| 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 8. ““If any man would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me.” Henry Maxwell paced his study back and forth. It was Wednesday and he had
started to think out the subject of his evening service which fell upon that
night. Out of one of his study windows he could see the tall chimney of the
railroad shops. The top of the evangelist's tent just showed over the
buildings around the Rectangle. He looked out of his window every time he
turned in his walk. After a while he sat down at his desk and drew a large
piece of paper toward him. After thinking several moments he wrote in large
letters the following:
A NUMBER OF THINGS THAT JESUS WOULD PROBABLY DO IN THIS PARISH
Live in a simple, plain manner, without needless luxury on the one hand or
undue asceticism on the other.
Preach fearlessly to the hypocrites in the church, no matter what their
social importance or wealth.
Show in some practical form His sympathy and love for the common people as
well as for the well-to-do, educated, refined people who make up the
majority of the parish.
Identify Himself with the great causes of humanity in some personal way that
would call for self-denial and suffering.
Preach against the saloon in Raymond.
Become known as a friend and companion of the sinful people in the
Rectangle.
Give up the summer trip to Europe this year. (I have been abroad twice and
cannot claim any special need of rest. I am well, and could forego this
pleasure, using the money for some one who needs a vacation more than I do.
There are probably plenty of such people in the city.)
He was conscious, with a humility that was once a stranger to him, that his
outline of Jesus' probable action was painfully lacking in depth and power,
but he was seeking carefully for concrete shapes into which he might cast
his thought of Jesus' conduct. Nearly every point he had put down, meant,
for him, a complete overturning of the custom and habit of years in the
ministry. In spite of that, he still searched deeper for sources of the
Christ-like spirit. He did not attempt to write any more, but sat at his
desk absorbed in his effort to catch more and more the spirit of Jesus in
his own life. He had forgotten the particular subject for his prayer meeting
with which he had begun his morning study.
He was so absorbed over his thought that he did not hear the bell ring; he
was roused by the servant who announced a caller. He had sent up his name,
Mr. Gray.
Maxwell stepped to the head of the stairs and asked Gray to come up. So Gray
came up and stated the reason for his call.
“I want your help, Mr. Maxwell. Of course you have heard what a wonderful
meeting we had Monday night and last night. Miss Winslow has done more with
her voice than I could do, and the tent won't hold the people.”
“I've heard of that. It is the first time the people there have heard her.
It is no wonder they are attracted.”
“It has been a wonderful revelation to us, and a most encouraging event in
our work. But I came to ask if you could not come down tonight and preach. I
am suffering from a severe cold. I do not dare trust my voice again. I know
it is asking a good deal from such a busy man. But, if you can't come, say
so frankly, and I'll try somewhere else.”
“I'm sorry, but it's my regular prayer meeting night,” began Henry Maxwell.
Then he flushed and added, “I shall be able to arrange it in some way so as
to come down. You can count on me.”
Gray thanked him earnestly and rose to go.
“Won't you stay a minute, Gray, and let us have a prayer together?”
“Yes,” said Gray simply.
So the two men kneeled together in the study. Henry Maxwell prayed like a
child. Gray was touched to tears as he knelt there. There was something
almost pitiful in the way this man who had lived his ministerial life in
such a narrow limit of exercise now begged for wisdom and strength to speak
a message to the people in the Rectangle.
Gray rose and held out his hand. “God bless you, Mr. Maxwell. I'm sure the
Spirit will give you power tonight.”
Henry Maxwell made no answer. He did not even trust himself to say that he
hoped so. But he thought of his promise and it brought him a certain peace
that was refreshing to his heart and mind alike.
So that is how it came about that when the First Church audience came into
the lecture room that evening it met with another surprise. There was an
unusually large number present. The prayer meetings ever since that
remarkable Sunday morning had been attended as never before in the history
of the First Church. Mr. Maxwell came at once to the point.
“I feel that I am called to go down to the Rectangle tonight, and I will
leave it with you to say whether you will go on with this meeting here. I
think perhaps the best plan would be for a few volunteers to go down to the
Rectangle with me prepared to help in the after-meeting, if necessary, and
the rest to remain here and pray that the Spirit power may go with us.”
So half a dozen of the men went with the pastor, and the rest of the
audience stayed in the lecture room. Maxwell could not escape the thought as
he left the room that probably in his entire church membership there might
not be found a score of disciples who were capable of doing work that would
successfully lead needy, sinful men into the knowledge of Christ. The
thought did not linger in his mind to vex him as he went his way, but it was
simply a part of his whole new conception of the meaning of Christian
discipleship.
When he and his little company of volunteers reached the Rectangle, the tent
was already crowded. They had difficulty in getting to the platform. Rachel
was there with Virginia and Jasper Chase who had come instead of the Doctor
tonight.
When the meeting began with a song in which Rachel sang the solo and the
people were asked to join in the chorus, not a foot of standing room was
left in the tent. The night was mild and the sides of the tent were up and a
great border of faces stretched around, looking in and forming part of the
audience. After the singing, and a prayer by one of the city pastors who was
present, Gray stated the reason for his inability to speak, and in his
simple manner turned the service over to “Brother Maxwell of the First
Church.”
