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The Christ of the Indian Road
By E. Stanley Jones
The Abingdon Press
New York Cincinnati
Copyright, 1925, by
E. STANLEY JONES
All rights reserved, including that of translation into foreign languages,
including the Scandinavian
Printed in the United States of America
First Edition Printed September, 1925
Reprinted October, November, and December, 1925
January, February, March, April, and June, 1926
CONTENTS
CBAPTEB PAGE
Preface 1
Preface to the Sixth Edition 3
Introduction 7
I. The Messenger and the Message 17
II. The Motive and End of Christian Missions 29
III. The Growing Moral and Spiritual Supremacy of Jesus 53
IV. Jesus Comes Through Irregular Channels— Mahatma Gandhi’s Part 67
V. Through the Regular Channels — Some Evangelistic Series 81
VI. The Great Hindrance 101
VII. The Question Hour 123
VIII. Jesus Through Experience 138
IX. What or Whom? 154
X. Christ and the Other Faiths 169
XI. The Concrete Christ 181
XII. The Indian Interpretation of Jesus. . 189
XIII. The Christ of the Indian Road 201
PREFACE
Perhaps a few words of caution may be help-
ful to the reader. To those familiar with India
the title of this volume may lead the reader to
expect the book to be what it is not — an Indian
interpretation of Christ. It is, rather, an attempt
to describe how Christ is becoming naturalized
upon the Indian Road. The Indian interpre-
tation of Christ must be left to later hands.
To those who have no first-hand familiarity
with conditions in India another word of caution
may be given. The author has tried to be scrupu-
lously careful not to overdraw the picture. He
has let non-Christians themselves largely tell the
story of the silent revolution in thought that is
taking place in India. But even so, the American
and English reader must be careful not always
to read into the statements of the non-Christians
the full content of his own thinking. In that
case unwarranted implications may be drawn
from them.
Christian missions have come to a crisis in
India. A new and challenging situation con-
fronts us. If we are to meet it, we must boldly
follow the Christ into what are, to us, untried
1
2
PREFACE
paths. In any case Christian missions are but
in their beginnings in India. With adjusted
attitude and spirit they will be needed in the
East for decades and generations to come.
My thanks are due to Dr. David G. Downey,
who, owing to my return to India, has graciously
undertaken to read the proofs and to see the book
through the press.
At the request of the publishers the spoken
style has been retained.
The Author.
Sitapur, U. P., India.
PREFACE TO THE SIXTH EDITION
Some of my readers have observed the absence
from this book of certain notes usual in mission-
ary textbooks. Where, they ask, are the child-
widows, the caste system with its compart-
mentalized and consequently paralyzed life, the
six million sadhus roaming through India find-
ing little and contributing less; is Hinduism
only a philosophical system — is there not a pop-
ular side with its 330,000,000 gods and goddesses,
its endless pilgrimages and rapacious priests at
each stage, its worship of demons and gods of
questionable character; has the purdah system
been abolished ; has the appalling illiteracy
amounting to ninety-three per cent been wiped
out? Have these dark lines hitherto so common
in the picture, faded out? Is it all sweetness
and light?
No, these things are still there. But I have
left them out of the picture for three reasons.
First. India is aggrieved, and I think rightly
so, that Christian missionaries in order to arouse
the West to missionary activity have too often
emphasized the dark side of the picture. What
they have said has been true, but the picture has
not been a true one. This overemphasis on the
one side has often created either pity or con-
4
PREFACE
tempt in the minds of the hearers. In modern
jargon a superiority complex has resulted. I
do not believe a superiority complex to be the
proper spring for missionary activity.
Eastern travelers in America, picking and
choosing their facts, can make out a very dark
picture of our civilization — the slums of our
cities, the lynchings, divorce statistics, crime
statistics unparalleled in other cities of the
world, and so on. They have, in fact, done so.
As Americans we have resented it as being an
untrue picture. Then as Christians we should
do unto others as we would that others should
do unto us.
Second. Indians themselves are now alive to
these evils and are combating them. The impact
of Christian ideals upon the situation has
created a conscience in regard to these things
and we can trust India to right them as she is,
in fact, now doing. The fact is that racial lines
are so drawn that India will probably deal more
drastically with her evils if she does it from
within than if we foreigners were always insist-
ing upon it. As a Turkish lawyer said to us
regarding the reforms in Turkey, “The things
which we have done in four years no outside
power or government could have made us do.
We are surprised at it ourselves.” The secret
was that they did it.
Third. I have tried to lay the foundations for
PREFACE
5
Christian missions deeper than upon particular
evils found in a particular race. Taken at their
very best, pagan men and systems in East or
West need Christ. I have said to India very
frankly: “I do not make a special drive upon
you because you are the neediest people of our
race, but because you are a member of our race.
I am convinced that the only kind of a world
worth having is a world patterned after the mind
and spirit of Jesus. I am therefore making a
drive upon the world as it is, in behalf of the
world as it ought to be, and as you are a part of
that world I come to you. But I would not be
here an hour if I did not know that ten others
were doing in the land from which I come what
I am trying to do here. We are all in the same
deep need. Christ, I believe, can supply that
need.”
Another word should be added in regard to
another seeming lack of emphasis. I have not
emphasized the mass movement among the low
castes because this book has been the story
growing out of my own sphere of work. My
work has been more connected with that mass
movement in mind described in these pages than
with the mass movement among the low castes.
In spite of its obvious weaknesses and dangers
I am deeply grateful for and rejoice in this lat-
ter mass movement in which there is a turning
of these dumb millions to Christ. In spite of
6
PREFACE
statements to the contrary, this movement is
going on with unabated force. Since my return
to India a friend showed a petition signed with
thumb impressions by eighteen thousand of
these people who desired to come into the Chris-
tian Church. But my emphasis has been upon
what I knew best growing out of experience.
A further word concerning the attitudes I
find on my return after an absence of nearly two
years from India. I find India even more open
and responsive than when I left. The mass
movement in mind goes on in silent but un-
abated vigor. As the physical atmosphere be-
comes saturated with moisture and heavy to the
point of precipitation so the spiritual atmos-
phere of India is becoming saturated with
Christ’s thoughts and ideals and is heavy to the
point of precipitation into Christian forms and
expression. As to when that will take place
depends upon how much Christlikeness we can
put into the situation. As the leading Arya
Samajist in India recently said to the writer,
“Everything depends upon * the Christian
Church.” It does.
The Authob.
INTRODUCTION
Clearing the Issues
When the early evangelists of the Good News
were sent out on their own, they returned
and told Jesus “what they had done and what
they had taught.” This evangelist must add a
third to what he has done and what he has
taught — what he has learned. It will not be
primarily an account of what has been done
through him, but what has been done to him.
Running through it all will be the perhaps un-
conscious testimony of how, while speaking to
India, I was led along to a simplification of my
task and message and faith — and I trust of my
life.
Recently at the close of an address a friend
remarked, “He has probably done some good to
India, but India has certainly done a great deal
for him.” India has. In my sharing with her
what has been a gift to me I found that I had less
than I thought I had — and more.
I thought my task was more complex than I
now see it to be; not less difficult but less com-
plex. When I first went to India I was trying
to hold a very long line — a line that stretched
clear from Genesis to Revelation, on to Western
7
8
INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
9
Civilization and to the Western Christian
Church. I found myself bobbing up and down
that line fighting behind Moses and David and
Jesus and Paul and Western Civilization and
the Christian Church. I was worried. There
was no well-defined issue. I found the battle
almost invariably being pitched at one of these
three places: the Old Testament, or Western Civ-
ilization, or the Christian Church. I had the ill-
defined but instinctive feeling that the heart of
the matter was being left out. Then I saw that I
could, and should, shorten my line, that I could
take my stand at Christ and before that non-
Christian world refuse to know anything save!
Jesus Christ and him crucified. The sheer storm
and stress of things had driven me to a place
that I could hold. Then I saw that there isj
where I should have been all the time. I saw !
that the gospel lies in the person of J esus, that
he himself is the Good News, that my one task
was to live and to present him. My task was!
simplified.
But it was not only simplified — it was vital-
ized. I found that when I was at the place of
Jesus I was every moment upon the vital. Here !
at this place all the questions in heaven and earth
were being settled. He Avas the one question
that settled all others.
I still believed in the Old Testament as being
the highest revelation of God given to the world
before Jesus’ coming; I would inwardly feed
upon it as Jesus did. But the issue was further
on. A Jain lawyer, a brilliant writer against
Christianity, arose in one of my meetings and
asked me a long list of questions regarding
things in the Old Testament. I replied, “My
brother, I think I can answer your questions,
but I do not feel called on to do so. I defined
Christianity as Christ. If you have any objec-
tions to make against him, I am ready to hear
them and answer them if I can.” He replied,
“Who gave you this authority to make this dis-
tinction? What church council gave you this
authority?” I replied that my own Master gave
it to me — that I was not following a church
council, but trying to follow him, and he himself
had said : “Ye have heard it said of old time, . . .
but I say unto you,” so I was simply following
his lead, for he made his own word final even in
Scripture. I Avas bringing the battle up from
that incomplete stage of Revelation to the final
— to Jesus. Revelation was progressive, cul-
minating in him. Why should I, then, pitch my
battle at an imperfect stage Avhen the perfect
was here in him? My lawyer friend saw with
dismay that a great many of his books written
against Christianity had gone into ashes by my
definition. They were beside the point. But the
lawyer was not to blame for missing the point.
Had we not often by our waitings and by our
10
INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
11
attitudes led him to believe that we did make the
issue there?
Our confusion was Peter’s confusion which
the Father’s voice and the vision of Jesus clari-
fied. On the Mount of Transfiguration, Moses,
representing the law, and Elijah the prophets,
talked with Jesus, the New Revelation. The Jew-
ish heart of Peter wanted to keep all three, and
put them on the same level — he wanted to build
three tabernacles for them. A voice from the
cloud spoke, “This is my beloved Son ; hear him”
— the law and the prophets are fulfilled in him ;
hear him. And when they lifted up their eyes
they saw no man save Jesus only. He filled their
horizon. He must fill ours.
Again, have we not often in the past led India
and the non-Christian world to think that our
type of civilization in the West is the issue?
Before the Great War was not Western greatness
often preached as a reason for the East becoming
Christian? This was a false trail and led us
into many embarrassments, calling for endless
apologies and explanations.
There is little to be wondered at that India
hesitates about our civilization — great and beau-
tiful on certain sides and weak and ugly on
others. While some of the contacts of the West
with the East have been in terms of beautiful
self-sacrifice and loving service, some of them
have been ugly and un-Christian. But that we
are not more Christian in the West is under-
standable when we remember in what manner
much of our Christianity was propagated in
Europe. Many of the evils which now afflict
the West came in with it. While it is true that
many of the first missionaries to the European
tribes were men of rare saintliness and self-sac-
rifice, nevertheless Christianity was not always
propagated by saintliness and self-sacrifice.
Take three illustrations that may show why
three great un-Christian things lie back in our
civilizations.
All Russia became Christian with Vladimir
the Emperor. He desired to become a Christian,
but hesitated, for, as being beneath his dignity,
he would not be baptized by the local clergy.
He wanted the Patriarch of Constantinople to
perform the ceremony — that would give the de-
sired dignity. But to ask him to come to do it
would be receiving a bounty at the hands of an-
other. He decided that the only thing consonant
with his honor would be to conquer Constan-
tinople and compel the Patriarch to baptize him.
He would then stand as dictator and not as
suppliant That was actually carried out. Con-
stantinople was captured and the Patriarch
forced to baptize him. Thus Russia became
Christian! Is it to be wondered at that dom-
ination still continues in the West in spite of
Christianity? It came in with it.
12
INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
13
Another. The Saxons, a warring tribe of
Europe, were practically compelled by Charle-
magne to become Christians. They consented on
one condition. That condition would only be
known at the time of their baptism. When these
warriors were put under the water as a symbol
that their old life was dead, they went under-
all except their right arms. They held them out,
lifted above their heads. These were their fight-
ing arms. They were never Christianized! Is
it to be wondered at that war continues in the
West in spite of Christianity? It came in
with it.
