I shall explain elsewhere,
in two voluminous treatises, why I did not understand the doctrine
of Jesus, and how at length it became clear to me. These works are
a criticism of dogmatic theology and a new translation of the four
Gospels, followed by a concordance. In these writings I seek
methodically to disentangle everything that tends to conceal the
truth from men; I translate the four Gospels anew, verse by verse,
and I bring them together in a new concordance. The work has lasted
for six years. Each year, each month, I discover new meanings which
corroborate the fundamental idea; I correct the errors which have
crept in, and I put the last touches to what I have already
written. My life, whose final term is not far distant, will
doubtless end before I have finished my work; but I am convinced
that the work will be of great service; so I shall do all that I
can to bring it to completion.
I do not now concern myself with
this outward work upon theology and the Gospels, but with an inner
work of an entirely different nature. I have to do now with nothing
systematic or methodical, only with that sudden light which showed
me the Gospel doctrine in all its simple beauty.
The process was something similar
to that experienced by one who, following an erroneous model, seeks
to restore a statue from broken bits of marble, and who with one of
the most refractory fragments in hand perceives the hopelessness of
his ideal; then he begins anew, and instead of the former
incongruities he finds, as he observes the outlines of each
fragment, that all fit well together and form one consistent whole.
That is exactly what happened to me, and is what I wish to relate.
I wish to tell how I found the key to the true meaning of the
doctrine of Jesus, and how by this meaning doubt was absolutely
driven from my soul. The discovery came about in this way.
From my childhood, from the time
I first began to read the New Testament, I was touched most of all
by that portion of the doctrine of Jesus which inculcates love,
humility, self-denial, and the duty of returning good for evil.
This, to me, has always been the substance of Christianity; my
heart recognized its truth in spite of scepticism and despair, and
for this reason I submitted to a religion professed by a multitude
of toilers, who find in it the solution of life,—the religion
taught by the Orthodox Church. But in making my submission to the
Church, I soon saw that I should not find in its creed the
confirmation of the essence of Christianity; what was to me
essential seemed to be in the dogma of the Church merely an
accessory. What was to me the most important of the teachings of
Jesus was not so regarded by the Church. No doubt (I thought) the
Church sees in Christianity, aside from its inner meaning of love,
humility, and self-denial, an outer, dogmatic meaning, which,
however strange and even repulsive to me, is not in itself evil or
pernicious. But the further I went on in submission to the doctrine
of the Church, the more clearly I saw in this particular point
something of greater importance than I had at first realized. What
I found most repulsive in the doctrine of the Church was the
strangeness of its dogmas and the approval, nay, the support, which
it gave to persecutions, to the death penalty, to wars stirred up
by the intolerance common to all sects; but my faith was chiefly
shattered by the indifference of the Church to what seemed to me
essential in the teachings of Jesus, and its partiality for what
seemed to me of secondary importance. I felt that something was
wrong; but I could not see where the fault lay, because the
doctrine of the Church did not deny what seemed to me essential in
the doctrine of Jesus; this essential was fully recognized, yet in
such a way as not to give it the first place. I could not accuse
the Church of denying the essence of the doctrine of Jesus, but it
was recognized in a way which did not satisfy me. The Church did
not give me what I expected from her. I had passed from nihilism to
the Church simply because I felt it to be impossible to live
without religion, that is, without a knowledge of good and evil
aside from animal instincts. I hoped to find this knowledge in
Christianity; but Christianity I then saw only as a vague spiritual
tendency, from which it was impossible to deduce any clear and
peremptory rules for the guidance of life. These I sought and these
I demanded of the Church. The Church offered me rules wherein I not
only sought in vain the practice of the Christian life so dear to
me, but which drove me still further away. I could not become a
disciple of the Church. An existence based upon Christian truth was
to me indispensable, and the Church only offered me rules
completely at variance with the truth that I loved. The rules of
the Church touching articles of faith, dogmas, the observance of
the sacrament, fasts, prayers, were not necessary to me, and did
not seem to be based on Christian truth. Moreover, the rules of the
Church weakened and sometimes destroyed the Christian disposition
of soul which alone gave meaning to my life.
I was troubled most that the
miseries of humanity, the habit of judging one another, of passing
judgment upon nations and religions, and the wars and massacres
which resulted in consequence, all went on with the approbation of
the Church. The doctrine of Jesus,—judge not, be humble, forgive
offences, deny self, love,—this doctrine was extolled by the Church
in words, but at the same time the Church approved what was
incompatible with the doctrine. Was it possible that the doctrine
of Jesus admitted of such contradiction? I could not believe
so.
