| Great Story For Youth and Adults
Christian Fiction That Popularized Saying "WWJD", (What Would Jesus Do?) By Charles M. Sheldon First Published In Late 1800's |
Gospel To The World 24/7 |
_______________________ CHAPTER 19. “He that saith he abideth in Him ought himself also to walk even as He walked.” [Letter from Rev. Calvin Bruce, D.D., of the Nazareth Avenue Church,
Chicago, to Rev. Philip A. Caxton, D.D., New York City.]
“My Dear Caxton:
“It is late Sunday night, but I am so intensely awake and so overflowing
with what I have seen and heard that I feel driven to write you now some
account of the situation in Raymond as I have been studying it, and as it
has apparently come to a climax today. So this is my only excuse for writing
so extended a letter at this time.
“You remember Henry Maxwell in the Seminary. I think you said the last time
I visited you in New York that you had not seen him since we graduated. He
was a refined, scholarly fellow, you remember, and when he was called to the
First Church of Raymond within a year after leaving the Seminary, I said to
my wife, ‘Raymond has made a good choice. Maxwell will satisfy them as a
sermonizer.’ He has been here eleven years, and I understand that up to a
year ago he had gone on in the regular course of the ministry, giving good
satisfaction and drawing good congregations. His church was counted the
largest and wealthiest church in Raymond. All the best people attended it,
and most of them belonged. The quartet choir was famous for its music,
especially for its soprano, Miss Winslow, of whom I shall have more to say;
and, on the whole, as I understand the facts, Maxwell was in a comfortable
berth, with a very good salary, pleasant surroundings, a not very exacting
parish of refined, rich, respectable people—such a church and parish as
nearly all the young men of the seminary in our time looked forward to as
very desirable.
“But a year ago today Maxwell came into his church on Sunday morning, and at
the close of the service made the astounding proposition that the members of
his church volunteer for a year not to do anything without first asking the
question, ‘What would Jesus do?’ and, after answering it, to do what in
their honest judgment He would do, regardless of what the result might be to
them.
“The effect of this proposition, as it has been met and obeyed by a number
of members of the church, has been so remarkable that, as you know, the
attention of the whole country has been directed to the movement. I call it
a ‘movement’ because from the action taken today, it seems probable that
what has been tried here will reach out into the other churches and cause a
revolution in methods, but more especially in a new definition of Christian
discipleship.
“In the first place, Maxwell tells me he was astonished at the response to
his proposition. Some of the most prominent members in the church made the
promise to do as Jesus would. Among them were Edward Norman, editor of the
Daily News, which has made such a sensation in the newspaper world; Milton
Wright, one of the leading merchants in Raymond; Alexander Powers, whose
action in the matter of the railroads against the interstate commerce laws
made such a stir about a year ago; Miss Page, one of Raymond's leading
society heiresses, who has lately dedicated her entire fortune, as I
understand, to the Christian daily paper and the work of reform in the slum
district known as the Rectangle; and Miss Winslow, whose reputation as a
singer is now national, but who in obedience to what she has decided to be
Jesus' probable action, has devoted her talent to volunteer work among the
girls and women who make up a large part of the city's worst and most
abandoned population.
“In addition to these well-known people has been a gradually increasing
number of Christians from the First Church and lately from other churches of
Raymond. A large proportion of these volunteers who pledged themselves to do
as Jesus would do comes from the Endeavor societies. The young people say
that they have already embodied in their society pledge the same principle
in the words, ‘I promise Him that I will strive to do whatever He would have
me do.’ This is not exactly what is included in Maxwell's proposition, which
is that the disciple shall try to do what Jesus would probably do in the
disciple's place. But the result of an honest obedience to either pledge, he
claims, will be practically the same, and he is not surprised that the
largest numbers have joined the new discipleship from the Endeavor Society.
“I am sure the first question you will ask is, ‘What has been the result of
this attempt? What has it accomplished or how has it changed in any way the
regular life of the church or the community?’
“You already know something, from reports of Raymond that have gone over the
country, what the events have been. But one needs to come here and learn
something of the changes in individual lives, and especially the change in
the church life, to realize all that is meant by this following of Jesus'
steps so literally. To tell all that would be to write a long story or
series of stories. I am not in a position to do that, but I can give you
some idea perhaps of what has been done as told me by friends here and by
Maxwell himself.
“The result of the pledge upon the First Church has been two-fold. It has
brought upon a spirit of Christian fellowship which Maxwell tells me never
before existed, and which now impresses him as being very nearly what the
Christian fellowship of the apostolic churches must have been; and it has
divided the church into two distinct groups of members. Those who have not
taken the pledge regard the others as foolishly literal in their attempt to
imitate the example of Jesus. Some of them have drawn out of the church and
no longer attend, or they have removed their membership entirely to other
churches. Some are an element of internal strife, and I heard rumors of an
attempt on their part to force Maxwell's resignation. I do not know that
this element is very strong in the church. It has been held in check by a
wonderful continuance of spiritual power, which dates from the first Sunday
the pledge was taken a year ago, and also by the fact that so many of the
most prominent members have been identified with the movement.