Another. The Mayflower that carried the Pil-
grim Fathers to religious liberty in America
went on her next trip for a load of slaves. The
good ship “Jesus” was in the slave trade for our
fathers. Is it to be wondered at that race and
color 'prejudice still exists in the West in spite
of Christianity? It came in with it.
The East feels that these things are still there.
But standing amid the shadows of Western civ-
ilization, India has seen a Figure who has
greatly attracted her. She has hesitated in re
gard to any allegiance to him, for India has
thought that if she took one she would have to
take both — Christ and Western civilization went
together. Now it is dawning upon the mind of
India that she can have one without the other—
Christ without Western civilization. That dawn-
ing revelation is of tremendous significance to
them — and to us.
“Do you mean to say,” said a Hindu lawyer
in one of my meetings about seven years ago,
“that you are not here to wipe out our civiliza-
tion and replace it with your own? Do you
mean that your message is Christ without any
implications that we must accept Western civ-
ilization? I have hated Christianity, but if
Christianity is Christ, I do not see how we In-
dians can hate it.” I could assure him that my
message was that and only that. But this was
seven years ago. That matter has now become
clarified, more or less. It has become clear that
we are not there to implant Western civilization.
They may take as little or as much from West-
ern civilization as they like — and there is much
that is tremendously worth while — but we do
not make it the issue. The fact is that if we do
not make it the issue, they will probably take
more from it than if we did.
But the swift and often accurate intuitions of
the Indian have gone further. He is making an
amazing and remarkable discovery, namely, that
Christianity and Jesus are not the same — that
they may have Jesus without the system that has
been built up around him in the West.
A prominent lecturer, who has just returned
from India, says that this discovery on the part
of India of the difference between Christianity
14
INTRODUCTION
and Jesus “can be called nothing less than a dis-
covery of the first magnitude.” Let it be said
that the suggestion as to the difference is not
new, it has been said before. But the thing that
is new is that a people before their acceptance of
Christianity have noted the distinction and seem
inclined to act upon it. It is a most significant
thing for India and the world that a great people
of amazing spiritual capacities is seeing, with
remarkable insight, that Christ is the center of
Christianity, that utter commitment to him and
catching his mind and spirit, and living his life
constitute a Christian. This realization has
remarkable potentialities for the future religious
history of the whole race.
Looking upon it in the large, I cannot help
wondering if there is not a Providence in the fact
that India has not accepted Christianity en
masse before this discovery was fixed in her
mind. If she had accepted Christianity without
this clarification, her Christianity would be but
a pale copy of ours and would have shared its
weaknesses. But with this discovery taking place
before acceptance it may mean that at this period
of our racial history the most potentially spirit-
ual race of the world may accept Christ as Chris-
tianity, may put that emphasis upon it, may
restore the lost radiance of the early days when
he was the center, and may give us a new burst
of spiritual power.
INTRODUCTION
15
For in all the history of Christianity whenever
there has been a new emphasis upon Jesus there
has been a fresh outburst of spiritual vitality
and virility. As Bossuet says, “Whenever
Christianity has struck out a new path in her
journey it has been because the personality of
Jesus has again become living, and a ray from
his being has once more illuminated the world.”
Out of a subject race came this gospel in the
beginning, and it may be that out of another sub-
ject race may come its clarification and revivifi-
cation. Some of us feel that the next great
spiritual impact upon the soul of the race is due
to come by way of India.
CHAPTER I
THE MESSENGER AND THE MESSAGE
I have been asked to tell in this book of my
evangelistic experiences in the East. I have
found that all real evangelistic work begins in
the evangelist. Around the world the problem
of Christian work is the problem of the Christian
worker. As family training cannot rise above
family character, so Christian service cannot
rise above the Christian servant.
I, therefore, cannot begin it in any better way
than to tell of a bit of personal experience — «
apart from which I question whether I would
have had the courage to undertake it. After over
eight years continuously in India in various
types of missionary work, ranging from pastor
of an English church, head of a publishing house,
missionary to the villages, district superinten-
dent of large areas, I felt strangely drawn to
work among the educated high castes, the intel-
ligentsia. As a mission we were doing very little
indeed among them. We had taken the line of
least resistance and nearly all our work was
among the low castes.
Along with my regular work I had started a
Bible class and study group at an Indian club
17
18 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
house where leading Hindus and Mohammedans
gathered. After tennis in the evenings we would
sit together until darkness fell and study the
New Testament and discuss spiritual matters.
One day one of the leading government officials,
a Hindu, remarked, “How long has this mission
been in this city?” I told him about fifty years.
He asked very pointedly: “Then why have you
gone only to the low castes? Why haven’t you
come to us?” I replied that I supposed it was
because we thought they did not want us. He
replied : “It is a mistake. We want you if you
will come in the right way.” We want you if
you will come in the right way ! Almost every
moment since then I have been in eager quest
for that right way. I have come to the con-
clusion that the right way was just to be a Chris-
tian with all the fearless implications of that
term.
But who was sufficient for these things? For
it meant standing down amid the currents of
thought and national movements sweeping over
India and interpreting Christ to the situation.
I was painfully conscious that I was not intel-
lectually prepared for it. I was the more pain-
fully conscious that I was not Christian enough
to do what the situation demanded. And most
depressing of all, I was physically broken.
The eight years of strain had brought on a
nervous exhaustion and brain fatigue so that
THE MESSENGER AND MESSAGE 19
there were several collapses in India before I
left for furlough. On board ship while speaking
in a Sunday morning service there was another
collapse. I took a year’s furlough in America.
On my way back to India I was holding evan-
gelistic meetings among the university students
of the Philippine Islands at Manila. Several
hundreds of these Roman Catholic students pro-
fessed conversion. But in the midst of the strain
of the meetings my old trouble came back. There
were several collapses. I went on to India with
a deepening cloud upon me. Here I was begin-
ning a new term of service in this trying climate
and beginning it— broken. I went straight to the
hills upon arrival and took a complete rest for
several months. I came down to the plains to
try it out and found that I was just as badly off
as ever. I went to the hills again. When I came
down the second time I saw that I could go no
further, I was at the end of my resources, my
health was shattered. Here I was facing this
call and task and yet utterly unprepared for it
in every possible way.
I saw that unless I got help from somewhere
I would have to give up my missionary career,
go back to America and go to work on a farm
to try to regain my health. It was one of my
darkest hours. At that time I was in a meeting
at Lucknow. While in prayer, not particularly
thinking about myself, a Voice seemed to say,
.
20 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
“Are you yourself ready for this work to which
I have called you?” I replied : “No, Lord, I am
done for. I have reached the end of my rope.”
The Voice replied, “If you will turn that over to
me and not worry about it, I will take care of it.”
I quickly answered, “Lord, I close the bargain
right here.” A great peace settled into my heart
and pervaded me. I knew it was done! Life-
abundant Life— had taken possession of me. I
was so lifted up that I scarcely touched the road
as I quietly walked home that night. Every inch
was holy ground. For days after that I hardly
knew I had a body. I went through the days,
working all day and far into the night, and came
down to bedtime wondering why in the world I
should ever go to bed at all, for there was not
the slightest trace of tiredness of any kind. I
seemed possessed by Life and Peace and Itest
by Christ himself.
The question came as to whether I should tell
this. I shrank from it, but felt I should — and
did. After that it was sink or swim before every-
body. But nine of the most strenuous years of
my life have gone by since then, and the old
trouble has never returned, and I have never had
such health. But it was more than a physical
Touch. I seemed to have tapped new Life for
body, mind, and spirit. Life was on a perma-
nently higher level. And I had done nothing
but take it !
THE MESSENGER AND MESSAGE 21
I suppose that this experience can be picked
to pieces psychologically and explained. It does
not matter. Life is bigger than processes and
overflows them. Christ to me had become Life.
Apart from this Touch I question if I would
have had the courage to answer the call to work
among these leaders of India’s thought and life.
It was too big and too exacting. But here I saw
my Resources. And they have not failed.
Now a word as to that right method of ap-
proach. There were two or three methods of
approach then current: (1) The old method of
attacking the weaknesses of other religions and
then trying to establish your own on the ruins
of the other. (2) The method of Doctor Far-
quhar, which was to show how Christianity ful-
fills the ancient faiths — a vast improvement on
the old method. (3) The method of starting
with a general subject of interest to all, and then
ending up with a Christian message and appeal.
I felt instinctively that there should be a bet-
ter approach than any of these three. I see now
how I was feeling after it. I have before me a
note written eight years ago laying down some
principles I thought we should follow. (1) Be
absolutely frank — there should be no camouflage
in hiding one’s meaning or purpose by noncom-
mittal subjects. The audience must know ex-
actly what it is coming to hear. (2) Announce
beforehand that there is to be no attack upon
22 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
anyone’s religion. If there is any attack in it.
it must be by the positive presentation of Christ.
He himself must be the attack. That would mean
that that kind of an attack may turn in two di-
rections — upon us as well as upon them. He
would judge both of us. This would tend to save
us from feelings and attitudes of superiority, so
ruinous to Christian work. (3) Allow them to
ask questions at the close— face everything and
dodge no difficulties. (4) Get the leading non
Christians of the city where the meetings are
held to become chairmen of our meetings. (5)
Christianity must be defined as Christ, not the
Old Testament, not Western civilization, not even
the system built around him in the West, but
Christ himself and to be a Christian is to follow
him. (6) Christ must be interpreted in terms
of Christian experience rather than through mere
argument.
That was written eight years ago. As I look
back I find that we have been led forward in
two most important steps since then: (1) I
have dropped out the term “Christianity” from
my announcements (it isn’t found in the Sciip-
tures, is it?), for it had connotations that con-
fused, and instead I have used the name of Christ
in subjects announced and in the address itself.
The other way I had to keep explaining that I
meant Christ by Christianity. (2) Christ must
be in an Indian setting. It must be the Christ
THE MESSENGER AND MESSAGE 23
of the Indian Road. I saw that no movement
would succeed in India that cuts across the grow-
ing national consciousness of India, that Chris-
tianity did seem to be cutting across that na-
tional consciousness, it was therefore not suc-
ceeding at least among the nationally conscious
classes. A leading Nationalist said to me, “I
am not afraid of Christianity as such, but I am
afraid of what is happening. Everyone who be-
comes a Christian is lost to our national cause.”
No wonder he suspected it. Christianity to suc-
ceed must stand, not with Caesar, nor depend
upon government backing and help, but must
stand with the people. It must work with the
national grain and not against it. Christ must
not seem a Western Partisan of White Rule, but
a Brother of Men. We would welcome to our
fellowship the modern equivalent of the Zealot,
the nationalist, even as our Master did.
As to the manner and spirit of the presenta-
tion of that message, we should consider it of
the highest importance that the penetrating
statement of Tagore should be kept in mind that
“when missionaries bring their truth to a strange
land, unless they bring it in the form of homage
it is not accepted and should not be. The man-
ner of offering it to you must not be at all dis-
cordant with your own national thought and
your self-respect.” I felt that we who come from
a foreign land should have the inward feeling
24 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
if not the outward signs, of being adopted sons I
of India, and we should offer our message as a
homage to our adopted land; respect should
characterize our every attitude; India should be!
home, her future our future, and we her serv- 1
ants for Jesus’ sake.
We have come, then, this far in our thinking:
that the Christ of the Indian Road, with all the
fullness of meaning that we can put into those
words, should be our message to India.
That this centering of everything in Jesus is
the right lead is remarkably corroborated by I
Doctor Gilkey, the Barrows lecturer, who has
just returned from a great hearing in India.
After consultation with a great many, of whom
I was honored to he one, he chose as the subject I
for the lectures, “The Personality of Jesus.” To
choose such a subject was in itself an adventure. !