Another astonishing thing about
the Church was that the passages upon which it based affirmation of
its dogmas were those which were most obscure. On the other hand,
the passages from which came the moral laws were the most clear and
precise. And yet the dogmas and the duties depending upon them were
definitely formulated by the Church, while the recommendation to
obey the moral law was put in the most vague and mystical terms.
Was this the intention of Jesus? The Gospels alone could dissipate
my doubts. I read them once and again.
Of all the other portions of the
Gospels, the Sermon on the Mount always had for me an exceptional
importance. I now read it more frequently than ever. Nowhere does
Jesus speak with greater solemnity, nowhere does he propound moral
rules more definitely and practically, nor do these rules in any
other form awaken more readily an echo in the human heart; nowhere
else does he address himself to a larger multitude of the common
people. If there are any clear and precise Christian principles,
one ought to find them here. I therefore sought the solution of my
doubts in Matthew v., vi., and vii., comprising the Sermon on the
Mount. These chapters I read very often, each time with the same
emotional ardor, as I came to the verses which exhort the hearer to
turn the other cheek, to give up his cloak, to be at peace with all
the world, to love his enemies,—but each time with the same
disappointment. The divine words were not clear. They exhorted to a
renunciation so absolute as to entirely stifle life as I understood
it; to renounce everything, therefore, could not, it seemed to me,
be essential to salvation. And the moment this ceased to be an
absolute condition, clearness and precision were at an end.
I read not only the Sermon on the
Mount; I read all the Gospels and all the theological commentaries
on the Gospels. I was not satisfied with the declarations of the
theologians that the Sermon on the Mount was only an indication of
the degree of perfection to which man should aspire; that man,
weighed down by sin, could not reach such an ideal; and that the
salvation of humanity was in faith and prayer and grace. I could
not admit the truth of these propositions. It seemed to me a
strange thing that Jesus should propound rules so clear and
admirable, addressed to the understanding of every one, and still
realize man's inability to carry his doctrine into practice.
Then as I read these maxims I was
permeated with the joyous assurance that I might that very hour,
that very moment, begin to practise them. The burning desire I felt
led me to the attempt, but the doctrine of the Church rang in my
ears,—Man is weak, and to this he cannot attain;—my strength soon
failed. On every side I heard, "You must believe and pray"; but my
wavering faith impeded prayer. Again I heard, "You must pray, and
God will give you faith; this faith will inspire prayer, which in
turn will invoke faith that will inspire more prayer, and so on,
indefinitely." Reason and experience alike convinced me that such
methods were useless. It seemed to me that the only true way was
for me to try to follow the doctrine of Jesus.
And so, after all this fruitless
search and careful meditation over all that had been written for
and against the divinity of the doctrine of Jesus, after all this
doubt and suffering, I came back face to face with the mysterious
Gospel message. I could not find the meanings that others found,
neither could I discover what I sought. It was only after I had
rejected the interpretations of the wise critics and theologians,
according to the words of Jesus, "Except ye... become as little
children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven" (Matt.
xviii. 3),—it was only then that I suddenly understood what had
been so meaningless before. I understood, not through exegetical
fantasies or profound and ingenious textual combinations; I
understood everything, because I put all commentaries out of my
mind. This was the passage that gave me the key to the
whole:—
"Ye have heard that it hath been
said, An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth: But I say unto
you, That ye resist not evil." (Matt. v. 38, 39.)
One day the exact and simple
meaning of these words came to me; I understood that Jesus meant
neither more nor less than what he said. What I saw was nothing
new; only the veil that had hidden the truth from me fell away, and
the truth was revealed in all its grandeur.
"Ye have heard that it hath been
said, An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth: But I say unto
you, That ye resist not evil."
These words suddenly appeared to
me as if I had never read them before. Always before, when I had
read this passage, I had, singularly enough, allowed certain words
to escape me, "But I say unto you, that ye resist not evil." To me
it had always been as if the words just quoted had never existed,
or had never possessed a definite meaning. Later on, as I talked
with many Christians familiar with the Gospel, I noticed frequently
the same blindness with regard to these words. No one remembered
them, and often in speaking of this passage, Christians took up the
Gospel to see for themselves if the words were really there.
