“It Is God’s Way”
“IT is God’s way!” said the dying McKinley. These words contain
a whole philosophy of history. In the broad sweep of affairs toward
the “far-off, divine event” of a perfected humanity God has His
way. His will and purpose give orderliness, coherence, and result
to the whole process.
The anarchist denies this. “Anarchy”
may be looked at psychologically or physiologically, as a mental
disease or a physical degeneration, and it may be regarded philosophically
as a systemless system, being utterly reprehensible from either
point of view. Theoretically anarchy negates thought, denies rationality,
and makes a philosophy of history impossible, for the simple reason
that it rejects all notions of a First Principle regulating all
life and action. Etymologically the term “anarchy,” when traced
furthest back into its Greek originals, is found to signify the
denial (or absence) of any arche, that is, of any Beginning,
Foundation Principle, or World-ground. It is finally against all
government because it is first of all opposed to all conceptions
of a co-ordinating Force or Being producing or inducing a world-order.
It assumes nothing, it proves nothing; it has no premises, no action,
no First or Final Causes. It simply recognizes an authorless confusion,
a meaningless mêlée, an indiscriminate death-struggle in
the wildernesses and jungles of a wretched world.
Over against this anarchical repudiation
of first principles, with its drive at all law and government, is
set the theistic assumption of a world-ordering Being of whose will
history is the consistent registration. There are practically three
attitudes that men take with respect to the great mystery of human
life. There is the anarchical teaching, universally execrated, that
things do not go God’s way, or anybody’s way, but are the sport
of irresponsible chance and unintelligible circumstance. On that
basis no philosophy, no religion, no government, no social stability,
no national prosperity would be possible. There is the fatalistic
(Moslem) belief that all things are fixed, in God’s way indeed,
but in the way of a God whom no man can respect while all men must
fear Him, and so as to allow human beings no slightest freedom of
choice, no real sphere of activity, and practically no materials
for morality. And then there is the rational Christian conception
that God has His way, that God remains master of events and the
Presiding Genius in all history from Adam to Apocalypse, but that
the Deity is most divine in according to man a real freedom, a regulated,
subordinate freedom, with entire liberty to do the things that ought
to be done, and complete accountability for doing the things that
ought not to be done. In this contention it is involved that man
must co-operate in carrying out the splendid purposes of the great
Creator, and that while all things work together for good for them
that love God, no man truly serves God by his sin. Sin gives trouble,
both to God and to man. Sin is the ultimate explanation of that
awful tragedy at Buffalo. Sin is the consummate folly and the pursuing
curse of history. The thing that helps, that blesses, that glorifies,
is righteousness—rightness before God and man.
“God’s way” is the safe way. He plans
best who plans with God. Despite all the anarchical denials of First
Principles, government lives, law lives, hope lives. God is not
dead, nor does He even sleep. And God will have His way. Men, parties,
philosophies, oppose Him in vain. “The dice of God,” says Emerson,
“are always loaded.” That is a fact to reckon with. Righteousness,
therefore, becomes resignation. For awhile we pursue our itineraries,
or frame our policies, or cast our votes, or write our essays, and
fondly think that it is we who are doing it; but in the end we note
that another Hand is writing on the wall, that a Higher Power, working
through us and beyond us and sometimes seemingly against us, is
making history of a kind that will last; and with the martyred McKinley
we come to murmur submissively, bravely: “It is God’s way. His will
be done!”
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