A leading Christian college president in India i
said to Doctor Gilkey: “If you had chosen that
subject as recently as five years ago, or even!
three, you would have had no hearing. I am as
much amazed as you are at this burst of interest I
and these crowds.” The leading Hindu social I
thinker of India, commenting in his paper, re- 1
marked, “The Barrows lecturer could not have
chosen a subject of more vital interest in India!
to-day than the subject, ‘The Personality of
Jesus.’ ” It was good to find my own experience |
corroborated in the experience of another
THE MESSENGER AND MESSAGE 25
Hitherto it has been exceedingly difficult to
get non-Christians to come to a Christian ad-
dress of any kind. But in the most prom-
inent Hindu, a Mohammedan judge, and a Chris-
tian missionary signed the notices that went out
calling the meetings. To me at that time it was
a new experience to have them do it. An expe-
rienced missionary said to me after one of the
meetings, “If you had told me a week ago that
the leading men of this city would sit night after
night listening to the straightest gospel one could
present and ask for more, I would not have be-
lieved it, and yet they are doing it.” I have
found that they will listen when that gospel is
Christ and are drawn when he is lifted up.
It may be that we will yet discover that good
Christianity is good tactics, that the straight-
forward, open proclamation of Jesus is the best
method. Paul believed this, for he says, “I dis-
own those practices which very shame conceals
from view; I do not go at it craftily, I do not
falsify the word of God ; I state the truth openly
and so commend myself to every man’s con-
science in the sight of God. ... It is Christ
Jesus as Lord, not myself, that I proclaim” (2
Cor. 4. 2-5, Moffatt). He let Jesus commend
himself to every man’s conscience, for he knew
that Jesus appeals to the soul as light appeals
to the eye, as truth fits the conscience, as
beauty speaks to the aesthetic nature. For Christ
26 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
and the soul are made for one another, and when
they are brought together deep speaks to deep
and wounds answer wounds.
That this approach is probably sound is seen
by the statement of the non-Christian chairman
who rebuked a Christian speaker because he had
tried to come at it gradually : “We can speak of
God ourselves, we expect to hear from you about
Christ.”
We often quote Paul’s speech at Athens as a
model of missionary approach and yet it was one
of Paul’s biggest failures. He did not succeed
in founding a church there. Mackintosh
analyzes his failure thus : “The Christian propa-
ganda failed or prospered in proportion as the
fresh data for religion present in Jesus were
studiously concealed or openly proclaimed. Take
Paul’s address at Athens : says some fine things,
God’s spirituality, a God afar off — one in whom
we live and move, creation instead of chaos.
Providence instead of chance, men of one blood
instead of proud distinction between Greek and
Barbarian. But at no point is publicity given to
the distinctive Christian message. In this
studied omission of the cross is the secret of his
comparative failure at Athens and his subse-
quent change at Corinth. He writes penitently,
‘I determined to know nothing among you save
Jesus Christ and him crucified.’ The gospel hat
lost its savour when it was merged in Jewish
THE MESSENGER AND MESSAGE 27
commonplace” ( The Originality of the Christian
Message, Mackintosh).
But the Hindu insists, and rightly so, that it
must not be “an incrusted Christ,” to use the
words of the student representative before the
World’s Student Conference at Peking. It must
not be a Christ bound with the grave clothes of
long-buried doctrinal controversy, but a Christ
as fresh and living and as untrammeled as the
one that greeted Mary at the empty tomb on that
first Easter morning.
A Hindu puts the matter thus : “We have been
unwilling to receive Christ into our hearts, but
we alone are not responsible for this. Christian
missionaries have held out a Christ completely
covered by their Christianity. Up to now their
special effort has been to defeat our religious doc-
trines, and therefore we have been prepared to
fight in order to self-defense. Men cannot judge
when they are in a state of war. In the excite-
ment of that intoxication while intending to
strike the Christians we have struck Christ”
( The Goal of India, Holland).
But we too must acknowledge our part in the
mistake and see to it that in the future India has
a chance to respond to an untrammeled Christ.
A friend of mine was talking to a Brahman
gentleman when the Brahman turned to him and
said, “I don’t like the Christ of your creeds and
the Christ of your churches.” My friend quietly
28 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
replied, “Then how would you like the Christ of
the Indian Road?” The Brahman thought a j
moment, mentally picturing the Christ of the 3
Indian Road — he saw him dressed in Sadhus' I
garments, seated by the wayside with the crowds |
about him, healing blind men who felt their way I
to him, putting his hands upon the heads of poor, I
unclean lepers who fell at his feet, announcing I
the good tidings of the Kingdom to stricken j
folks, staggering up a lone hill with a broken I
heart and dying upon a wayside cross for men, I
but rising triumphantly and walking on that I
road again. He suddenly turned to the friend I
and earnestly said, “I could love and follow the |
Christ of the Indian Road.”
How differs this Christ of the Indian Road I
from the Christ of the Galilsean Road? Not ]
at all. I
Christ is becoming a familiar Figure upon the
Indian Road. He is becoming naturalized there.
Upon the road of India’s thinking you meet with
him again and again, on the highways of India’s
affection you feel his gracious Presence, on the
ways of her decisions and actions he is becoming
regal and authoritative. And the voice of India
is beginning to say with Whittier :
“The healing of the seamless dress
Is by our beds of pain;
We touch him in life’s throng and press,
And we are whole again.”
CHAPTER II
THE MOTIVE AND END OF CHRISTIAN
MISSIONS
There is a good deal of misunderstanding as
to why we are undertaking Christian missions
and as to what we are really trying to do. A very
severe criticism is beating upon this whole ques-
tion of missions from many angles and sources.
Personally I welcome it. If what we are doing
is real it will shine all the more. If it isn’t real,
the sooner we find it out the better.
We have been called international meddlers,
creed mongers to the East, feverish ecclesiastics
compassing land and sea to gain another prose-
lyte. From the other side comes the criticism
that we satisfy a racial superiority complex
when we go on helpful service to other nations ;
that we are the kindly side of imperialism — we
go ahead and touch the situation in terms of
schools and hospitals and human helpfulness,
then imperialism comes along and gathers up
the situation in the name of empire; or that
capitalism takes over and exploits the situation
as intrepid missionaries open it up. Again it
is said that it is a bit of spiritual impertinence
29
30 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
to come to a nation that can produce a Gandhi or
a Tagore. Finally we are told that the whole
missionary movement is a mistake, since, as non-
Christian investigators tell us, the last command
of Jesus to go into the world and preach the gos-
pel is an interpolation, hence the whole is i
founded upon a mistaken idea.
These are serious criticisms and must be met
fairly and squarely. If this whole question of
missions is to hold the affections of the church
in the future, we must be sure that we are about
a business that commends itself to the mind as
well, for what does not hold the mind will soon
not hold the heart. Besides, let it be noted that
if Christianity isn’t worth exporting it isn't
worth keeping. If we cannot share it, we cannot
keep it.
Some of the motives that were valid in the past
are not holding good to-day. In the days when I
volunteered to be a missionary the prevailing
thought was that here is a cataract of human
souls pouring over into perdition and that we
were to rescue as many as possible. Rightly or
wrongly, this idea is no longer prevailing as a
motive for foreign missions. Then at the close of
the Great War there was the feeling that democ-
racy was the panacea for the world’s ills, and that
America, being the embodiment of the democratic
ideal, should loose democracy, permeated with
Christianity, upon the world. A good deal of
THE MOTIVE AND END
31
the thought underlying the Methodist Centenary
and the Interchurch World Movement was per-
vaded with this idea. We now see that democ-
racy, fine as it is, is no panacea for the world’s
diseases, that paralyzing evils can flourish in a
democracy as flagrantly as in an autocracy. A
thoughtful Hindu, after reading Bryce’s Modern
Democracies, put it down and remarked to a
friend, “After all, democracy is only an ideal,
and that ideal will never be realized until the
kingdom of God comes on earth as it is in
heaven.” We must go deeper than democracy.
Then there was a time when we thought we
were there in the East to Westernize it in gen-
eral. I remember very vividly an address given
twenty years ago by a prominent Christian
editor, on the lines,
“Out of the darkness of night
The world rolls into light.
It is daybreak everywhere.”
The whole address was a recounting of electric
cars in Bombay, and American plows in Africa
and dress suits in Japan as a sign that it is
daybreak everywhere ! I am frank to say that I
would not turn over my hand to Westernize the
East, but I trust I would give my life to Chris-
tianize it. It cannot be too clearly said that they
are not synonymous. We have seen as by a lurid
flash during this last war that much of our civ-
32 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
ilization is still held under the sway of pag
ideals. Who was it that prayed, “Oh, to see t
world with the lid off”? Well, we have seen it
with the lid off, and the grim form of our pagai
past leered out of the depths at us. That pagan
past was controlling much of the submerged lift
of our outwardly brilliant civilization. To see
many of our modern cities with the lid off would
cure us of an easy optimism. No, paganism is
not a thing to which we can point on the map and
say, “It is here,” “It is there.” It is not a gen
graphical something, but a matter of the spirit,
and there may be vast areas of thought and pur
pose and spirit that are still pagan on both sides
of the world. Paganism may be either in East
or West.
As yet there is no such thing as a Christian na
tion. There are Christianized individuals and
groups, but the collective life of no people has
been founded upon the outlook of Jesus. We are
only partially Christianized. That does not
mean that we are not appreciative of and thank
ful for the Christianization that has taken place,
nor are we blind to the fact that our civilization
is probably the best that has been produced so
far in human history, but we are not measuring
ourselves by ourselves, but in the white light of
the person of Jesus.
We want the East to keep its own soul — only
thus can it be creative. We are not there to
THE MOTIVE AND END
33
plaster Western civilization upon the East, to
make it a pale copy of ourselves. We must go
deeper — infinitely deeper — than that.
Again, we are not there to give its people a
blocked-off, rigid, ecclesiastical and theological
system, saying to them, “Take that in its entirety
or nothing.” Jesus is the gospel — he himself is
the good news. Men went out in those early days
and preached Jesus and the resurrection — a
risen Jesus. But just as a stream takes on the
coloring of the soil over which it flows, so Chris-
tianity in its flowing through the soils of the dif-
ferent racial and national outlooks took on col-
oring from them. We have added a good deal to
the central message — Jesus. Some of it is worth
surviving, for it has come out of reality. Some
of it will not stand the shock of transplantation.
It is a shock to any organism to be transplanted.
I have seen a good many star preachers visit the
East and have their messages translated. The
result has often been disastrous. After the
rhetoric and fine periods had been eliminated as
untranslatable there was not enough basis of
ideas to go over to be reclothed in another lan-
guage. Some of our ecclesiastical systems built
upon a controversy lose meaning when they pass
over into a totally different atmosphere. But
Jesus is universal. He can stand the shock of
transplantation. He appeals to the universal
heart.
34 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
We will put our civilization and our ecclesias-
tical systems at the disposal of India to take as
much as may suit their purposes. But we do not
insist upon these. We will give them Christ,
and urge them to interpret him through their
own genius and life. Then the interpretation
•will be first-hand and vital.
If this viewpoint hurts our denominational
pride, it may help our Christianity.
If we are not in India to do these things just
for what purpose are we there? We believe there
are three great elemental needs of East and
West: an adequate goal for character; a free,
full life; God. We believe that Jesus in a su-
preme way gives these three things.
Each system must be judged by its output,
its fruit. “The outcome is the criterion.” What
are we trying to produce? The ends of the dif-
ferent systems of thought and faith may be
summed up as follows: Greece said, “Be mod-
erate — know thyself” ; Rome said, “Be strong-
order thyself” ; Confucianism says, “Be superior
— correct thyself”; Shintoism says, “Be loyal—
suppress thyself”; Buddhism says, “Be disil-
lusioned — annihilate thyself”; Hinduism says,
“Be separated — merge thyself”; Mohammedan-
ism says, “Be submissive — assert thyself”; Ju-
daism says, “Be holy — conform thyself” ; Modern
Materialism says, “Be industrious — enjoy thy-
self”; Modern Dilettanteism says, “Be broad—
THE MOTIVE AND END 35
cultivate thyself”; Christianity says, “Be Christ-
like— give thyself.”
