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Overland Monthly / OV195 - The Japanese Complimented
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OV195 THE JAPANESE COMPLIMENTED
BY C. T. RUSSELL Pastor of Brooklyn and London Tabernacles
"Choose ye this day whom ye will serve."—#Jos 24:15 .
TOKIO, JAPAN.—I am deeply impressed with
the great progress the Japanese nation has made, which is manifest on
every hand. But I fear that here, as in civilized lands, some of the
progress is injurious. The Japanese and every other people need a faith
ballast. It is necessary to strength of character and a permanent
civilization. Without it, in a little while the whole world will be
swept into anarchy.
Indeed, I foresee that awful condition approaching rapidly—in Europe, in America and here in Japan.
Laments the Lack of Faith Ballast.
The basis of anarchy is a lack of faith
ballast: and alas! our wonderful schools, with their fine equipments,
are the real cause of the condition which is approaching. In Europe and
America this infidelity is glossed over with the name of Higher
Criticism, but here I see that the Japanese more candidly label it
Agnosticism and Atheism. It appalls me to find that the progress of
Japanese scholars from Shintoism, Confucianism and Buddhism has not
been toward Christianity, but toward total unbelief. I have been handed
a report from three of the Japanese schools which has made me
heart-sick. Out of a total of four hundred and nine students, four
professed Christianity, seventeen the religion of their fathers, sixty
declared themselves Atheists, two hundred and eighty-two registered as
Agnostics, and forty-six were so bewildered as to be non-committal.
Alas, even the proverbial Japanese politeness, gentleness, kindness of
character and willingness to die for their Emperor cannot exist long
under the influence of such a lack of faith ballast. And what the
Japanese scholars of to-day believe will surely reflect in their masses
shortly. And I am bound in candor to admit that a very similar
condition of things prevails throughout Europe and America. The outlook
is ominous indeed.
War and Rapine Not Noble Objects.
Whatever we may be, the closing of one
year and the opening of another furnishes a favorable opportunity for
retrospection as well as for good resolutions. The greatest power in
the universe is the power of the will, and we are all learning how
important a matter it is that our own wills and the wills of our fellow
creatures be rightly directed. It is in line with this thought that the
wise man declared that "Greater is a man that ruleth his own spirit
than he who conquers a city;" and "As a man willeth in his heart, so is
he."—#Pr 16:32; 23:7.
Of old, Alexander the Great willed to be the conqueror of the world,
and at a cost of wealth and streams of blood he accomplished wonders.
We are gradually learning, however, that war and rapine are not
sufficiently noble objects for the human ambition and will.
Instead, the bright minds of the world
are turning toward the conquering of the earth. Highways are cast up,
rails are laid, trains are run, mountains are pierced, rivers are
spanned with bridges, and the human will is using steam and electrical
power in every direction in a marvelous manner. I am not emphasizing
these well known facts so common to our observation, but calling
attention to the will behind all these results, without which they
could not be attained. And what is thus noted in the achievements of
the world reminds us that we each and all have wills, which should be
rightly directed and forcefully exercised in all of our personal
affairs, our lives, our ambitions, our family and social attainments.
A.
OV196 will-less man is a good-for-naught.
How important, then, it is that all of our wills should be wisely,
rightly directed, that our lives may be made as successful and useful
as possible, for the glory of our Creator and for the welfare of our
fellows, as well as for our own sakes! I suggest, therefore, in harmony
with the above text, that we "choose this day" our course for the
remainder of the year; yea, for life, and, finding that we have chosen
wisely, that we bend every energy to the out-working of that resolution
or will.
Japan a Flowery Kingdom.
This choice does not necessarily mean
that all must turn right about face and go in the opposite direction to
that in which we have been going. I am not a believer in the theory of
manÂ’s total depravity. Wherever I travel I perceive marks of sin,
depravity, human imperfection, weakness, but I also perceive evidences
of good intentions, good endeavors, noble resolves. Is it not because
sin at the present time is profitable, advantageous, pleasurable, or
seems to be one or all of these, that it is sought after, desired and
given so large a control in human affairs? Is not this true because we
are now under the domination of the Prince of Darkness, the Prince of
this world, whom the Scriptures declare shall be bound for a thousand
years and deceive the nations no more, by putting light for darkness?
