|
SELF-ASSURANCE AND INVASION OF DIVINE PREROGATIVES INVOLVED IN
THE LOVE OF CENSURING OTHERS.
Jas 4:11,12 FROM sins which are the result of a want of love to God St. James
passes on, and abruptly, to some which are the result of a want of
love for one’s neighbor. But in thus passing on he is really
returning to his, main subject, for the central portion of the
Epistle is chiefly taken up with one’s duty towards one’s neighbor.
And of this duty he again singles out for special notice the
necessity for putting a bridle on one’s tongue. {Jas 1:26
3:1-12} Some have supposed that he is addressing a new class of
readers; but the much gentler address, "brethren," as compared with
"ye adulteresses" (ver. 4), "ye sinners," "ye double-minded"
(ver. 8), does not at all compel us to suppose that. After a
paragraph of exceptional sternness, he returns to his usual manner
of
addressing his readers, {Jas 1:2,16,19 2:1,5,14 3:1,10,12
5:7,9,10,12,19} and with all the more fitness because the address
"brethren" is in itself an indirect reproof for unbrotherly
conduct. It implies what Moses expressed when he said, "Sirs, ye are
brethren; why do ye wrong one to another?". {Ac 7:26} "Speak not against one another, brethren." The context
shows what kind of adverse speaking is meant. It is not so much
abusive or calumnious language that is condemned, as the love of
finding fault. The censorious temper is utterly unchristian. It
means that we have been paying an amount of attention to the
conduct of others which would have been better bestowed upon our
own. It means also that we have been paying this attention, not
in order to help, but in order to criticise, and criticise
unfavourably. It shows, moreover, that we have a very inadequate
estimate of our own frailty and shortcomings. If we knew how
worthy of blame we ourselves are, we should be much less ready
to deal out blame to others. But over and above all this,
censoriousness is an invasion of the Divine prerogatives. It is
not merely a transgression of the royal law of love, but a
setting oneself above the law, as if it were a mistake, or did
not apply to oneself. It is a climbing up on to that
judgment-seat on which God alone has the right to sit, and a
publishing of judgments upon others which He alone has the right
to pronounce. This is the aspect of it on which St. James lays
most stress. "He that speaketh against a brother, or judgeth a brother,
speaketh against the law and judgeth the law." St. James is
probably not referring to Christ’s command in the Sermon on the
Mount. "Judge not, that ye be not judged. For with what
judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged". {Mt 7:1,2} It is a
law of far wider scope that is in his mind, the same as that of
which he has already spoken, "the perfect law, the law of
liberty"; "the {Jas 1:25} royal law, according to the
Scripture, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself". {Jas
2:8} No one who knows this law, and has at all grasped its
meaning and scope, can suppose that observance of it is
compatible with habitual criticism of the conduct of others, and
frequent utterance of un-favorable judgments respecting them. No
man, however willing he may be to have his conduct laid open to
criticism, is fond of being constantly subjected to it. Still
less can any one be fond of being made the object of slighting
and condemnatory remarks. Every man’s personal experience has
taught him that; and if he loves his neighbor as himself, he
will take care to inflict on him as little pain of this kind as
possible. If, with full knowledge of the royal law of charity,
and with full experience of the vexation which adverse criticism
causes, he still persists in framing and expressing unfriendly
opinions respecting other people, then he is setting himself up
as superior, not only to those whom he presumes to judge, but to
the law itself. He is, by his conduct, condemning the law of
love as a bad law, or at least as so defective that a superior
person like himself may without scruple disregard it. In judging
and condemning his brother he is judging and condemning the law;
and he who condemns a law assumes that he is in possession of
some higher principle by which he tests it and finds it wanting.
What is the higher principle by which the censorious person
justifies his contempt for the law of love? He has nothing to
show us but his own arrogance and self-confidence. He knows what
the duty of other persons is, and how signally they fall short
of it. To talk of "hoping all things, and enduring all
things," and of "taking not account of evil," may be all very
well theoretically of an ideal state of society; but in the very
far from ideal world in which we have to live it is necessary to
keep one’s eye open to the conduct of other people, and to keep
them up to the mark by letting them and their acquaintances know
what we think of them. It is no use mincing matters or being
mealy-mouthed; wherever abuses are found, or even suspected,
they must be denounced. And if other persons neglect their duty
in this particular, the censorious man is not going to share
such responsibility. This is the kind of reasoning by which
flagrant violations of the law of love are frequently justified.
And such reasoning, as St. James plainly shows, amounts really
to this, that those who employ it know better than the Divine
Lawgiver the principles by which human society ought to be
governed. He has clearly promulgated a law; and they ascend His
judgment-seat, and intimate that very serious exceptions and
modifications are necessary; indeed, that in some cases the law
must be entirely superseded. They, at any rate, are not bound by
it. This proneness to judge and condemn others is further proof of that
want of humility about which so much was said in the previous
section. Pride, the most subtle of sins, has very many forms, and
one
of them is the love of finding fault; that is, the love of assuming
an attitude of superiority, not only towards other persons, but
towards the law of charity and Him who is the Author of it. To a
truly humble man this is impossible. He is accustomed to contrast
the
outcome of his own life with the requirements of God’s law, and to
know how awful is the gulf which separates the one from the other.