If the end and motive of Christianity, and
therefore of Christian missions, is to produce
Christlike character, I have no apology for being
a Christian missionary, for I know nothing
higher for God or man than to be Christlike.
I know nothing higher for God. If God in
character is like Jesus, he is a good God and
trustable. The present-day doubt is not concern-
ing Christ, but concerning God. Men wonder if
there can be a good God back of things when they
see earthquakes wipe out the innocent and the
guilty alike and innocent little children suffer
from nameless diseases they did not bring on
themselves. But the distracted and doubting
mind turns toward Jesus with relief and says,
“If God is like that, he is all right.” As Chris-
tians we affirm that he is — that he is Christlike
in character, and we say it without qualification
and without the slightest stammering of the
tongue. We believe that “God is Jesus every-
where and J esus is God here — the human life
of God.
If God thinks in terms of little children as
Jesus did, cares for the leper, the outcaste, and
the blind, and if his heart is like that gentle
heart that broke upon the cross, then he can have
my heart without reservation and without ques-
tion.
36 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
If the finest spirits of the human race should
sit down and think out the kind of a God they
would like to see in the universe, his moral and
spiritual likeness would gradually form like unto
the Son of Man. The greatest news that has ever
been broken to the human race is the news that
God is like Christ. And the greatest news that
we can break to that non-Christian world is just
that— that the God whom you have dimly real-
ized, but about whose character you are uncer-
tain, is like Christ. I have watched the look ot
incredulity come into the faces of men in India
as that announcement is made. But incredulity
gives way to the thought that God ought to be |
like that, and that in turn to the thought that
he is. “I have thrown over everything in my
belief as to the future life,” said one of the most
brilliant Hindus, “except the continuity of hu-
man existence and the consistency of the charac-
ter of God.” The consistency of the character
of God had been fixed for him by Jesus, concern-
ing whom he said to me, “ Jesus is the highest
expression of God we have ever seen.” That
consistency of the character of God is fleeting
and intangible until Jesus fixes it forever in the
soul.
Further, I know nothing higher for man than
to be Christlike. The highest adjective descrip-
tive of character in any language is the adjective
“Christlike.” No higher compliment can be paid
THE MOTIVE AND END 37
to human nature than to be called Christlike.
When India, a non-Christian nation, wanted to
pay her highest compliment to her highest son,
she searched for the highest term she knew and
called Gandhi a Christlike man.
We thoughtfully throw down this ideal before
the philosophers of the world, the statesmen, the
moralists, the reformers, the religious thinkers,
and we say to them : “Brother men, this is what
we are trying to produce. We think it is worth
while to produce Christlike character. Do you
know anything finer and better? Do you know
of any nobler goal? Is there any pattern which
you have conceived that surpasses this in being
just what life ought to be? If so, show us, and
before God, we will leave this and seek the
other.” I believe that the lips of the world are
dumb and silent before the question of finding
anything better. In the realm of character Jesus
has the field. In the struggle and clash of ideals
for human life his is the fittest to survive. Men
need a goal for character and Jesus is that goal.
But men need more than a goal, they need a
free, full life, for life is crippled and dwarfed.
A Jewish lady in India said to the writer: “You
talk to these people of religion. What they need
is bread. Look how starved and pinched they
are. Why don’t you give them bread?” India
does need bread and needs it desperately. No one
can stand amid the appalling poverty of India
38 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
with the average per capita income less than
five cents a day, and where forty million people
have never known a full stomach and will never
know it from birth to death, and not feel the
desperate need of helping India to get bread-
more of it and quickly. Our industrial schools,
our experimental farms, our cooperative banks
and numerous other endeavors at economic up-
lift prove that we are keenly alive to the need of
helping India get bread.
But a great, unbiassed economist came to the
conclusion that “almost every economic evil in
India is rooted in religious and social custom."
Every time you try to lift India economically
you run into a custom that balks you. Therefore,
while I thank God for every endeavor to help
India to get more bread, I believe that the best
way to give India bread is to give her Christ.
For Christ makes life free.
Moreover, I want to see India politically free.
This does not mean that India must necessarily
he without the British Empire. I personally
hope that she will remain within it. But with
out self-determination India will not make her
real contribution to the world. Seeley was right
when he said that “moral deterioration is bound
to set in in any subject race.” While I believe
that England has given India as good govern-
ment as one nation is capable of giving to an-
other, nevertheless, I am convinced with the na-
THE MOTIVE AND END
39
tionalist that “good government is no substitute
for self-government.” I want to see India stand
upon her own feet. But the real shackles that
bind India are within. Loose her there and
freedom from without is that moment assured.
After Mahatma Gandhi’s release from prison
I asked him what, in his opinion, was the reason
for the collapse of his movement while he was
in jail. He threw the question back on me and
asked me what I thought was the cause. I re-
plied that I thought that since life finally came
to the level of the habitual thinking, the cause
lay back in the thinking of India. In the mind
of the Mohammedan there is gripping him in the
inmost places the thought of Kismet — everything
is predestined by the sovereign will of Allah.
When he gets under difficulties the tendency is
to tap his forehead and say: “What can I do?
My Kismet is bad.” It is more or less fatalistic.
On the other hand the Hindu has lying hack in
his mind the thought of Karma — that we are in
the grip of the results of the deeds of the previous
birth. When the Hindu runs against difficult
situations he usually says: “What can I do?
my Karma is bad.” It too is more or less fatal-
istic and consequently paralyzing. I suggested
to the Mahatma that under the spell of his per-
sonality India forgot both Kismet and Karma
and was creative, the national life was purified
and impossible things accomplished. But when
40 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
he was taken away the older and deeper ideas of
Kismet and Karma reasserted themselves, and I
under the difficulties that confronted her India
sat down. The movement collapsed. I sng- I
gested that, as he well knew and practiced in a
wonderful way, there was a third ideal of life, I
namely the cross. Now the cross never knows de- I
feat for it itself is Defeat, and you cannot defeat I
Defeat. You cannot break Brokenness. It starts I
with defeat and accepts that as a way of life. I
But in that very attitude it finds its victory. It J
never knows when it is defeated, for it turns |
every impediment into an instrument, and every J
difficulty into a door, every cross into a means of
redemption. So, I concluded, any people that
would put the cross at the center of its thought
and life would never know when it is defeated. It
would have a quenchless hope that Easter morn-
ing lies just behind every Calvary. It was there- I
fore my considered belief that India will never |
permanently rise until both Kismet and Karma |
are replaced in the mind of India by the cross. I
As Doctor Tagore puts it, “Things come up to j
a certain place in India and then stop.” The |
reason for this I feel to be in the above. I
Almost every economic, social, and national evil I
roots back in cramping custom. I believe, there- |
fore, that the best way to make India free eco-
nomically, socially, and politically is to give her |
Christ.
THE MOTIVE AND END
41
India has always had the genius for addition,
she has lacked elimination. She has absorbed
everything that has come along, but she has
eliminated little, hence her life is burdened and
crushed. Life depends almost as much upon
elimination as upon absorption. India needs a
dynamic power to help her cleanse, to let go.
The women of a lowly caste in Gujerat
Upon each succeeding birthday add to ankles
And to arms a ring of heavy brass until when age
Creeps on, weighted down through life with this
Accumulation of the years, they totter to their
tasks,
And then the burning ghat and the dreadful realms
of Yama.
Custom decrees it shall be so.
Thus I saw our aged India weighted down with
Accumulated custom and sapping superstition,
With scarce strength left to lift herself
To stand upright among the nations.
She raised her eyes, weary, but spiritual still,
Full upon me and seemed to say,
Adopted son of mine, if your love be true
Loose from me these weights and set me free,
For I would serve, but mind, my son, be gentle,
For by long association they seem a part of me.’
0, master of my heart, give to me the touch of
Gentle power that I may help to loose our Bharat,
Mindful every moment how thy nail-pierced Hand
Didst gently loose my shackled soul
From many a chain of lust and clinging selfishness
And bade my happy soul be free.
42 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
THE MOTIVE AND END
43
I believe that the dynamic that India needs is
Christ. Whom the Son makes free is free in-
deed. India needs a free, full life. And Christ
is Life.
But more, the deepest need of the human heart
East or West is God. The Indian people are the
most God-stirred people on earth. But the im-
pression I gather is that it is a stirring rather
than a possession.
The whole situation was summed up to me
in this scene : I was sitting in the cool of a won-
derful Indian evening with an old philosopher.
He was the finest type of India’s thinkers, deeply
read in his own philosophy and acquainted with
the philosophy of the West. The spell of the
quietness and calm of the evening w r as upon us
as we discussed the questions of God, life, and
destiny. In the midst of the conversation he
slowly stroked his beard and said, “I am that
Ultimate Reality, but I do not know' it yet.”
As I sat there meditating upon his words I
seemed to see before me India sitting and
through the voice of the old man affirming, as
she has affirmed through the centuries: “I am
that Ultimate Reality,” and adding, “but I do
not know it yet.”
A few days later I saw him again. He was
distressed and burdened. “My country is not
free. She is divided and paralyzed. I can't
seem to see any hope.” Such was the burden of
his plaint that day. His heart would respond
to no other note.
The next day I came again and he was radiant.
“Oh,” he said, “my heart has been so happy to-
day. All day long the prayer that gave
us has been ringing through my mind, ‘Thou art
our Father, teach us how to know thee as Father.’
Oh, that is it. I have peace to-day. That is
what my country needs.” But before he was
through he added with a little touch of sadness
in it, I thought : “If this will only stay. But it
doesn’t seem to stay.”
Do you get the picture : India affirms, “I am
that Ultimate Reality,” but adds, “I do not know
it yet,” and then finding no foothold in or power
from that Impersonal Essence termed Ultimate
Reality, sinks into despair concerning the real
world about her: “My country — is there any
hope?” Then there is the lighted-up moment
when she sees a glimpse of the Father and ex-
claims: “Oh, that is it. I have peace to-day.
This is what my country needs,” and then plain-
tively ends with, “It doesn’t seem to stay.”
Just what is lacking there? Certainly not fine
philosophic earnestness and spiritual receptivity.
But w'hen it comes down to the place of joyously
getting hold it eludes. Was there any need for
Christ there? Could he do anything in that situ-
ation? As India asks with Philip, “Show us the
Father and it sufficeth us,” would he not stand
45
44 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
and quietly say, “He that hath seen me hath seen I
the Father”? Would he not fix the fleeting vision I
of the Father and make it a permanent expert I
ence of life? And out of that possession of the j
Father would there not grow the dynamic that j
would help one not to despair of conditions 1
around one? Would not that lighted-up moment j
become a part of life itself? The innermost I
depths of my being cry out that this is so !
It is an actual fact of experience that when
you deepen the Christ-consciousness you deepen I
the God-consciousness. Jesus does not push out |
or rival God ; the more I know of him the more I
I know of the Father. I do not argue that, I
simply testify.
Now, if any people on earth should have found
God apart from Jesus Christ the Indian people
have earned that right. They have searched for
God as no other nation on earth has ever
searched for God. If sheer persistence of search
could have found God in joyous clearness, then
the Indian people have earned that right.
But it is precisely this lack of the joyous sense
of finding that strikes me as I go about India
“You are the boldest man I have ever seen,”
said a Hindu after an address. “You said you
had found God. I have never heard a man say
that before.” There was no credit to me — not
the slightest. I had looked into the face of
Jesus and lo, I saw the Father! But India has
THE MOTIVE AND END
not had that face to look into, and as a conse-
quence the vision of the Father is fleeting.
If this sounds dogmatic, then let India herself
speak. My friend Holland gives this illuminat-
ing incident : He had had a discussion with an
able Hindu judge and the judge had got the bet-
ter of the argument, so he said in a kindly way :
“Well, after all, there is not much difference be-
tween us. You Christians are converted when
you find God in Christ. We Hindus are con-
verted when we find God in ourselves.” “With
this difference,” replied Holland, “that in those
countries where Christ is known conversions
happen. I could take you to visit hundreds of
my Christian friends in this city, Indian and
English, and as you talked to them you would
gather just this impression of light and dis-
covery and inspiration of which we have been
speaking, whereas I do not know of a single
Hindu student that gives me the impression he
has found.” The judge’s face fell, his tone
dropped and he said to Holland, quietly: “You
are perfectly right. I know more Hindus than
you, Aryas, Brahmos, Theosophists and Or-
thodox; I do not know one who has found” ( The
Goal of India, Holland, p. 209).
