As the great fountain of beneficence, we see God with
lavish hand pouring forth bounty and blessing upon His creatures and children,
ruling the universe with the divine principle of service. As a loving Father,
He seeks His children, ever ready to bless. We learn to love Him because He first loves us, as
forever our best Friend.
By this
principle Jesus rises to the throne of a true lordship,
becomes leader and prince in the realm of religion, his church supreme and
enduring amid the religions of the world. In darker days, worshiped as Deity,
far away and above human experience, the example of Jesus was lost from sight,
his mission deemed a sacrifice to pay the penalty of human guilt.
Walking in his
footsteps and cherishing his spirit, our lives become unselfish and helpful
with a loving service that renders the humblest Christ-like and God-like.
All legitimate
business is a mutual service, with both parties benefited.
As commerce runs its lines around the globe, civilization is tending to bind
into one brotherhood the whole human family, fulfilling the sentiment of the
fine Swiss motto, "Each for all, and all for each."
Everywhere and
forever genuine service is the supreme secret of true success.
Whatever best serves human need will win the glad homage of the human heart,
will go to the front, will conquer and command. This is true alike for persons
and peoples, nations and churches.
June days of every year are sending forth from
academies, seminaries, and colleges a great host of young men and women,
graduated to start upon their life career. As they enter upon the busy arena of
practical affairs, comes to each the sharp summons: Do some good work or get out of the way!
By this ruling life principle, each speedily becomes
weighed and measured, tested and judged. Does one ask supremely for some soft
place of easiest work and largest pay, to settle down in selfish indulgence,
ignoble comfort and content? He is speedily ignored and forgotten.
Whomever asks supremely for the greatest opportunity,
open field for best work for which their ability is adequate, nobly consecrates
themselves, unselfishly does their best, doors speedily open to them. Higher
opportunities seek them. People love and honor them. Living or dying, they go
in, on, and up to heights of usefulness and renown.
The law of service applies equally to institutions. It
is true of the Church.
Soon after the
death of Jesus and his apostles, the pure, simple, practical gospel they preached
became obscured by heathen traditions that still linger in popular theology.
The flowing stream has gathered sediment.
We seek to filter it, and get the pure, living water,
to restore and apply to life the original gospel preached by Jesus.
We seek to welcome and keep pace with advancing
intelligence. It offers no mystical or miraculous plan of salvation, but by practical righteousness would
turn the wilderness into a garden.
But the better day among us is dawning, the missionary
spirit awakening, and pushing its way into every open door of opportunity for
service. Primarily we come hither for worship, for inspiration and guidance,
for friendly fellowship, for comfort in sorrow and good cheer in daily living.
The church’s larger purpose is not only for
worship, but for work; not only to get good, but to do good.
While old dogmas and forms are passing away, the ideal church of the future we
hope here to realize.
The true church is not a concert or lecture hall of
luxurious surroundings, with an audience of passive hearers to be entertained
with sweet music and eloquent preaching.
It is a congregation, a coming together, a union of souls
joining hearts and hands for good work.
The true church is not an
aristocratic club, composed of a few select, superior saints, but, as in
Galilee, a company of the common people who heard Jesus gladly.
We here today
start afresh to work for and realize the ideal coming church.
Every blessing to our own souls we would send out as blessing to others in
life's sore struggle. Personal consecration crowned by zealous purpose to bless
the world would make ours the church of the helping hand. Only by practical service can we
hope to win.
Without this,
the Master does not need us, and the world has no place for us. The logic of events
issues the edict, "Do some good work, or better close the doors and
disband."
Only as
practically we serve this community can our church live or hope to win success.
(Adapted
from a 1910 sermon by Rev. Russ R. Shippen)
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