When the deception shall pass away and mankind shall see clearly the
joys and rewards of righteousness, will they not prefer them? And if in
that glorious Epoch right-doing brings blessing and pleasure, and
wrong-doing brings all the disadvantages and stripes, may we not expect
that the majority of humanity will seek righteousness, seek harmony
with God, and thus seek the joys and blessings of Divine favor and
everlasting life? My brief stay in Japan has given me a keen
appreciation of what the Japanese have already attained as a
people—entirely aside from Christianity. I perceive many things in
Japan closely connected with their religious customs, which put to the
blush certain conditions prevalent in Europe and America, where
Christianity has been dominant for centuries. We are to acknowledge the
good wherever we see it, and so now I freely acknowledge that I
perceive amongst the Japanese people an esthetic taste, a gentleness of
demeanor and a loyalty of heart which I fully appreciate, even though
these qualities came to the Japanese, not through Christianity, but
through Shintoism and Buddhism. Indeed, I must apologize for much of
the rudeness and crudeness of the so-called Christian nations, of which
the Japs have heard through their learned men, and of which they know
something through contact with the soldiers and sailors of these lands
who come to their ports. I would have the Japanese understand, if I
could, that the teachings of Christianity cover every form of courtesy,
gentleness, brotherly kindness and hospitality. The very key-note of
Christ’s instruction to His followers is love, out of a pure heart—and
that each should do unto his neighbor as he would that his neighbor
should do to him. The fruits and graces of the Holy Spirit of Christ
are prominently set forth in the Bible—meekness, gentleness, patience,
long-suffering, faith, hope, joy, love. I should like the Japanese to
know that while these qualities are very generally ignored amongst the
representatives of Christendom, there are, nevertheless, faithful
disciples of Jesus who study daily to put into practice all these
qualities marked by Divine approval. The difference seems to be that
these esthetic qualities or graces have become a national trait in
Japan, while in Christendom, so-called, they are practiced only by a
proportionately small number, the remainder rather boasting of and
cultivating qualities the reverse of these, as more helpful in the
battle for life and for money which is manifest everywhere among them..
OV197 I find myself unable to agree with
the teachings of the missionaries which have reached Japan, however
honest some of them may have been. Knowing that an essential feature of
Shintoism is reverence for deceased ancestors, many missionaries, I
fear, have done violence to the tenderest feelings and most deeply
seated convictions of the Japanese when they told them that their
ancestors, instead of being objects of worship, are damned of God, and
have begun their experience of a torture which will last to all
eternity, because they did not know, and therefore did not accept,
Jesus Christ as their Messiah and Savior, and did not become His
followers.
Disagrees with Missionaries.
I will not discuss the sincerity of these
brethren in thus doing violence to the sacred and tender sentiments of
the Japanese people. I will merely say that to my understanding they
have misinterpreted our great CreatorÂ’s Plan and the explanation
thereof furnished us in our sacred Scriptures. Instead, I give the
people the Bible Message, that their forefathers, whom they so deeply
venerate, are, according to the Bible, asleep in death, sweetly resting
from all labor, strife, vexation and turmoil, awaiting the morning
light of a New Epoch. That glorious period, when they will be awakened
and come forth under more favorable conditions than the present, under
a reign of righteousness and to a clear knowledge of the Truth, is to
be inaugurated by the coming of Christ, the worldÂ’s Messiah. He comes
to establish His Kingdom and to overthrow the Prince of Darkness. He
comes to break the shackles of ignorance and sin, sickness and death,
and to set mankind free from these. His Kingdom will set up the
glorious standard of righteousness and truth and render every
assistance possible for humanity to come into harmony with the Divine
will. In that glorious Day, which, I believe, is very near at hand,
everything that the Japanese and their ancestors have learned in
harmony with meekness, gentleness, patience, long-suffering, brotherly
kindness, love, will be that much of an assistance in their uplift
toward the full perfection of the Divine requirement of character. And
similarly be it noted, those who have failed to cultivate these heart
and character qualities, whether they were Japanese or nominal
Christians, will have that much whereof to be ashamed and to overcome
and rectify.
Does Not Wish to Be Misunderstood.
Do not misunderstand me. I am not
ignoring the fundamental Christian doctrine that "Christ died for our
sins, according to the Scriptures," and "rose again for our
justification." I am affirming that doctrine and carrying it to its
legitimate conclusion. The Bible, the inspired authority of
Christendom, clearly teaches that the sacrificial death of Jesus, the
Just for the unjust, was not for a mere handful, but for the entire
race. That sacrificial death took place more than four thousand years
after AdamÂ’s sin, but it is to be made efficacious for Adam and all of
his race—not merely for those who have heard the Message of Divine
grace, nor merely for those who have lived since the sacrifice took
place, but as the Bible declares, "Jesus Christ, by the grace of God,
tasted death for every man."—#Heb 2:9 .