With the exception of one man who said he
was a jiwan-mukta, that is, one who has found
living salvation, a man whom the audience
smiled upon and did not take seriously, I have
46 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
found India God-stirred, but still seeking. There I
is not yet that sense of finding.
But Jesus actually does give men just that. I
More, he gives a goal for character and a free, I
full life. Is there anyone else who can give men J
those three things? Is there anyone else actually
doing it?
I asked an earnest Hindu one day what he ;
thought of Christ. He thoughtfully answered:
“There is no one else who is seriously bidding
for the heart of the world except Jesus Christ. I
There is no one else on the field.”
Sweep the horizon — is there anyone else?
Yes, Mrs. Besant announces a coming World I
Teacher. She puts forth Krishnamurti, a Brah-
man youth who is to be the incarnation of
Christ. (Even here she naively acknowledges the
supremacy of Jesus, for it is to be an incarnation
of Christ . ) He has given forth his first install-
ment of world teaching and has received divine
honors in India and in the West. I had a long
interview with him, found him of average intel-
ligence, of rather lovable disposition, of mediocre
spiritual intuitions, and heard him swear in
good, round English ! I came away feeling that
if he is all we, as a race, have to look to in order
to get out of the muddle we are in, then God pity
us.
There is literally no one else on the field and
nothing else on the horizon. It is Christ or—
THE MOTIVE AND END
47
nothing. Matthew Arnold says: “Try all the
ways to peace and welfare you can think of and
you will find that there is no way that brings you
to it except the way of Jesus. But this way does
bring you to it.”
What, then, have we in Christianity that is
not found in any of the other systems? I was
asked by an ardent Arya Samajist that very
question. “What have you in your religion that
we haven’t in ours?” He expected me to argue
with him the question concerning what moral
ideas and philosophic principles we had that they
did not have. I answered, “Shall I tell you in
a word? You have no Christ Just there is
l lie great lack of the non-Christian faiths. Fine
things in their culture and thought — we admit
it and thank God in real sincerity for them — but
i he real lack, the lack for which nothing else can
atone, is just — Christ. They have no Christ. And
lacking him, life lacks its supreme necessity.
Sadhu Sunder Singh, the great Christian mys-
tic, clarifies this in his conversation with a Euro-
pean professor of comparative religions in a
Hindu college. The professor was an agnostic
as far as Christianity was concerned and inter-
viewed the Sadhu with the evident intention of
showing him his mistake in renouncing another
faith for Christ. He asked, “What have you
found in Christianity that you did not have in
your old religion?”
48 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
The Sadhu answered, “I have Christ.”
“Yes, I know,” the professor replied, a little
impatiently, for he was hoping for a philosoph
ieal argument, “but what particular principle
or doctrine have you found that you did not have
before?”
The Sadhu replied, “The particular thing I
have found is Christ.”
Try as the professor might, he could not budge
him from that position. He went away discom-
fited — and thoughtful. The Sadhu was right.
The non-Christian faiths have fine things in
them, but they lack — Christ.
But someone objects: “Aren’t they getting
along pretty well without Christ?” My answer
is that I know of no one, East or West, who is
getting along pretty well without Christ. Christ
being Life is a necessity to life.
A Brahman came to me confidentially one day
and said, “Your addresses have been very much
enjoyed, but there is one thing I would suggest.
If you will preach Christ as a way, all right, but
say that there may be other ways as well. If
you do this, India will be at your feet.” I re
plied, thanking my brother for his concern, but
said : “I am not looking for popularity, and it is
not a question what I should say. It is a ques-
tion of what are the facts. They have the final
word.” I should be glad, more than glad, if I
could say that there are others who are saving
THE MOTIVE AND END
49
men, but I know of only One to whom I dare
actually apply the term “Saviour.” But I do
dare apply it to Christ unreservedly and without
qualification. A Hindu said to me one day, “You
are such a broad-minded Christian.” I replied :
‘ My brother, I am the narrowest man you have
come across. I am broad on almost anything
else, but on the one supreme necessity for human
nature I am absolutely narrowed by the facts to
one — Jesus.” It is precisely because we believe
in the absoluteness of Jesus that we can afford
to take the more generous view of the non-Chris-
tian systems and situations. But the facts have
driven us to Jesus as the supreme necessity for
all life everywhere.
We disclaim, then, that this is international
meddling. There is no more meddling in this
than when Copernicus discovered a center
around which our planet revolved and shared his
discovery. It caused upset and heart-burnings
to many who thought the geocentric view was
sacrosanct. We now see that the disorderliness
caused by this announcement was nothing com-
pared to the vast and incurable disorderliness
which was everywhere when men were thinking
away from the center. We announce that we be-
lieve that we have discovered the center of this
moral and spiritual universe — the person of
Jesus. That causes confusion and upset. But
when men once find that center they find that an
50 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
orderly spiritual universe comes out of chaos.
But we do not impose it upon men, we share it
with them.
We also repudiate the idea of gaining mere
members ; we want character, and if there is any
feverishness in our effort, it is that we are fever-
ishly trying to set our own house in order. We
need it as much as anyone else.
As for the satisfying a racial superiority com-
plex and being the forerunners of imperialism
and capitalism, let us say that Jesus is the one
Figure that stands blocking every road of polit-
ical and economic exploitation in the East. He
is troubling exploiters everywhere. He has got
hold of them. They cannot grab and exploit with
quite so easy a conscience as they once did. More-
over, amid the racial clashes and bitterness there
stands one who is the Son of man. Racialism
withers under his real touch. He is the Friend
of Men.
When we are told that India produces her
great men, Gandhi and Tagore, and that it is
therefore impertinent to go to the East, we reply
thanking God for the greatness of these sons of
India; we are proud of them and grateful for
them, and grateful also for the part that Jesus
is having in molding them into greatness.
As for the “Great Commission” being an in-
terpolation, we reply that this has not yet been
proved; but even if it were, we would still be
THE MOTIVE AND END
51
committed to this whole enterprise of sharing
him with the world, for it is not based on a com-
mand, but upon the very nature of the gospel
i t self, upon him. Last command or no last com-
mand, we must share him, for the necessities of
human life command us to give a Saviour such
as Jesus. Out of the deep necessities comes the
imperious voice, “Go into all the world and
preach the gospel.” If we hold our peace, the
stones— the hard, bare facts of life — will cry out.
Further. He and the facts not only command
us to go, but he, standing in the East, beckons
us to come. He is there — deeply there, before
us. We not only take him; we go to him. Of
this vivid and tragic truth, he gives us a vision
in that glimpse of the last day: “I was an
hungered, and ye gave me meat; I was thirsty,
and ye gave me drink ; I was a stranger, and ye
took me in: naked, and ye clothed me: I was
sick, and ye visited me : I was in prison, and ye
came unto me.” The righteous cry, “Lord, when
saw we thee an hungered, and fed thee? or
thirsty, and gave thee drink?” The amazing
words fall from his lips : “Inasmuch as ye have
done it unto one of the least of these . . . ye have
done it unto me.” Whom do we feed when we
feed the hungry of India? That pinched man
before me? Yes and more — our own Christ is
hungry in that man. And when I put the chalice
to the parched lips of India— to whose lips do I
52 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
put it? That man athirst before me? Yea, more,
for my own Christ is again athirst in him. I do
not have to take Christ to India — he is there in
the perpetual incarnation of human need. When
we do it to them we do it to him. “This whole
question is vascular : cut it anywhere and it will
bleed.”
If Christ is in this, I do not see how we can be
out of it.
To sum up: We are there because Christlike
character is the highest that we know, because
he gives men a free, full life, and, most important
of all, he gives them God. And we do not know
of anyone else who does do these things except
Christ. But he does.
And to the heart that has learned to love him
it is irresistible to think of him hungry, thirsty,
sick, in prison, naked and a stranger in the
throbbing needs of our brother men.
We take them Christ — we go to him. He is
the motive and the end.
CHAPTER III
THE GROWING MORAL AND SPIRITUAL
SUPREMACY OF JESUS
Many who have looked for the Kingdom to
come only by observation so that they could say
“Lo, here,” and “Lo, there,” have been disap-
pointed to find it come so slowly, but the more
discerning have suddenly awakened to find that
the Kingdom was in the midst of them and all
around them. Christianity is actually breaking
out beyond the borders of the Christian Church
and is being seen in most unexpected places. If
those who have not the spirit of Jesus are none
of his, no matter what outward symbols they pos-
sess, then conversely those who have the spirit
of Jesus are his, no matter what outward sym-
bols they may lack. In a spiritual movement like
that of Jesus it is difficult and impossible to mark
its frontiers. Statistics and classifications lose
their meaning and are impotent to tell who are
in and who are not. Jesus told us it would be
so.
He said that the Kingdom would come in two
great ways : It would be like a grain of mustard
seed, a tiny thing that grows into a great tree:
53
54 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
this speaks of the outward growth of Christianity
— men coming into the organized expression of
the Kingdom, namely, the Christian Church.
Again, it would he like leaven which would
silently permeate the whole : this tells of the
silent permeation of the minds and hearts of men
by Christian truth and thought until, from with-
in, but scarcely knowing what is happening, the
spirit and outlook of men would be silently leav-
ened by the spirit of Jesus — they would be Chris-
tianized from within.
We see these two things taking place with the
impact of Christ upon the soul of the East.
We need not stop long at the first, though the
growth by that method has been very consider-
able. In the last ten years the population has
increased by 1.2 per cent, but the growth of the
Christian Church has been 22.6 per cent. We
have added about 100,000 souls to the Christian
Church every year for the last ten years— about
a million in ten years. These have been largely
from the outcaste sections of society. There are
60,000,000 who are untouchables. These untouch-
ables, who have lived on the edges of life, degraded
and despised, are being stirred with new virile
thinking. Hitherto they have been oppressed
and have opened not their mouths. But not so
now. They are catching from the high-caste
leaders of the Nationalist Movement (beautiful
irony ! ) the possibilities of passive resistance and
THE SUPREMACY OF JESUS
55
are turning it against the Brahmans themselves.
Last March a year ago began a struggle in South
India that has had nation-wide consequences.
Some of these untouchables appeared on a for-
bidden road in Travancore, the most caste-ridden
section of India. They were promptly sent off to
jail. The next day there was another group there
ready to be sent off. That struggle has been go-
ing on for over a year. They go to jail, serve
their sentence, and then quietly come back and
sit upon the forbidden road — and India has an
amazing power to sit ! The sight of these silent,
patient, passive resisters has shaken the caste
system to its foundation, and has so stirred the
high castes that some of the more sympathetic
spirits among them formed a procession a thou-
sand strong, walked on foot one hundred fifty
miles, holding meetings to arouse sympathy as
they went, and presented to her Highness the
ruler of Travancore a petition asking that all the
■mads be thrown open to the untouchables. The
latest word says that these low castes had won
out and the roads had been thrown open. Pa-
tient suffering had won !
These outcastes are on the move. They are
debating far into the night in their caste coun-
cils as to where they will find their spiritual
destiny and destination. They are talking over
the relative merits of Hinduism, Mohammed-
anism, Buddhism (for Buddhism is being brought
56 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
back into India from which it had been driven,
in order, I presume, to provide a figure that is
Indian to set over against the personality oil
Jesus) and Christianity. In the next ten or
twenty years the spiritual destiny of a vast sec-
tion of human kind will probably be settled.
This quest of the outcaste is one of the most
remarkable spiritual phenomena at the present
time, for sixty million are on the move!
But there is a more remarkable movement at
the other end of society among the higher castes.