He
knows too much against himself to take delight in censuring the
faults of others. Censoriousness is a sure sign that he who is
addicted to it is ignorant of the immensity of his own shortcomings.
No man who habitually considers his own transgressions will be eager
to be severe upon the transgressions of others, or to usurp
functions
which require full authority and perfect knowledge for their
equitable and adequate performance. Censoriousness brings yet another evil in its train. Indulgence in
the habit of prying into the acts and motives of others leaves us
little time and less liking for searching carefully into our own
acts
and motives. The two things act and react upon one another by a
natural law. The more seriously and frequently we examine ourselves,
the less prone we shall be to criticize others; and the more
pertinaciously we busy ourselves about the supposed shortcomings and
delinquencies of our neighbors, the less we are likely to
investigate
and realize our own grievous sins. All the more will this be the
case
if we are in the habit of giving utterance to the uncharitable
judgments which we love to frame. He who constantly expresses his
detestation of evil by denouncing the evil doings of his brethren is
not the man most likely to express his detestation of it by the
holiness of his own life; and the man whose whole life is a protest
against sin is not the man most given to protesting against sinners.
To be constantly speculating, to be frequently deciding, to be ready
to make known our decisions, as to whether this man is "awakened"
or not, whether he is "converted" or not, whether he is a
"Catholic" or not, whether he is a "sound Churchman" or not—what
is this but to climb up into the White Throne, and with human
ignorance and prejudice anticipate the judgments of Divine
Omniscience and Justice, as to who are on the right hand, and who on
the left? "One only is Lawgiver and Judge, even He who is able to save
and to destroy." There is one and only one Source of all law
and authority, and that Source is God Himself. Jesus Christ
affirmed the same doctrine when He consented to plead, as a
prisoner charged with many crimes, before the judgment-seat of
His own creature, Pontius Pilate. "Thou wouldest have no power
against Me, except it were given thee from above". {Joh
19:11} It was Christ’s last word to the Roman Procurator, a
declaration of the supremacy of God in the government of the
world, and a protest against the claim insinuated in "I have
power to release Thee, and I have power to crucify Thee," to be
possessed of an authority that was irresponsible. Jesus declared
that Pilate’s power over Himself was the result of a Divine
commission; for the possession and exercise of all authority are
the gift of God, and can have no other origin. And this sole
Fount of authority, this one only Lawgiver and Judge, has no
need of assessors. While He delegates some portions of His power
to human representatives, He requires no man. He allows no man,
to share his judgment-seat, or to cancel or modify His laws. It
is one of those cases in which the possession of power is proof
of the possession of right. "He who is able to save and to
destroy," who has the power to execute sentences respecting the
weal and woe of immortal souls, has the right to pronounce such
sentences. Man has no right to frame and utter such judgments,
because he has no power to put them into execution; and the
practice of uttering them is a perpetual usurpation of Divine
prerogatives. It is an approach to that sin which brought about
the fall of the angels. Is not the sin of a censorious temper in a very real sense
diabolical? It is Satan’s special delight to be "the accuser of the
brethren". {Re 12:10} His names, Satan ("adversary") and
devil (διαβολος =" malicious accuser"), bear witness to this
characteristic, which is brought prominently forward in the opening
chapters of the Book of Job. It is of the essence of censoriousness
that its activity is displayed with a sinister motive. The charges
are commonly uttered, not to the person who is blamed, but to
others,
who will thereby be prejudiced against him; or if they are made to
the man’s own face, it is with the object of inflicting pain, rather
than with the hope of thereby inducing him to amend. It is no
"speaking truth in" Eph 4:15, but reckless or malevolent
speaking evil, without much caring whether it be true or false. It
is
the poisoning of the wells out of which respect and affection for
our
fellow-men flow. Thus the presumption which grasps at functions that
belong to God alone leads to a fall and a course of action which is
indeed Satanical. "One only is the Lawgiver and the Judge, even He who is able
to save and to destroy." St. Peter and St. Paul teach the same
doctrine in those Epistles which (as has been already pointed
out) it is possible that the writer of this Epistle may have
seen. "Be subject to every ordiniance of man for the Lord’s
sake; whether it be to the king, as supreme (i.e., to the Roman
Emperor); or unto governors, as sent by him". {1Pe 2:13}
However much of human origination (κτισις ανθρωπινη) there
may be about civil government, yet its sanctions are Divine. And
St. Paul affirms that its real origin is Divine also: "There is
no power but of God; and the powers that be are ordained of
God". {Ro 13:1} The ultimate sanction of even Pilate’s
misused jurisdiction was "from above"; and it was to
inhabitants of Rome, appalled by the frantic atrocities of Nero,
that St. Paul declared that the authority of their Emperor
existed by "the ordinance of God." If to resist this delegated
authority be a serious matter, how much more to attempt to
anticipate or to contradict the judgments of Him from whom it
springs! "But who art thou, that judgest thy neighbor?" St. James
concludes this brief section against the sin of censoriousness