Another Scripture distinctly shows that the Divine favor and blessing
resulting from JesusÂ’ death are not only to be a benefit to the Church,
to those who now believe and walk in the footsteps of the Redeemer, but
will ultimately benefit all the remainder of mankind. Thus we read, "He
is a propitiation (satisfaction) for our sins (the ChurchÂ’s sins), and
not for ours only, but also for the sins of the whole world."—#1Jo 2:2.
All mankind, therefore, must ultimately receive a benefit, a blessing,
as a result of JesusÂ’ death. This is the method God has adopted for the
fulfillment of His glorious promise of thirty-five hundred years ago to
Abraham—to which promise our Creator gave His oath, .
OV198 that we might have strong
consolation and faith in its fulfillment. The promise is that "All the
families of the earth shall be blessed," and, additionally, that the
blessing shall come to them through AbrahamÂ’s Seed.
ChristendomÂ’s Great Mistake.
The great mistake made by Christendom has
been in overlooking the fact that GodÂ’s great work thus far has been
only the finding of the promised Seed of Abraham, through whom the
blessing will reach all peoples. Primarily, this gracious offer was
made to AbrahamÂ’s natural posterity, the nation of Israel, if they
could keep perfectly the terms of their Law Covenant. But they were
unable so to do because, like the remainder of the race, they were
fallen, imperfect. Then it was that God revealed to them that He would
send them a Savior, Who would deliver them from their own weakness and
use them in carrying the blessing and favor to the whole world. In due
time, God sent His Son, Jesus, to be the Redeemer. Jesus left the glory
which He had with the Father and humbled Himself to human nature, yea,
even to death, the ignominious death of the Cross. Thus doing, He
provided the Ransom-Price for the sins of the whole world, for the
penalty upon the race was a death penalty, the result of one manÂ’s
disobedience. Thus the death of a Just One for the unjust is sufficient
to constitute a satisfaction of the Divine Law, the redemption of the
race from its death sentence. Thus was secured to all an opportunity
for resurrection: "As by a man came death, by a Man also comes the
resurrection of the dead; for as all in Adam die, even so all in Christ
shall be made alive, every man in his own order"—not all at once.—#1Co 15:21-23.
Jesus, the Redeemer, having finished His
sacrifice, was returned to heavenly glory at the right hand of Divine
Majesty, far superior to angels, etc. He is now ready for His great
work. Why the delay, do you ask? The Scriptures very clearly inform us
that a special, saintly class, to be gathered out of all nations,
peoples, kindreds and tongues, is to be associated with the Redeemer in
His great work of blessing the world. It is for this foreordained
company to be called, chosen and found faithful, that the Messianic
Kingdom delays. It is my opinion that the delay is nearly over—that
very soon the last member of the glorious company will have passed
beyond the veil, and that then, forthwith, the sufferings of The
Christ, Head and body, being ended, MessiahÂ’s glorious Kingdom will
begin.
What Israel Did Not Obtain.
St. Paul points us to the fact that the
Jewish Age, up to the time of Jesus, accomplished a great moral uplift
in that nation, but that the nation as a whole was not saintly, and
hence as a whole, could not be the RedeemerÂ’s associates in His
Messianic Kingdom. When Messiah came to His own and they received Him
not, but crucified Him, they, as a nation, were rejected from Divine
favor for a time.
But some of them were Israelites
indeed—some of them received Jesus, became His disciples, and were
accepted of God by the begetting of the Holy Spirit, at and after
Pentecost, to be members of the House of Sons—members of spiritual
Israel.
Since then Divine Providence has been
selecting the saintly ones from every nation under heaven, to complete
this spiritual Israel. Thus St. Paul declares again: "If ye be ChristÂ’s
then are ye Abraham’s Seed, and heirs according to the promise"—the
promise that all the families of the earth shall be blessed through
this Seed.—#Ga 3:16-29.
So to-day and always, I urge a recognition of the power of the will,
and the importance of its proper exercise in choosing the best
things—the things represented in Christ and His glorious Gospel of the
Love of God. "Choose ye this day whom ye will serve"—God or Mammon.
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