“Who's de bloke?” asked a hoarse voice near the outside of the tent.
v“De Fust Church parson. We've got de whole high-tone swell outfit
tonight.”
“Did you say Fust Church? I know him. My landlord's got a front pew up
there,” said another voice, and there was a laugh, for the speaker was a
saloon keeper.
“Trow out de life line 'cross de dark wave!” began a drunken man near by,
singing in such an unconscious imitation of a local traveling singer's nasal
tone that roars of laughter and jeers of approval rose around him. The
people in the tent turned in the direction of the disturbance. There were
shouts of “Put him out!” “Give the Fust Church a chance!” “Song! Song! Give
us another song!”
Henry Maxwell stood up, and a great wave of actual terror went over him.
This was not like preaching to the well-dressed, respectable, good-mannered
people up on the boulevard. He began to speak, but the confusion increased.
Gray went down into the crowd, but did not seem able to quiet it. Maxwell
raised his arm and his voice. The crowd in the tent began to pay some
attention, but the noise on the outside increased. In a few minutes the
audience was beyond his control. He turned to Rachel with a sad smile.
“Sing something, Miss Winslow. They will listen to you,” he said, and then
sat down and covered his face with his hands.
It was Rachel's opportunity, and she was fully equal to it. Virginia was at
the organ and Rachel asked her to play a few notes of the hymn.
“Savior, I follow on,
Guided by Thee,
Seeing not yet the hand
That leadeth me.
Hushed be my heart and still
Fear I no farther ill,
Only to meet Thy will,
My will shall be.”
Rachel had not sung the first line before the people in the tent were all
turned toward her, hushed and reverent. Before she had finished the verse
the Rectangle was subdued and tamed. It lay like some wild beast at her
feet, and she sang it into harmlessness. Ah! What were the flippant,
perfumed, critical audiences in concert halls compared with this dirty,
drunken, impure, besotted mass of humanity that trembled and wept and grew
strangely, sadly thoughtful under the touch of this divine ministry of this
beautiful young woman! Mr. Maxwell, as he raised his head and saw the
transformed mob, had a glimpse of something that Jesus would probably do
with a voice like Rachel Winslow's. Jasper Chase sat with his eyes on the
singer, and his greatest longing as an ambitious author was swallowed up in
his thought of what Rachel Winslow's love might sometimes mean to him. And
over in the shadow outside stood the last person any one might have expected
to see at a gospel tent service—Rollin Page, who, jostled on every side by
rough men and women who stared at the swell in fine clothes, seemed careless
of his surroundings and at the same time evidently swayed by the power that
Rachel possessed. He had just come over from the club. Neither Rachel nor
Virginia saw him that night.
The song was over. Maxwell rose again. This time he felt calmer. What would
Jesus do? He spoke as he thought once he never could speak. Who were these
people? They were immortal souls. What was Christianity? A calling of
sinners, not the righteous, to repentance. How would Jesus speak? What would
He say? He could not tell all that His message would include, but he felt
sure of a part of it. And in that certainty he spoke on. Never before had he
felt “compassion for the multitude.” What had the multitude been to him
during his ten years in the First Church but a vague, dangerous, dirty,
troublesome factor in society, outside of the church and of his reach, an
element that caused him occasionally an unpleasant twinge of conscience, a
factor in Raymond that was talked about at associations as the “masses,” in
papers written by the brethren in attempts to show why the “masses” were not
being reached.
But tonight as he faced the masses he asked himself whether,
after all, this was not just about such a multitude as Jesus faced oftenest,
and he felt the genuine emotion of love for a crowd which is one of the best
indications a preacher ever has that he is living close to the heart of the
world's eternal Life. It is easy to love an individual sinner, especially if
he is personally picturesque or interesting. To love a multitude of sinners
is distinctively a Christ-like quality.
When the meeting closed, there was no special interest shown. No one stayed
to the after-meeting. The people rapidly melted away from the tent, and the
saloons, which had been experiencing a dull season while the meetings
progressed, again drove a thriving trade. The Rectangle, as if to make up
for lost time, started in with vigor on its usual night debauch. Maxwell and
his little party, including Virginia, Rachel and Jasper Chase, walked down
past the row of saloons and dens until they reached the corner where the
cars passed.
“This is a terrible spot,” said the minister as he stood waiting for their
car. “I never realized that Raymond had such a festering sore. It does not
seem possible that this is a city full of Christian disciples.”
“Do you think any one can ever remove this great curse of drink?” asked
Jasper Chase.
“I have thought lately as never before of what Christian people might do to
remove the curse of the saloon. Why don't we all act together against it?
Why don't the Christian pastors and the church members of Raymond move as
one man against the traffic? What would Jesus do? Would He keep silent?
Would He vote to license these causes of crime and death?”
He was talking to himself more than to the others. He remembered that he had
always voted for license, and so had nearly all his church members. What
would Jesus do? Could he answer that question? Would the Master preach and
act against the saloon if He lived today? How would He preach and act?
