men must come to us; actors and such are obstacles
to moral progress.” Pray look at the thing
reasonably a moment, laying aside all biases of education
and custom. If a common public impression is
fair evidence of a thing then this minister’s
legitimate, recognized, and acceptable business is
to tell people calmly, coldly, and in stiff, written
sentences, from the pulpit, to go and do right, be
just, be merciful, be charitable. And his congregation
forget it all between church and home. But for
fifty years it was George Holland’s business
on the stage to make his audience go and do right,
and be just, merciful, and charitable—because
by his living, breathing, feeling pictures he showed
them what it was to do these things, and how to do
them, and how instant and ample was the reward!
Is it not a singular teacher of men, this reverend
gentleman who is so poorly informed himself as to
put the whole stage under ban, and say, “I do
not think it teaches moral lessons”? Where
was ever a sermon preached that could make filial
ingratitude so hateful to men as the sinful play of
“King Lear”? Or where was there ever
a sermon that could so convince men of the wrong and
the cruelty of harboring a pampered and unanalyzed
jealousy as the sinful play of “Othello”?
And where are there ten preachers who can stand in
the pulpit preaching heroism, unselfish devotion,
and lofty patriotism, and hold their own against any
one of five hundred William Tells that can be raised
upon five hundred stages in the land at a day’s
notice? It is almost fair and just to aver (although
it is profanity) that nine-tenths of all the kindness
and forbearance and Christian charity and generosity
in the hearts of the American people today got there
by being filtered down from their fountain-head, the
gospel of Christ, through dramas and tragedies and
comedies on the stage, and through the despised novel
and the Christmas story, and through the thousand
and one lessons, suggestions, and narratives of generous
deeds that stir the pulses, and exalt and augment
the nobility of the nation day by day from the teeming
columns of ten thousand newspapers, and not from the
drowsy pulpit.
All that is great and good in our particular civilization
came straight from the hand of Jesus Christ, and many
creatures, and of divers sorts, were doubtless appointed
to disseminate it; and let us believe that this seed
and the result are the main thing, and not the cut
of the sower’s garment; and that whosoever,
in his way and according to his opportunity, sows
the one and produces the other, has done high service
and worthy. And further, let us try with all
our strength to believe that whenever old simple-hearted
George Holland sowed this seed, and reared his crop
of broader charities and better impulses in men’s
hearts, it was just as acceptable before the Throne
as if the seed had been scattered in vapid platitudes
from the pulpit of the ineffable Sabine himself.
Am I saying that the pulpit does not do its share
toward disseminating the marrow, the meat of the gospel
of Christ? (For we are not talking of ceremonies and
wire-drawn creeds now, but the living heart and soul
of what is pretty often only a specter.)