; gain-seeking as the stimulus to effort, inducing men to invest capital, or to labor, primarily for the sake of the returns to themselves; and selfish ownership as the reward of success, letting men feel that they can do as they please with their own.  Certain callings, upon which the Christian Spirit has exerted a stronger influence, have already been raised above the level of the commercial world.  It is not good form professionally for physicians, or ministers, or college professors to compete with each other and seek to draw away patients, parishioners or pupils; to exercise their callings mainly for the sake of financial gains; nor to regard as their own their skill, or inspiration, or learning.  But as yet the butcher, the baker, the grocer, the banker, the manufacturer, the promoter, are not supposed to be on this plane.  They are urged to compete, even to the extent of putting their rivals out of business, in defiance of an old Jewish maxim, “He that taketh away his neighbor’s living slayeth him,” and in face of the Lord’s Prayer in which we ask not for “my daily cake,” but for “our daily bread.”  They are expected to consider profits, dividends, wages, as the chief end in their callings; and if out of their gains they devote a portion to public uses, that is charity on their part.  A few individuals are undoubtedly superior to the ideal set before them, and are as truly dedicated servants of the community as any physician or minister of the gospel, but they are a small minority; and the false ideal ruins characters, and renders the commercial world a battlefield, instead of a household of co-working children of God.

It scans international relations, and finds patriotism still a pagan virtue.  Mr. Lecky calls it “in relation to foreigners a spirit of constant and jealous self-assertion.”  When a tariff is under discussion, high, low or no duties are advocated as beneficial for the industries of one’s own country, regardless of the welfare of those of other lands.  The scramble for colonies with their advantages to trade, the imperialistic spirit that seizes possessions without respect to the wishes of their inhabitants, the endeavor to secure in other countries special concessions or large business orders at an extraordinary profit, are all sanctified under the name of patriotism.  The peace of the world is supposed to be maintained

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Some Christian Convictions from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.