The movement among the low’ castes is called the
Mass Movement; this other movement I would
call a mass movement in mind toward Christ as
a Person. Do not misunderstand me, they are
not knocking at the doors for baptism, nor are
they enamored of our ecclesiastical systems or
our civilization, but there is an amazing turning
in thought toward Christ. Now’, “whatever gets
your attention finally gets you,” and I do not
think I overstate or exaggerate when I say that
Jesus is getting the attention of the finest minds
and spirits in India — and he is getting them.
If one asks for the evidence of this, I would
find it difficult to put my finger upon it, for some
of it is so subtle that one has to stand down
amid these sw’irling currents of India’s life and
feel a subtle change from bitterness and hate to
understanding sympathy and inw’ard love and
allegiance. I can only throw’ open little windows
THE SUPREMACY OF JESUS
57
through things that may seem insignificant in
themselves, but which may let one see into a
larger situation.
A few r years ago I was talking to a devoted
English missionary who was confused and dis-
couraged about the national situation. She w r on-
dered of what use it was to try any more to do
Christian work in India since Britain had lost
moral hold upon India. There was such bitter-
ness everywhere, and she could feel it. We
talked about the inner meaning of things and I
told her of w’hat I had seen. I shall never forget
the look on her face as she said: “I see the
light. Christ is bigger than my empire, and his
kingdom may come either through it or in spite of
it. I see light bursting through these clouds
that have hung over me.” A little window had
let her see a great light.
Nine years ago in the National Congress at
Poona a Hindu gentleman in addressing the Con-
gress used the name of Christ. There was such
an uproar and confusion that he had to sit down
unable to finish his speech. That name of Christ
stood for all that India hated, for he was identi-
fied with empire and the foreign rulers. He had
not yet become naturalized upon the Indian
Road. But in the meantime a disassociation of
Jesus from the West had been made, so that nine
years later when that same National Congress
met, the Hindu president in giving his presiden-
58 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
tial address quoted great passages from the Net |
Testament, took out bodily the account of the
crucifixion of Jesus from John’s Gospel: there j
were some seventy references to Christ in that
Congress. Mrs. Naidu, India’s able poetess and
Nationalist, sent a poem to the Congress to be J
read, entitled, “By Love Serve One Another”-
a Scripture quotation.
Through the literature and addresses of India's
leaders phrases and sentences from the New Tes-
tament run almost like a refrain.
In one of the Provincial Congress addresses
Dr. , the president, in the course of his
address spoke of Mr. C. F. Andrews as “that real
Christian,” and added, “Would that there were
more real Christians !” Incidentally, let it be
said that the Hindus often refer to “C. F. A*
as standing for “Christ’s Faithful Apostle”-a
beautiful tribute, and a true one.
In a recent Congress meeting Mohammed Ali.
the leader of the Mussulmans of India, in his
presidential address spoke of Mahatma Gandhi
as “that Christlike man.” Again and again Hin-
dus rise in my meetings and ask if I do not think
that Mahatma Gandhi is a Christlike man. 1
usually reply that I cordially differ with him in a
good many things, nevertheless do think in some
things he is a very Christlike man indeed. I
have had them reply that they would go much
further : they believed that he was the incam-
THE SUPREMACY OF JESUS 59
tion of Christ. A Hindu gave utterance to the
game thought when listening to a preacher
preaching in the bazaar in North India on the
second coming of Christ : “Why do you preach
on the second coming of Christ? He has already
come— he is here — Gandhi.” Blasphemy? That
is not the point — the point is that Gandhi is their
ideal, and they are identifying that ideal with
Jesus. It is the gripping of the mind by the Jesus
ideal.
Even the Arya Samaj, which is our bitterest
opponent and whose leader said in a recent speech,
“You may forget your name, you may forget your
mother, but do not forget that the missionaries
are the enemies of your country and your civi-
lization” — nevertheless, in a recent editorial in
their principal organ, the Vedic Magazine, they
call Gandhi “This modern Christ.” Against the
missionary, but unconsciously for his message —
Christ!
In an article written by a Hindu in an extreme
nationalist paper there occurred this sentence:
“Calvary, where another great of the East has
suffered martyrdom for the sins of the world, has
to-day its counterpart in Yerravada, where our
Mahatmaji suffers martyrdom for the thraldom
of the world. Just as Calvary stands for the
world sinners, so Yerravada stands for the
world’s down-trodden.” Yerravada is the prison
where Gandhi was imprisoned. It is not a ques-
60 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
THE SUPREMACY OF JESUS
61
tion whether these are real parallels or not, the
significant thing is that the Indian people are
seeing them.
I was talking to two of the followers of Mahat-
ma Ghandi one day when I said, “My brothers,
we must have unity between the Hindu and
Mohammedan if our country is ever to be strong
and free, but your Hindu-Moliammedan unity is
based upon a wrong foundation. You have based
it upon a religious pact, you should base it upon
the unchanging fact that you are all Indians.
Upon this basis you should come together. This
other will not stand.” My Hindu friend replied,
“But, Mr. Jones, isn’t it our Christian duty to
help our Mohammedan brethren in their difficul-
ties?” A Hindu talking about his Christian duty
toward his Mohammedan brethren !
In the Ashram 1 at the atmosphere is one
of beautiful courtesy and friendliness. A Par-
see gentleman came into my little room there and
placed some flowers on my table. It was a beau-
tiful bit of thoughtfulness. I said, “My brother,
that was very gracious of you. I thank you from
my heart for that.” “Oh, no,” he replied, “that
was my Christian duty,” and then, catching him-
self, he quickly added, “Yes, and also my Parsee
duty.” But I wondered if the last portion was
not a tribute he felt he must pay to past loyalties,
rather like a waving salutation to a dying ideal
in bis mind? The thing that was gripping him —
really gripping him — was that to be kindly and
gracious was one’s Christian duty while he was
still a Parsee — outwardly.
Two of the leaders of India, one in the political
and one in the social realm, were talking to a
friend of mine when the social leader remarked,
-Well, Dr. , it is very difficult for us to
say where our Hinduism ends and where our
Christianity begins!” Turning to the political
leader he said, “Isn’t that so, ?” He pon-
dered a moment and then thoughtfully replied,
•Yes, that is so.” Our Hinduism ends — our
Christianity begins !
At the close of one of my addresses on “Jesus
and the Problems of the Day” the Hindu chair-
man, a prominent social thinker, in his chair-
man’s remarks said, “I suppose that the epitome
of what the speaker has said is that the solution
of the problems of the day depends upon the ap-
plication of the mind and spirit of Jesus to those
problems. Now, I am not a Christian, and you
will be surprised to hear me say that I entirely
a-ree with these conclusions.” He went almost
immediately from our meeting to be the President
of the All-India Social Conference, which deals’
with the pressing social problems of India’s life,
and he went there with this underlying thought
as to the solution of those problems. Another
Hindu chairman put the matter in this way, “The
X A place of religious retreat.
62 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
problems of the day arise through the lack of the
spirit of Jesus Christ in the affairs of men.”
At question time in the sacred city of ,
the editor of the local non-cooperation paper, a
brilliant Hindu, a graduate of Oxford University,
sent in a long list of keen questions which I
was doing my best to answer, when two members
of the secret police, the spy-system of India, got
up and went behind a pillar and were whispering
together and were disturbing him in his listen
ing. These men were no friends of the editor,
for they had probably shadowed him quite a bit.
To this they were adding this present incon-
venience. He twisted in his seat quite a bit and
was very ill at ease, and then finally, turning to
a friend of mine alongside of him, said, “Mr.
J , I feel most un-Christian toward those
men !” Here was a Hindu talking about his un-
Christian feelings toward the representatives of
a Christian government! Mixed up, but illu-
minating.
In view of the above incidents, and many more
like them, I was not surprised to have a Hindu
college principal say to me one day, “There is
growing up in India a Christ-cult, entirely apart
from the Christian Church, almost under its
opposition. The leading ideas of that cult are
love, service and self-sacrifice.” He did not meau
that there was any gathering of this scattered
thought into an organization called the Christ-
THE SUPREMACY OF JESUS
63
cult. Things are not propagated in India by
blocked-off organization as we carry them on in
tb(> West. The method of propagation has been
by ideas catching from life to life and thus
silently leavening the whole. And this permea-
tion that is taking place is running true to the
genius of the past, for in the past it was thus
that the ideas of the great reformers like Rama-
nuja and Shankara became dominant This
Christ-cult has become more like an atmosphere
than an organization.
But the tremendous question presses itself
upon us: Will the present Christian Church be
big enough, responsive enough, Christlike enough
to be the medium and organ through which Christ
will come to India? For, mind you, Christianity
is breaking out beyond the borders of the Chris-
tian Church. Will the Christian Church be
Christlike enough to be the moral and spiritual
center of this overflowing Christianity? Or will
many of the finest spirits and minds of India
accept Christ as Lord and Master of their lives,
but live their Christian lives apart from the Chris-
tian Church? I believe in the Christian Church
with all my heart, and believe that in it has cen-
tered the finest moral and spiritual life of the
world, but here is a new and amazing challenge,
for this outside Christianity is going straight to
the heart of things and saying that to be a Chris-
tian is to be Christlike. This means nothing less
64 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
THE SUPREMACY OF JESUS
65
than that ancient rituals and orders, and power |
at court and correctly stated doctrine avail little |
if Christlikeness is not the outstanding charac-
teristic of the life of the people of the churches.
If Christianity centers in the Christian Church
in the future, it will be because that church is the
center of the Christ-spirit. This constitutes a
challenge and a call.
This whole chapter might be summed up in the
statement of the Brahman who put his hand on
my shoulder (and I am untouchable!) and said,
“Sir, you perhaps become discouraged at the few
who become Christians from the high castes.
You need not be discouraged. You do not know I
how far your gospel has gone. Now, look at me.
I am a Brahman, but I would call myself a
Christian Brahman, for I am trying to live my
life upon the principles and spirit of Jesus,
though I may never come out and be an open
follower of Jesus Christ, but I am following
him. Sir, don’t be discouraged, you do not know '
how far your gospel has gone.”
I was not discouraged, my heart was singing
to the music of things, for I saw my risen Lord
entering behind closed doors once again and
showing his hands and his side and speaking
peace to disciples I had not known.
As the physical atmosphere becomes heavy with
moisture, so heavy that it is precipitated into
rain, so the spiritual atmosphere of India is
becoming heavy with interest in Jesus Christ
and is on the verge of and is actually being pre-
cipitated into Christian forms and Christian
expression. I pray that the Christian Church
may be the Christlike medium through which
this spiritual precipitation may express itself.
But one word of caution before closing this
chapter. Do not misunderstand me. I am not
satisfied with an interest in Jesus — I cannot
be satisfied this side of allegiance — utter and
absolute. But if you give me an inch in the soul
of India, I will take it and appeal for that next
inch until the whole soul of this great people
is laid at the feet of the Son of God.
Moreover, our final call to the w r orld is not
to love Christ, but to have faith in him. But
since a nation is gradually won we will thank
God for any stage on the w r ay to the goal we can
find. That final goal is faith in Christ.
But He who was grateful for the cup of cold
water given in his name, wdio accepted the super-
stitious touch of a woman upon the border of
Lis garment and let healing flow through that
imperfect touch, w r ho rejoiced in the faith of an
outsider and said that he had not found so great
faith in Israel, and gave him his heart’s desire,
who would not break the bruised reed or quench
the smoking flax, who saw r in a grateful woman’s
anointing of his feet a meaning deeper than she
saw, declaring it to have significance for his
66 TEE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
burial, who caught and responded to the cry of
a penitent thief for remembrance, certainly will
not despise this day of small but prophetic begin-
nings and will bring these “other sheep who are
not of this fold, that there may be one flock
[R. V.] and one shepherd.”
CHAPTER IV
JESUS COMES THROUGH IRREGULAR
CHANNELS— MAHATMA GANDHI’S
PART
While a Christian lecturer was commenting
on this remarkable permeation of the atmosphere
of India with the thought and spirit of Jesus, a
Hindu turned and said to me, “Yes, but he failed
to say that Mahatma Gandhi was responsible for
a great deal of this new interest in Jesus.” I
could only agree with him that the criticism was
just.