by a telling argumentum ad hominem. Granted that there are grave
evils in some of the brethren among whom and with whom you live;
granted that it is quite necessary that these evils should be
noticed and condemned; are you precisely the persons that are
best qualified to do it? Putting aside the question of
authority, what are your personal qualifications for the office
of a censor and a judge? Is there that blamelessness of life,
that gravity of behavior, that purity of motive, that severe
control of tongue, that freedom from contamination from the
world, that overflowing charity which marks the man of pure
religion? To such a man finding fault with his brethren is real
pain; and therefore to be fond of finding fault is strong
evidence that these necessary qualities are not possessed. Least
of all is such a one fond of disclosing to others the sins which
he has discovered in an erring brother. Indeed, there is
scarcely a better way of detecting our own "secret faults"
than that of noticing what blemishes we are most prone to
suspect and denounce in the lives of our neighbors. It is often
our own personal acquaintance with iniquity that makes us
suppose that others must be like ourselves. It is our own
meanness, dishonesty, pride, or impurity that we see reflected
on what is perhaps only the surface of a life whose secret
springs and motives lie in a sphere quite beyond our groveling
comprehension. Here, again, St. James is quite in harmony with
St. Paul, who asks the same question: "Who art thou that
judgest the servant of another? to his own lord he standeth or
falleth…But thou, why dost thou judge thy brother? or thou
again, why dost thou set at naught thy brother? For we shall all
stand before the judgment-seat of God?". {Ro 14:4,10} But are not St. James and St. Paul requiring of us what is
impossible? Is it not beyond our power to avoid forming judgments
about our brethren? Certainly this is beyond our power, and we are
not required to do anything so unreasonable as to attempt to avoid
such inevitable judgments. Whenever the conduct of others comes
under
our notice we necessarily form some kind of an opinion of it, and it
is out of these opinions and judgments, of which we form many in the
course of a day, that our own characters are to a large extent
slowly
built up; for the way in which we regard the conduct of others has a
great influence upon our own conduct. But it is not this necessary
judging that is condemned. What is condemned is the inquisitorial
examination of our neighbors’ views and actions, undertaken without
authority and without love. Such judging is sinister in its purpose,
and is disappointed if it can find nothing to blame. It is eager,
rather than unwilling, to think evil, its prejudices being against,
rather than in favor of, those whom it criticizes. To discover some
grievous form of wrong-doing is not a sorrow, but a delight. But what both St. James and St. Paul condemn, even more than the
habit of forming these unfavorable judgments about our neighbors, is
the giving effect to them. "Speak not one against another." "Why
dost thou set at naught thy brother?" This at any rate we all can
avoid. However difficult, or impossible, it may be to avoid forming
unfavorable opinions of other people, we can at any rate abstain
from
publishing such opinions to the world. The temper which delights in
communicating suspicions and criticisms is even more fatal than the
habit of forming and cherishing them; it is the difference between a
disease which is infectious, and one which is not. The bitterness
and
misery which are caused by the love of evil speaking is
incalculable.
It is one enormous item in that tragic sum of human suffering which
is entirely preventable. Much of human suffering is inevitable and
incurable; it may be compensated or consoled, but it can be neither
escaped nor remedied. There is much, however, that need never be
incurred at all, that is utterly wanton and gratuitous. And this
pathetic burden of utterly needless misery in great measure consists
of that which we heedlessly or maliciously inflict upon one another
by making known, with quite inadequate reason, our knowledge or
suspicion of the misconduct of other people. Experience seems to do
little towards curing us of this fault. Over and over again we have
discovered, after having communicated suspicions, that they are
baseless. Over and over again we have found out that to disclose
what
we know to the discredit of a neighbor does more harm than good. And
not infrequently we have ourselves had abundant reason to wish that
we had never spoken; for curses are not the only kind of evil
speaking that is wont to "come home to roost." And yet, each time
that the temptation occurs again, we persuade ourselves that it is
our duty to speak out, to put others on their guard, to denounce an
unquestionable abuse, and so forth. And forthwith we set the whisper
in motion, or we write a letter to the papers, and the supposed
delinquent is "shown up." An honest answer to the questions,
"Should I say this of him if he were present? Why do I not speak to
him about it, instead of to others? Am I sorry or glad to make this
known?" would at once make us pause, and perhaps abstain. It would
lead us to see that we are not undertaking a painful duty, but
needlessly indulging in unchristian censoriousness, and thereby
inflicting needless pain. It is not given to many of us to do a
great
deal towards making other persons holier; but it is within the power
of all of us to do a very great deal towards making others happier;
and one of the simplest methods of diminishing the miseries and
increasing the joys of society is to maintain a firm control over
our
tempers and our tongues, and to observe to the utmost St. James’s
pregnant rule, "Speak not one against another, brethren." |