“The effect on Maxwell is very marked. I heard him preach in our State
Association four years ago. He impressed me at the time as having
considerable power in dramatic delivery, of which he himself was somewhat
conscious. His sermon was well written and abounded in what the Seminary
students used to call ‘fine passages.’ The effect of it was what an average
congregation would call ‘pleasing.’ This morning I heard Maxwell preach
again, for the first time since then. I shall speak of that farther on. He
is not the same man. He gives me the impression of one who has passed
through a crisis of revolution. He tells me this revolution is simply a new
definition of Christian discipleship. He certainly has changed many of his
old habits and many of his old views. His attitude on the saloon question is
radically opposite to the one he entertained a year ago. And in his entire
thought of the ministry, his pulpit and parish work, I find he has made a
complete change. So far as I can understand, the idea that is moving him on
now is the idea that the Christianity of our times must represent a more
literal imitation of Jesus, and especially in the element of suffering. He
quoted to me in the course of our conversation several times the verses in
Peter: ‘For even hereunto were ye called, because Christ also suffered for
you, leaving you an example, that ye would follow His steps’; and he seems
filled with the conviction that what our churches need today more than
anything else is this factor of joyful suffering for Jesus in some form. I
do not know as I agree with him, altogether; but, my dear Caxton, it is
certainly astonishing to note the results of this idea as they have
impressed themselves upon this city and this church.
“You ask how about the results on the individuals who have made this pledge
and honestly tried to be true to it. Those results are, as I have said, a
part of individual history and cannot be told in detail. Some of them I can
give you so that you may see that this form of discipleship is not merely
sentiment or fine posing for effect.
“For instance, take the case of Mr. Powers, who was superintendent of the
machine shops of the L. and T. R. R. here. When he acted upon the evidence
which incriminated the road he lost his position, and more than that, I
learn from my friends here, his family and social relations have become so
changed that he and his family no longer appear in public. They have dropped
out of the social circle where once they were so prominent. By the way,
Caxton, I understand in this connection that the Commission, for one reason
or another, postponed action on this case, and it is now rumored that the L.
and T. R. R. will pass into a receiver's hands very soon. The president of
the road who, according to the evidence submitted by Powers, was the
principal offender, has resigned, and complications which have risen since
point to the receivership. Meanwhile, the superintendent has gone back to
his old work as a telegraph operator. I met him at the church yesterday. He
impressed me as a man who had, like Maxwell, gone through a crisis in
character. I could not help thinking of him as being good material for the
church of the first century when the disciples had all things in common.
“Or take the case of Mr. Norman, editor of the Daily News. He risked his
entire fortune in obedience to what he believed was Jesus' action, and
revolutionized his entire conduct of the paper at the risk of a failure. I
send you a copy of yesterday's paper. I want you to read it carefully. To my
mind it is one of the most interesting and remarkable papers ever printed in
the United States. It is open to criticism, but what could any mere man
attempt in this line that would be free from criticism. Take it all in all,
it is so far above the ordinary conception of a daily paper that I am amazed
at the result. He tells me that the paper is beginning to be read more and
more by the Christian people of the city. He was very confident of its final
success. Read his editorial on the money questions, also the one on the
coming election in Raymond when the question of license will again be an
issue. Both articles are of the best from his point of view. He says he
never begins an editorial or, in fact, any part of his newspaper work,
without first asking, ‘What would Jesus do?’ The result is certainly
apparent.
“Then there is Milton Wright, the merchant. He has, I am told, so
revolutionized his business that no man is more beloved today in Raymond.
His own clerks and employees have an affection for him that is very
touching. During the winter, while he was lying dangerously ill at his home,
scores of clerks volunteered to watch and help in any way possible, and his
return to his store was greeted with marked demonstrations. All this has
been brought about by the element of personal love introduced into the
business. This love is not mere words, but the business itself is carried on
under a system of co-operation that is not a patronizing recognition of
inferiors, but a real sharing in the whole business. Other men on the street
look upon Milton Wright as odd. It is a fact, however, that while he has
lost heavily in some directions, he has increased his business, and is today
respected and honored as one of the best and most successful merchants in
Raymond.
“And there is Miss Winslow. She has chosen to give her great talent to the
poor of the city. Her plans include a Musical Institute where choruses and
classes in vocal music shall be a feature. She is enthusiastic over her life
work. In connection with her friend Miss Page she has planned a course in
music which, if carried out, will certainly do much to lift up the lives of
the people down there. I am not too old, dear Caxton, to be interested in
the romantic side of much that has also been tragic here in Raymond, and I
must tell you that it is well understood here that Miss Winslow expects to
be married this spring to a brother of Miss Page who was once a society
leader and club man, and who was converted in a tent where his
wife-that-is-to-be took an active part in the service. I don't know all the
details of this little romance, but I imagine there is a story wrapped up in
it, and it would make interesting reading if we only knew it all.
“These are only a few illustrations of results in individual lives owing to
obedience to the pledge. I meant to have spoken of President Marsh of
Lincoln College. He is a graduate of my alma mater and I knew him slightly
when I was in the senior year. He has taken an active part in the recent
municipal campaign, and his influence in the city is regarded as a very
large factor in the coming election. He impressed me, as did all the other
disciples in this movement, as having fought out some hard questions, and as
having taken up some real burdens that have caused and still do cause that
suffering of which Henry Maxwell speaks, a suffering that does not
eliminate, but does appear to intensify, a positive and practical joy.
~ end of chapter 19 ~ Back To "In His Steps" Index |