to be solved in
the present. It promises those who are broken with the injustice and
greed of their fellows a place where right would prevail and rest would
be their portion in the future. It shifts to an imaginary and ideal
world all the perplexities and wrongs of the real present world.
That kind of teaching ingrained in generations accounts for the dull
patience, the stolid, brute-like content of the peasant in Europe; he
is born a bearer of burdens, a tiller of the soil, to walk bent and
never look up; it is all endurable because it is all so short; he some
day will be better off than kings and emperors are now.
But as the generations are born the inspiring vision of that future
loses its force; the ideals are gone and the children come into the
world with their fathers content with their present condition, but
devoid of aspiration and also devoid of their father's faith in the
compensations of the future.
Then comes the reaction. Some daring spirits assert that if there is
any good, if there is equity and rights, men ought to enter into and
enjoy them here and now. And some who catch the vision of a God of
real love are unwilling to believe that He keeps from His children the
present joys of His home; they invite to a present heaven.
Then how easy it is to fall into the error of seeking only a material
present-day paradise, to live as if the only things worth living for
were food and clothes and pleasant circumstances. Better a worthy,
beautiful ideal afar off than an unworthy and debasing one already
realized. The heaven that so many are seeking will but bring all men
to the level of the brute.
The danger is that we shall miss the real benefit of this great truth
that whatever good is designed for man may be realized in large measure
while he lives and shall make his good to consist only in goods.
Better conditions of living easily become the foe of the best. Heaven
is not meat and drink; it is the better heart.
Making houses and lands the supreme end of living is little better than
looking forward to harps and crowns. It is easy, being freed from
slavery to a superstition to relapse into slavery to our lower selves.
We are in danger of living for a living instead of for our lives. We
are "on the make" instead of being engaged in making manhood. We are
digging the lead of commercial advantage with the gold shovels of
character.
We may be measured by our own measurements. In sermons and o
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