Mahatma Gandhi does not call himself a Chris-
tian. The fact is that he calls himself a Hindu.
But by his life and outlook and methods he has
been the medium through which a great deal of
this interest in Christ has come.
He saw clearly that there were two ways that
India might gain her freedom. She might take
the way of the sword and the bomb — the way that
Mohammed Ali and Shankat Ali, the Moham-
medan leaders, untamed by Gandhi, would have
taken; and the way that the Bengal anarchists
have actually taken. The fires of rebellion were
underneath. The flash of a bomb here and there
67
68 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
let the world see in that lurid light what was
there. Gandhi brought all this hidden discontent
to the open. A member of the secret police told
me that it was comparatively easy for them now
since Gandhi’s advent, that they simply went to
the Non-Cooperation Headquarters and asked
what would be the next step in their program in
the fight with the government and they told him
just what they would do next. Gandhi turned
the streams of discontent and rebellion into open
and frank channels.
He rejected both the sword and the bomb, not
because it was expedient, but because he believed
with all his soul in something else, in another
type of power — soul force or the power of suffer-
ing — and another type of victory — a victory over
oneself, this inward victory being the precursor
of the outward national victory. In the fires of
that suffering there would come the inward free-
dom, the purification of the social and political
life from within.
Now for the first time in human history a
nation in the attainment of its national ends
repudiated physical force and substituted the
power of soul or soul force, and has made inward
national regeneration a vital part of its program.
This is certainly an infinitely more Christian
way than we have ordinarily taken in the West
Had the Indian people really caught the ideal
on a national scale and put it into practice, as
IRREGULAR CHANNELS
69
an inner circle caught and practiced it, they
would have risen to almost unparalleled moral
heights. As one English writer, who is not sup-
posed to be sympathetic, put it, “Had India really
practiced Gandhi’s program, no nation on earth
could have denied to India the moral leadership
of the world.” They would have shown us a way
out of the vicious circle into which militarism
has got us. They would have demonstrated what
we all vaguely feel, that the final power of the
world resides in soul.
The daily Anglo-Indian paper, the Statesman,
after bitterly fighting Gandhi and his movement,
acknowledged in its editorial columns that
Gandhi “had put sincerity into politics.” He
did more: he put the cross into politics.
The movement as a political movement failed,
for violence crept into it. The movement failed,
hut it was not a failure. The immediate end was
not accomplished, but it left a spiritual deposit
in the mind of India that will never be lost.
At the close of an address on “Gandhi” in
America a man arose and asked why I talked
on Gandhi and his movement when both of them
were abject failures. I replied that I did so
because I belonged to that other and greater Fail-
ure of human history — to the Man who began
a kingdom with initial success and then it all
ended in a cross, a bitter and shameful Failure.
But Golgotha’s failure was the world’s most
70 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
amazing success. A recent dramatist made the
centurion say to Mary as she stood by the cross:
“I tell you, woman, that this dead Son of yours,
disfigured, shamed, spat upon, has built this day
a kingdom that can never die. The living glory
of him rules it. The earth is his and he made it
He and his brothers have been molding and mak-
ing it through the long ages; they are the only
ones who ever did possess it ; not the proud, not
the idle, not the vaunting empires of the world.
Something has happened on this hill to-day to
shake all the kingdoms of blood and fear to dust.
The earth is his, the earth is theirs and they
made it. The meek, the terrible meek, the fierce
agonizing meek are about to enter into their
inheritance.” If the meek shall finally inherit
earth, then Gandhi must get his portion, for he
belongs to the meek, the terrible meek.
Do not misunderstand me, I do not draw the
parallels, thereby suggesting that these events
are comparable in their effect upon human his-
tory, but belonging to the Great Failure that
meant world redemption, I am predisposed to
understand a failure that may mean something
bigger than political success for India— aud
beyond.
Gandhi did not fail. The Indian people fail'd
Gandhi. It was their failure. But in apparent
failure he really succeeded. I would rather
think of him as Gandhi the defeated, but holding
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firm and with unsoured spirit to the belief that
somehow, someway the power of his ideal must
conquer, than to see Gandhi seated by some other
method as the first president of the Indian
Republic. We have plenty of presidents through-
out the world. We have a new crop every elec-
tion day. China has one every few months by
the clicking of political and military machinery,
but few outside China know their names; but
the name of Gandhi haunts us, shocks us, appeals
to us. If Gandhi should die right now' in the
moment of his most apparent failure, disagree
with him as I do in many things, I w'ould hold
him to be the most successful man who has lived
iu East or West in the last ten years. I think
history will bear that out. I would rather be
a Wilson or a Gandhi defeated, but holding to
ideals not yet accepted, than to be a Cldmenceau,
the tiger, standing victorious over a fallen foe.
Gandhi’s movement in its failure left a new'
spiritual deposit in the mind of India. The cross
has become intelligible and vital. Up to a few
years ago one w r as preaching against a stone wall
in preaching the cross in India, The w r hole
underlying philosophy of things was against it.
The doctrine of karma, as ordinarily held, has
little or no room for the cross in it. According
to it, you are being meted out, to the last jot and
tittle, the results of your actions in a previous
birth. Everything is held in the iron grip of that
72 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
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law of rewards and punishments. If you help I
a man it is because his Karma calls for that help; I
if you hurt him, it is for the same reason. All K
suffering is punitive and the result of previous
sin. This thought prompted a man to ask me
in one of my meetings “if Jesus must not have I
been a very wicked man in a previous birth, since
lie was such a terrible sufferer in this one.” This I
was a view consistent with the doctrine. There I
is little or no room for vicarious suffering for I
others.
But with this teaching of Gandhi that they can
joyously take on themselves suffering for the sake r
of national ends, there has come into the atrnos- I
phere a new sensitiveness to the cross. A bril- I
liant Hindu thinker, writing on this subject, I
said, “What the missionaries have not been able I
to do in fifty years Gandhi by his life and trial I
and incarceration has done, namely, he has |
turned the eyes of India toward the cross.” I
am a missionary, and you would expect that to |
make us missionaries wince a bit, but it does not. I
We do not mind who gets the credit. We are not I
there for credit, but for reality. We desire so I
desperately that India and the world may see the I
cross that we rejoice if anyone, even one outside I
our fold, helps India see that cross. To-day in ^
India you can step up from this nationalist think- I
ing straight to the heart of the cross. It is the I
message that goes through with power.
Even a Mohammedan editor caught the inner
meaning of things — and it is difficult for Moham-
medans who have other ideas of power — and
expressed it in an editorial thus: “From the
mere standpoint of strategy it is infinitely better
for the missionaries to depend upon the cross
and its meaning of self-sacrifice than upon all
the empires and their backing.”
This little window lets us see a good deal : In
a Nationalist paper at the time of great national
excitement there appeared this flaming headline,
“A Dreadful Night of Crucifixion.” I read
through the accouut with eagerness to see what
had happened. It was a vivid account of how
A kali Sikhs, resisters, were severely beaten by
the police. It ended with this sentence : “Gentle
reader, on that dreadful night Christ w T as again
crucified.” This was written by a Hindu for
Hindus and Mohammedans, but they had caught
the idea that Christ was identified in some mys-
terious way with the pain and suffering and
oppression of men. Whether the text taken will
bear the burden of the meaning given to it is not
the question; the idea lives on even after the
event to which it is applied passes away. That
idea is that Christ suffers in the suffering of men.
A nationalist put the matter to me this way :
“It is you Christians who can understand the
inner meaning of our movement better than
others, for it has a kinship to the underlying
74 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
thought of Christianity.” The man who said
this was a man of beautiful character and was
acting upon that inner meaning. One national-
ist asked me, “Do you not think that the Non-
Cooperation movement is an application of the
principles of Jesus to the present political situa-
tion ?”
Some of the Hindus have been concerned about
this too definitely Christian aspect of things.
One of them asked in my meeting, “Just as the
British government conquered India through the
sons of the soil, that is, through Indian troops,
aren’t you trying to conquer India for Chris-
tianity in the same way, namely, by using a son
of the soil, Gandhi?” Of course this was pre-
posterous, for Gandhi is the last man on earth
who can be “handled” ; but the point is that the
questioner saw the Christian drift of things.
In one of the important conferences when the
nationalist leaders were discussing this question
of procedure a Hindu nationalist said, “I oppose
this non-violent non-cooperation. I ask you is it
Hindu teaching? It is not. Is it Mohammedan
teaching? It is not. I will tell you what it is,
it is Christian teaching. I therefore oppose it.”
Even among the ordinary villagers this drift
is noted. At the missionaries had been
bitterly opposed by the Hindus in their preach-
ing at a mela, a religious fair. But this year of
which I speak the Hindus came and helped them,
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75
saying, “We are allies now, since Mahatma
Gandhi is following Christ.” The question of
whether he would say he is or not is not the
paramount thing — the point is that the villagers
saw the inner relationship of things.
This viewpoint of the villagers is not to be
wondered at when an instance like this occurs:
On the arrival of the train the great crowd gath-
ered for a speech. Gandhi came out, took out a
New Testament and read the Beatitudes and then
finished by saying: “That is my address to you.
Act upon that.” That was all the speech he gave.
But it spoke volumes.
In one place the nationalists were forbidden
by the government to carry the national flag
beyond a certain point on a bridge which led
into the European or Civil section of the town.
The nationalists made it an issue. The magis-
trate, who arrested and tried most of them, re-
marked to me that those whom he arrested were
much more Christian in their spirit than he was.
They would let him know what time they were
coming across the bridge with the flag and how
many ! Would he please be prepared for twenty-
five to-day. Of the twelve hundred who were
arrested in that flag agitation, although none of
them were professed Christians, and although
they could take into jail with them only a limited
number of things which they had to produce
before the magistrate, the vast majority took New
76 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
Testaments with them to read while there. The
reason they did so becomes apparent when one
of them remarked, “We now know what it means
for you Christians to suffer for Christ.” The
cross had become not a doctrine, but a living
thing to them.
Sometimes things took a rather amusing, if
not ludicrous turn, as when a Hindu nationalist
who was being tried by a British judge, began
his defense with these words, “And they shall
deliver you up before kings and governors and
magistrates for my name’s sake,” and ended up
his statement with the words, “Father, forgive
them, they know not what they do !”
But the real force of it strikes one when Ghandi
himself exemplifies it. He is ready to apply this
principle of conquering by soul force not merely
against the British government, but against his
own people as w T ell, when he feels they are in the
w rong. This, of course, would have little or no
effect were not Gandhi the soul of sincerity and
utterly fearless.
When in South Africa carrying on his passive
resistance movement against the South African
government ( w r hich struggle, by the way, he won)
the indentured coolies in whose behalf he was
fighting with non-violent weapons, got out of
hand again and again. He remonstrated, but all
to no avail. Finally without word he w r ent off
and began to fast. He had fasted for tw'o days
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when word went around among the coolies that
(iandhi was fasting because of what they were
doing. That changed matters immediately.
They came to him with folded hands and begged
him to desist from the fast, promising him that
they would do anything if only he would stop it.
Suffering love had conquered.
In his ashram one of the boys told him some-
thing that he believed but later found out that
the boy had lied to him. Gandhi called the
school together and solemnly said, “Boys, I am
sorry to find out that one of you is a liar. As
punishment I am going off and fast to-day.”
That may be passed with a smile, but not if you
knew the dead earnestness of Gandhi and the
sheer moral weight of the man. There could not
have been a more terrific punishment, for long
after any physical pain from physical punish-
ment would have died away there would persist
the spiritual pain from the lashings of conscience
awakened by the sufferings of the man who loved
him. In the light of Gandhi’s acting thus it
becomes easy for them to step up from the
thought that if one man w r ould take on him-
self suffering to bring a boy back from a lie to
the truth, then if there were One divine enough
and holy enough, he might take on his soul the
very sin of a whole race to bring us back to
good and to God. The cross thus bursts into
meaning when lighted up by this lesser act.