Through a similar neglect of these words I had failed to understand
the words that follow:—
"But whosoever shall smite thee
on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also," etc. (Matt. v. 39,
et seq.)
Always these words had seemed to
me to demand long-suffering and privation contrary to human nature.
They touched me; I felt that it would be noble to follow them, but
I also felt that I had not the strength to put them into practice.
I said to myself, "If I turn the other cheek, I shall get another
blow; if I give, all that I have will be taken away. Life would be
an impossibility. Since life is given to me, why should I deprive
myself of it? Jesus cannot demand as much as that." Thus I
reasoned, persuaded that Jesus, in exalting long-suffering and
privation, made use of exaggerated terms lacking in clearness and
precision; but when I understood the words "Resist not evil," I saw
that Jesus did not exaggerate, that he did not demand suffering for
suffering, but that he had formulated with great clearness and
precision exactly what he wished to say.
"Resist not evil," knowing that
you will meet with those who, when they have struck you on one
cheek and met with no resistance, will strike you on the other;
who, having taken away your coat, will take away your cloak also;
who, having profited by your labor, will force you to labor still
more without reward. And yet, though all this should happen to you,
"Resist not evil"; do good to them that injure you. When I
understood these words as they are written, all that had been
obscure became clear to me, and what had seemed exaggerated I saw
to be perfectly reasonable. For the first time I grasped the
pivotal idea in the words "Resist not evil"; I saw that what
followed was only a development of this command; I saw that Jesus
did not exhort us to turn the other cheek that we might endure
suffering, but that his exhortation was, "Resist not evil," and
that he afterward declared suffering to be the possible consequence
of the practice of this maxim.
A father, when his son is about
to set out on a far journey, commands him not to tarry by the way;
he does not tell him to pass his nights without shelter, to deprive
himself of food, to expose himself to rain and cold. He says, "Go
thy way, and tarry not, though thou should'st be wet or cold." So
Jesus does not say, "Turn the other cheek and suffer." He says,
"Resist not evil"; no matter what happens, "Resist not."
These words, "Resist not evil,"
when I understood their significance, were to me the key that
opened all the rest. Then I was astonished that I had failed to
comprehend words so clear and precise.
"Ye have heard that it hath been
said, An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth: But I say unto
you, That ye resist not evil."
Whatever injury the evil-disposed
may inflict upon you, bear it, give all that you have, but resist
not. Could anything be more clear, more definite, more intelligible
than that? I had only to grasp the simple and exact meaning of
these words, just as they were spoken, when the whole doctrine of
Jesus, not only as set forth in the Sermon on the Mount, but in the
entire Gospels, became clear to me; what had seemed contradictory
was now in harmony; above all, what had seemed superfluous was now
indispensable. Each portion fell into harmonious unison and filled
its proper part, like the fragments of a broken statue when
adjusted in harmony with the sculptor's design. In the Sermon on
the Mount, as well as throughout the whole Gospel, I found
everywhere affirmation of the same doctrine, "Resist not
evil."
In the Sermon on the Mount, as
well as in many other places, Jesus represents his disciples, those
who observe the rule of non-resistance to evil, as turning the
other cheek, giving up their cloaks, persecuted, used despitefully,
and in want. Everywhere Jesus says that he who taketh not up his
cross, he who does not renounce worldly advantage, he who is not
ready to bear all the consequences of the commandment, "Resist not
evil," cannot become his disciple.
To his disciples Jesus says,
Choose to be poor; bear all things without resistance to evil, even
though you thereby bring upon yourself persecution, suffering, and
death.
Prepared to suffer death rather
than resist evil, he reproved the resentment of Peter, and died
exhorting his followers not to resist and to remain always faithful
to his doctrine. The early disciples observed this rule, and passed
their lives in misery and persecution, without rendering evil for
evil.
It seems, then, that Jesus meant
precisely what he said. We may declare the practice of such a rule
to be very difficult; we may deny that he who follows it will find
happiness; we may say with the unbelievers that Jesus was a
dreamer, an idealist who propounded impracticable maxims; but it is
impossible not to admit that he expressed in a manner at once clear
and precise what he wished to say; that is, that according to his
doctrine a man must not resist evil, and, consequently, that
whoever adopts his doctrine will not resist evil. And yet neither
believers nor unbelievers will admit this simple and clear
interpretation of Jesus' words.