SPIRITUAL FREEDOM GEORGE DE CHARMS 1940
NEW CHURCH LIFE
VOL. LX
JANUARY, 1940
No. 1
"Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free." (John 8: 32.)
To be free is the deepest desire of the human heart. For this men have labored and fought, suffered and died, through all the ages. Yet it has ever eluded their grasp. Progress has been made only at the cost of long and bitter struggle. It has been achieved by slow and uneven steps: by gaining a little here, and later on a little there. Over and over again, what was accomplished has apparently been lost, and could be regained only by further conflict and sacrifice.
In our modern era the results have appeared to be more encouraging. Men thought they had at last discovered the secret of freedom. Believing that it lay in the conquest of the forces of nature, they concentrated all their energies on this task. Astonishing results were attained, by means of which natural freedom has been enlarged and extended with ever increasing rapidity. The advancement of knowledge, combined with the spread of education, has progressively loosened the bonds of ignorance. Inventive genius has multiplied things designed to reduce the drudgery of labor-things that minister to man's convenience, comfort, and enjoyment. The application of scientific laws has greatly alleviated human suffering. Education has made possible a greater degree of personal responsibility, which, through the orderly processes of law, has secured to the individual a larger measure of civil and political liberty.
Yet it is doubtful whether any permanent results have been achieved. Our modern world, at the very height of its intellectual development, appears to be caught in a net of mysterious forces over which it has no control-forces that are relentlessly tightening about it, threatening to crush once more its hard-won freedom, and to wipe out every gain that has been made. Well may we ask: Is there, after all, such a thing as human freedom? Is it possible of attainment? Or have men been struggling toward a mirage that has lured them ever more deeply into a desert of helpless bondage from which there is no escape?
This is, in fact, just what has happened, though it is not because there is no such thing as human freedom, but because men have not perceived the true essence of freedom. They have mistaken the appearance for the reality. They have supposed that it lay in the power of the human will to achieve its own desires. They have imagined that these desires could be increasingly satisfied by overcoming the forces of nature. Knowing that the desires of man's will are evil as well as good, they have believed nonetheless that the cause of evil was ignorance, and that, in the measure in which knowledge multiplied and intelligence increased, good desires would prevail.
The very opposite is the case. The source of freedom is not in man's will, but in the will of God. It consists in being led by the Lord. It results, not from a conquest over natural forces outside of man, but by victory over the forces of evil within his own heart. The increase of natural knowledge, and the development of external intelligence alone, will not insure such a victory. These can be used for evil purposes as well as good. They serve to increase the power of the one as well as of the other. Man, by his own intelligence, cannot distinguish what is truly good from that which merely appears to him as good because it gives delight and satisfies his natural loves. The Lord alone knows what is truly good, and this good He can impart to man only so far as man will yield his mind to Divine leading. This is the only way that leads to freedom.
Such is the clear import of the Lord's words in the eighth chapter of John. It is there recounted that He was teaching in the temple, and as He taught, many believed on Him. Then said Jesus to those Jews that believed on Him, If ye continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed; and ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.'
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Thinking that He spake of external liberty, they said: 'We be Abraham's seed, and were never in bondage to any man; how sayest Thou then, Ye shall be free? Jesus answered them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin; and the servant abideth not in the house forever: but the Son abideth ever. If therefore the Son shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed.'
This is plain teaching. External freedom-the freedom to think and speak, and act as we please-is an illusion. Because it gives us delight, it creates the appearance that we are free. But the delight is an evil one, centered in self, destroying the freedom of others, subjecting them to our will, achieving its own satisfaction at their expense by a suppression and cruel domination that leaves human suffering in its path. And because this inordinate will to power must be checked by the merciful Providence of the Lord for the protection of others, it leads to inevitable punishment and retribution, to an ultimate frustration that makes man at last a slave to his own passions.
The law of God is the law of love to the Lord and of charity toward the neighbor. To act from the love of self-that is, to seek as the highest good the accomplishment of one's own will-this is the very essence of sin. And whosoever committeth sin "becomes the servant of sin." He may imagine that he is master of his own fate, and for a time he may enjoy success, and with it a sense of freedom, but only so long as his evil love may be used, in the Lord's Providence, to accomplish results that may be turned to a good end: only so long as be may unconsciously be a servant of the Divine will. But such a servant abideth not in the house forever." His love of self is insatiable. It must be placed in bonds, lest it injure and destroy the good. Such is the bondage of hell.
The love of self, therefore, is the cause and origin of all slavery; but love to the Lord is the cause and origin of all true freedom. That which enables us to love the Lord is what is called innocence." Innocence is a willingness to be led. It is of two kinds-external and internal. External innocence is a willingness to be led by others in whom we have confidence. But internal innocence is a willingness to be led by the Lord alone. Every man at birth is endowed by the Lord with external innocence. It is a delight, which enables him to be taught and led, through infancy, childhood and youth, by parents and teachers.
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As he advances in age this delight decreases, and is successively replaced by the delight of self-leading.
Yet this innocence of childhood-because within it the very delight of heaven lies concealed-provides the means and prepares the way for internal innocence. If the child is taught about the Lord, if he is led to know and love the Lord as his Heavenly Father, to have unquestioning faith in the teaching of the Word, then, although these things are not yet understood, although they are little more than words and phrases accepted on the authority of others, still they contain the seed of spiritual faith-the seed of internal innocence, that is, of delight in being led by the Lord. When adult age is reached, when the day of childish innocence is past, and man faces the responsibility of determining his own life, then, by means of that innocence a temple has been formed in his mind, where the Lord may appear to him directly and individually to teach him the way of life. And in that spiritual temple there will be ideas, affections-delights responsive to the Lord's teaching, impelling the man to accept and to believe.