Suppose it was not popular to preach against license? Suppose the Christian
people thought it was all that could be done to license the evil and so get
revenue from the necessary sin? Or suppose the church members themselves
owned the property where the saloons stood—what then? He knew that those
were the facts in Raymond. What would Jesus do?
He went up into his study the next morning with that question only partly
answered. He thought of it all day. He was still thinking of it and reaching
certain real conclusions when the EVENING News came. His wife brought it up
and sat down a few minutes while he read to her.
The EVENING News was at present the most sensational paper in Raymond. That
is to say, it was being edited in such a remarkable fashion that its
subscribers had never been so excited over a newspaper before. First they
had noticed the absence of the prize fight, and gradually it began to dawn
upon them that the News no longer printed accounts of crime with detailed
descriptions, or scandals in private life. Then they noticed that the
advertisements of liquor and tobacco were dropped, together with certain
others of a questionable character. The discontinuance of the Sunday paper
caused the greatest comment of all, and now the character of the editorials
was creating the greatest excitement. A quotation from the Monday paper of
this week will show what Edward Norman was doing to keep his promise. The
editorial was headed:
THE MORAL SIDE OF POLITICAL QUESTIONS
The editor of the News has always advocated the principles of the great
political party at present in power, and has heretofore discussed all
political questions from the standpoint of expediency, or of belief in the
party as opposed to other political organizations. Hereafter, to be
perfectly honest with all our readers, the editor will present and discuss
all political questions from the standpoint of right and wrong. In other
words, the first question asked in this office about any political question
will not be, “Is it in the interests of our party?” or, “Is it according to
the principles laid down by our party in its platform?” but the question
first asked will be, “Is this measure in accordance with the spirit and
teachings of Jesus as the author of the greatest standard of life known to
men?” That is, to be perfectly plain, the moral side of every political
question will be considered its most important side, and the ground will be
distinctly taken that nations as well as individuals are under the same law
to do all things to the glory of God as the first rule of action.
The same principle will be observed in this office toward candidates for
places of responsibility and trust in the republic. Regardless of party
politics the editor of the News will do all in his power to bring the best
men into power, and will not knowingly help to support for office any
candidate who is unworthy, no matter how much he may be endorsed by the
party. The first question asked about the man and about the measures will
be, “Is he the right man for the place?” “Is he a good man with ability?”
“Is the measure right?”
There had been more of this, but we have quoted enough to show the character
of the editorial. Hundreds of men in Raymond had read it and rubbed their
eyes in amazement. A good many of them had promptly written to the News,
telling the editor to stop their paper. The paper still came out, however,
and was eagerly read all over the city. At the end of a week Edward Norman
knew very well that he was fast losing a large number of subscribers. He
faced the conditions calmly, although Clark, the managing editor, grimly
anticipated ultimate bankruptcy, especially since Monday's editorial.
Tonight, as Maxwell read to his wife, he could see in almost every column
evidences of Norman's conscientious obedience to his promise. There was an
absence of slangy, sensational scare heads. The reading matter under the
head lines was in perfect keeping with them. He noticed in two columns that
the reporters' name appeared signed at the bottom. And there was a distinct
advance in the dignity and style of their contributions.
“So Norman is beginning to get his reporters to sign their work. He has
talked with me about that. It is a good thing. It fixes responsibility for
items where it belongs and raises the standard of work done. A good thing
all around for the public and the writers.”
Maxwell suddenly paused. His wife looked up from some work she was doing. He
was reading something with the utmost interest. “Listen to this, Mary,” he
said, after a moment while his lip trembled:
This morning Alexander Powers, Superintendent of the L. and T. R. R. shops
in this city, handed in his resignation to the road, and gave as his reason
the fact that certain proofs had fallen into his hands of the violation of
the Interstate Commerce Law, and also of the state law which has recently
been framed to prevent and punish railroad pooling for the benefit of
certain favored shippers. Mr. Powers states in his resignation that he can
no longer consistently withhold the information he possesses against the
road. He will be a witness against it. He has placed his evidence against
the company in the hands of the Commission and it is now for them to take
action upon it.
The News wishes to express itself on this action of Mr. Powers. In the first
place he has nothing to gain by it. He has lost a very valuable place
voluntarily, when by keeping silent he might have retained it. In the second
place, we believe his action ought to receive the approval of all
thoughtful, honest citizens who believe in seeing law obeyed and lawbreakers
brought to justice. In a case like this, where evidence against a railroad
company is generally understood to be almost impossible to obtain, it is the
general belief that the officers of the road are often in possession of
criminating facts but do not consider it to be any of their business to
inform the authorities that the law is being defied. The entire result of
this evasion of responsibility on the part of those who are responsible is
demoralizing to every young man connected with the road. The editor of the
News recalls the statement made by a prominent railroad official in this
city a little while ago, that nearly every clerk in a certain department of
the road understood that large sums of money were made by shrewd violations
of the Interstate Commerce Law, was ready to admire the shrewdness with
which it was done, and declared that they would all do the same thing if
they were high enough in railroad circles to attempt it.
It is not necessary to say that such a condition of business is destructive
to all the nobler and higher standards of conduct, and no young man can live
in such an atmosphere of unpunished dishonesty and lawlessness without
wrecking his character.
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