This first faith is the very sanctuary of man's freedom. Without it he would be carried along inevitably on the current of his own selfish loves and desires, knowing no other delight, and supposing that only thus could he be free. But external innocence has introduced him into the delight of being led. It has given him to feel the protection of a power outside of himself-a power that watches over him with tender care. It has given him a sense of his own weakness and ignorance, and his dependence upon this higher power. By this delight the Lord provides a balance for the delight of self-will and self- leading which is his by natural inheritance, and which has increased with the years until it can no longer be held in check by external restraints.
Because of this balance, the Lord can give him the power and the freedom-as of himself-to choose the delight of innocence in preference to the delight of self-leading. If he makes this choice, then it is no longer a delight imposed from without one to which he has been compelled by the pressure of others. It requires him to follow no leading by other men, which is fallible and subject to error like himself. It is a delight that he has freely elected, in which there is the appearance of self-determination, and thus a sense of internal freedom.
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Yet it is a delight that impels him willingly to submit his mind and his heart to the Lord's leading, when he hears the teaching of His Word.
This is the essence of a spiritual faith. But it is not yet a living religion. To everyone who comes in this way to believe on Him, the Lord says: If ye continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed; and ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free." The Jews to whom the Lord spoke these words had come to believe on Him. But their faith was a temporary state induced by the sphere of His presence and the power of His teaching. At the moment they saw the truth, and sincerely acknowledged it. But there were many things in their minds-things innocently accepted as true and deeply confirmed by established modes of thought, which were opposed to this truth. When the momentary state was passed, these accustomed ideas would return to attack their faith, to raise doubts concerning it. If they were to retain it: if it were to transform their lives; if it were to make them truly disciples of the Lord, these doubts must be met and overcome.
For this they had not sufficient knowledge. They must seek further instruction. They must return to the Lord, and diligently search His Word for a Divine answer to their troubled questioning. They must persist in yielding up their thought to the Lord's leading, as against the temptation to trust in their own knowledge and intelligence. Before this has been done, they are not truly disciples. Though they might accept the Lord's teaching in part, they would gradually twist it into agreement with their own mistaken concepts, and thus falsify it. Wherefore the Lord said to them: "If ye continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed."
It appears to man as if this continuance in the Word is an intellectual struggle. It requires him to read, to study, and to reflect. But in essence it is a struggle to maintain and establish his faith, that is, his willingness to be led and taught by the Lord, as against the natural desire to rely upon his own will. Because, by means of it, love to the Lord is strengthened, and that love is a flame, which gives spiritual light to the mind, therefore it leads to an inner vision of the Truth-a deeper understanding of the Word. And with that understanding there comes a new responsibility.
For the understanding of the truth points the way to a genuine religious life. It reveals the difference between this life and a merely moral or civil life.
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Moral and civil life may be used by the love of self to attain its own ends. They may be turned to the purposes of evil, even while the appearance of evil is removed from the external conduct. But a spiritual life is one that removes the love of self from the heart, from the inmost intention of the will, and sets up in its place the love of use and charity toward the neighbor. It takes away the delight of domination, and puts in its place a delight in use,-a deep regard for the freedom of others that makes a man find his own happiness in promoting the success and well-being of others. Wherefore the Lord says: " Ye shall know the truth, and, the truth shall make you free." For in love to the Lord, and in spiritual charity exercised in human life, lies the secret of all genuine freedom.
All men know that the freedom of any social order depends upon the integrity of character, sincerity, honor, and justice of those who constitute it. They know that these virtues may be practised merely for the sake of self-interest, and that in this case freedom is insecure and transitory-in constant danger of being violated. But they do not know how this may be avoided. They regard self-interest as inevitable and universal because inherent in human nature. Any effort to eliminate this is regarded as visionary. Wherefore men seek to attain freedom by every means that will enable them still to accomplish their own will-by every means that leaves the love of self-undisturbed in the internal of man's mind. They seek it by amassing external knowledge; by conquering the forces of nature; by eliminating poverty: by setting up ideological systems of economic and political life, vainly trusting that, when ignorance and `want have been removed, selfishness will disappear of itself, spontaneously and without a struggle. But they refuse to face the spiritual conflict by which alone it can be overcome. They refuse to come to the Lord, that they might have life. They reject the teaching of His Word, which calls them to repentance of heart. They are unwilling to submit their minds to the discipline of truth. Because of this, they never undergo that internal compulsion of self by which alone evil can he destroyed at its source. Thus, even while they struggle vainly to escape the outward effects of evil, they keep its inner cause alive that it may destroy in the night that which they have toiled to build during the day.
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This is the reason why a New Church must be established, in which there will be a spiritual faith and a living religion. To this end the Lord has come again to His temple. He has come in a rational revelation of His truth, wherein we may behold the presence and operation of His Infinite Love and Wisdom. All who see Him there, who hearken to His teaching and acknowledge its truth in heart and in faith, are among those who believe in Him. But if we would be His disciples indeed, we must "continue in His Word." We cannot rest satisfied with a formal profession of faith. We must earnestly endeavor to understand the truth as a spiritual way of life. We must accept its challenge, and through every temptation submit our own will to the Lord's leading-to the leading of His truth, by governing not only our speech and action, but also our inmost purpose and intention according to the Truth revealed. Only thus will the Church grow and wax strong in spirit-strong in the spirit (!)f love to the Lord and charity, that the way may be prepared for the final restoration of genuine freedom to the world. Amen.
LESSONS: Isaiah 61. John 8: 16-38. A. C. 1937:4, 5
MUSIC: Liturgy, pages 534, 564, 593. Revised Liturgy, pages 450, 454, 455.
PRAYERS: Liturgy, nos. 59, 106.