78 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
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This is all the more vividly seen in Gandhi’s
recent fast of twenty-one days. A fast of that
length of time is serious when we recall that
Gandhi had not really recovered from his opera- j
tion and that he ordinarily weighs less than a
hundred pounds. But when he came out of jail
he found the Hindus and Mohammedans suspi-
cious, jealous, and divided. Before his arrest
they had become united in his person, but when
he was taken away and put in jail they fell apart.
He knew that the moment India was united that
moment India was free. He pleaded and remon-
strated, but the divisions persisted and became
acute. Out of sheer sorrow of heart he announced
that he would undergo, as a penance, a fast of
twenty-one days.
It touched India to the quick, for they are an
emotionally responsive people. They called a
Unity Conference on the tenth day of his fast. It
was composed of representatives of the various
religions of India, including the Metropolitan,
the head of the Church of England in India.
They debated back and forth the questions at
issue. Though Gandhi was lying in weakness
upon his couch in another part of the city, his
spirit pressed upon them in the conference for a
solution. They passed resolutions covering their
points of difference and appointed a commission
of twenty-five as a Permanent Board of Adjudi-
cation on intercommunal matters. But the most
remarkable resolution was the one in which they
stated that “We recognize the right of an indi-
vidual to change his faith at will, provided no
inducement is offered to effect that change, such
as the offering of material gain,” and, further,
“We also recognize the right of that individual
not to suffer persecution from the community
which he may leave.” When one remembers that
in Islam apostasy meant death, and in Hinduism
social death, then this resolution marks a
national epoch and is really a National Declara-
tion of Religious Freedom. The silent pressure
of the spirit of Gandhi was doing its work. And
Gandhi’s spirit was being pressed upon by the
Spirit of Jesus.
On the eighteenth day of the fast, Mr. C. F.
Andrews, who was editing Gandhi’s paper, Young
India, while he was fasting, wrote an editorial
in which he described Gandhi lying upon his
couch on the upper veranda in Delhi, weak and
emaciated. He pictured the fort which could be
seen in the distance, reminding them of the
struggle for the possession of the kingdom ; below
the fort Englishmen could be seen going out to
their golf ; nearer at hand the crowds of his own
people surged through the bazaar intent on buy-
ing and selling. While Andrews watched him
there that verse of Scripture rushed to his mind :
“Is it nothing to you, ye that pass by? Is there
any sorrow like unto my sorrow?” He ended it
80 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
with this sentence : “As I looked upon him there
and caught the meaning of it all, I felt as never
before in my own experience the meaning of the
cross.”
Andrews spoke out in these last sentences the
very thought of the heart of India. India has
seen the meaning of the cross in one of her sons.
As a former fiery opponent of Christianity, a
nationalist leader, said, “I never understood the
meaning of Christianity until I saw it in Gan-
dhi.” While this inspires us and we are deeply
grateful for it, nevertheless, it is a sword that
cuts two ways, for some of us have been there
these years and deeply regret that Christianity
did not burst into meaning through us. How-
ever, we are glad that India is seeing. And let
it. be quietly said that we too are seeing.
CHAPTER V
THROUGH THE REGULAR CHANNELS—
SOME EVANGELISTIC SERIES
The picture given in the preceding chapter
must be corrected a bit, for while Gandhi has
had a good deal to do with popularizing the latent
sentiment lying in the soul of India, neverthe-
less it has been the missionaries and their asso-
ciates who through these decades have, by their
fine living and self-sacrifice and constant teach-
ing, laid up this sentiment in the heart of India.
I have constantly felt my own debt of gratitude
as I have gone from place to place entering into
other people’s labors. They sowed where I was
privileged to reap. It was they who have had
the harder part.
Some time ago I got hold of a phrase that has
been of incalculable value to me : “Evangelize the
inevitable.” Certain things are inevitable: no
use to grumble against them — get into them and
evangelize them. The labor movement through-
out the world is inevitable. In England they
more or less evangelized it so that it is very
Christian in its spirit and outlook. We failed
to do that in America so that the movement sorne-
81
82 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
times fell into the hands of men who were anti-
Christian. This has been of incalculable loss.
Some years ago I saw that the Nationalist Move-
ment in India was inevitable. You could not
scatter as much education and Christian teach-
ing through India without there being an upris-
ing of soul demanding self-expression and self-
control. It is as inevitable as the dawn. We
would have felt that we had failed if this had
not come. When I saw the inevitableness of it I
felt there was only one thing to be done — get
into the movement and evangelize it. Stand
down in those national currents and put Christ
there.
That does not mean that we should get into
the politics of the country and become politicians,
but it does mean that the Indian Nationalist
senses at once that we are in spiritual sympathy
with the finest and best in his movement. That
is all he asks for, but he does ask for that.
When I began this work nine years ago it was
in a small way, hoping that this most difficult
field would open. I have had no plans that 1
was not ready to scrap, if they did not seem to be
vital, or did not work. There was one concern
and one only : how could I help India to see in
Jesus what I saw. Anything that ministered to
that I wanted, anything that did not could go.
Since the Methodist Board took charge of my
expenses and then gave me perfect freedom to
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work among all the different missions of India.
I have covered several times the more important
centers and many smaller ones.
We have had as chairmen of our meetings
members of Legislative Councils, judges, lawyers,
generals, college presidents, professors, and lead-
ing Hindus and Mohammedans of every type.
We have had the meetings in the open spaces in
the cool of the evenings, in Town Halls, Hindu
and Christian college auditoriums, Theosophical
Society halls and even in Hindu temple com-
pounds. The reader will probably note that I
have omitted Christian churches from this list.
There is a real prejudice against them, so we
seldom or never have meetings for Hindus and
Mohammedans in them.
We have felt that we must hit the problem in
two places: The church must be spiritualized
and the non-Christian won to Christ. We have
morning meetings for the Christians and night
meetings for the non-Christians. These are tied
together in purpose, for we know that we can-
not spiritualize the church apart from its tasks.
Experience and expression are the two sides of
the Christian life, and one cannot exist without
the other. Kill either and you kill both. So we
have tried to get the church to realize its joyous
privilege of soul-winning.
One task along this line has been to help arouse
the Syrian Church in South India — a church of
84 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
five hundred thousand that has been dead for
centuries. They are now beginning to be keen
and alive and the largest Christian audience in
the world gathers at the time of the yearly con-
vention, when in a single audience there will be
thirty-five thousand people. These conventions
have been marked with great spiritual power, and
the church is now beginning to take its place in
the evangelization of India.
In the meetings for non-Christians there have
been large crowds in many places, and although
it has been the most upset period of India’s
recent history, yet we have not had the slightest
disturbance of any kind in any single meeting iu
nine years. India has shown a beautiful cour-
tesy and has treated me as a friend and brother,
and I have tried to respond.
I said there had been no disturbance, but there
was one on one occasion, but that was based on
a misunderstanding. The Non-Cooperators, the
extreme Nationalists, saw the officials of the city
going into our meeting and thought we were hav-
ing a pro-government meeting. They surrounded
the building, stoned it, rushed the doors and
yelled their national yells for three quarters of
an hour. I requested some men to hold the doors,
and above the din and noise I talked on brother-
hood and good will and the coming of the King-
dom, while the storm raged on the outside. It
was a lovely time to talk about it! But the
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85
next day when the Non-Cooperators found out
what kind of a meeting we were having they came
and personally apologized, and said that they
themselves would attend the rest of the meet-
ings. They did so, and one of them, on the last
night of the meeting, dressed in his simple white
homespun, the sign of the Nationalist, arose and
read a paper thanking me for what I had said
to them about Christ. That was the nearest
to a disturbance we had had in nine years. The
gentle courtesy of the East is a beautiful thing.
For instance, after speaking for a number of
nights in a Theosophical Society hall it was a
fine courtesy for the secretary of the Society to
garland me publicly, though everything I had
said cut straight across the ideas of theosophy.
In view of what I have said above the criticism
of Bernard Lucas is just when he remarks,
“We have attempted the task of winning India
for Christ as though it were a country of bar-
barians, whereas it is a country of cultured and
civilized people with a submerged tenth of bar-
barians.” It is usually about that submerged
tenth that we hear in our general missionary
talks, which taken alone can hardly be called a
fair representation of the situation. At the same
time, I realize that my presentation needs the
balance of the other facts.
I know when I stand before an audience of
Hindus and Mohammedans that they are in-
86 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
wardly challenging every word I utter and every
thought I express ; and I know if I gain an inch
in their souls, I will have to fight for it, but all
the time there is courtesy and friendliness, even
in moments of deepest disagreement. Such treat-
ment can fairly be claimed to indicate culture.
Now for a few glimpses into some of the evan
gelistic series. I select these out of the hun-
dreds we have had throughout India.
We went into the great city of . It was
an exceedingly difficult proposition, for there
was a great university there which was supposed
to propagate Hindu culture and religion. On the
other hand the city was held in the grip of an-
cient thought and many a superstition. But
we were amazed and delighted to find that the
president of the university graciously consented
to become chairman of one of our meetings.
There were large crowds each night. At the
close of the meeting one night the students of the
university came and asked me to come over to
speak at the university. I was surprised beyond
measure and said, “My brothers, you don’t want
me over there?”
“Oh, yes, we do,” they replied.
But I pressed a little further : “Do your pro-
fessors know about it?” “Yes,” they said, “they
want you to come.”
“But,” I still persisted, “what do you want
me to speak about?”
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One of them answered and said, “If you don’t
mind, we would like you to speak about Christ.”
Well, I assure you, I didn’t mind !
Another spoke up and said, “We wou 1 d like
you to speak especially about the cross.” I like
to speak especially about the cross ! I went over
several times, and on the first occasion was
introduced by the Hindu chairman, a professor,
in these words. “I have been attending the pub-
lic meetings, but I haven’t been interested in the
speaker as much as I have been interested in
the Person concerning whom he has been speak-
ing. Young men, no such personality as that of
Jesus has ever appeared in human history. He
is the greatest character that has ever been
in our world. Now r , to-day is a Hindu festival,
and w r e can begin the festival in no better way
than to hear again about this Person.” The
striking thing was that I could see no sign of
resentment on the faces of the students. Know-
ing the bitterness and prejudices of the past,
I could scarcely believe my ears, for we were at
the heart of orthodoxy.
In the same place I w r as invited by the Theos-
ophists to speak to them in their hall. At the
close their leader said, “We may not agree with
what Mr. Jones is saying, but w r e can certainly
all try to be like Jesus Christ” — which is a good
deal!
In the meetings were in the Town Hall.
88 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
The next to the last night of the series the lead-
ers of the Non-Cooperation movement in that
place publicly presented a request at the dose.
They said that the next day was the anniversary
of Mahatma Gandhi’s going to jail and it was
their big day, that they were going to have a
great meeting of ten thousand or more on the
public commons, and they had come to ask ns
to put these two meetings together. They asked
me to speak on the same topic announced for that
next night arid said they would furnish an inter-
preter. I strongly desired to go, for it was such
a gracious invitation and meant so much, for it
was their greatest political gathering and they
wanted me to give a Christian address ! But the
next night I wanted to give an invitation for
personal allegiance to Christ. Very reluctantly
I had to decline their invitation. Notwithstand-
ing the fact that the other meeting was going
on at the same time, our meeting was packed to
its capacity. At the close of the address I did
what I have only dared to do this last year. I
asked these leading high-caste men to take their
stand publicly for Christ. I told them frankly
that I would leave the question of baptism and
the Christian Church to their consciences, that
I would give them my own view, namely, that I
believed that inwardly and outwardly one should
belong to Christ, but, having said that, I would
leave the matter to their consciences as they read
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the New Testament, and in its light decided what
they should do. But I urged that here and now
they should make Jesus the Lord and Saviour
of their lives. On that proposition between thirty
and forty of the leading citizens, lawyers, doc-
tors, and so on, stayed. That aftermeeting in
which we prayed and instructed them and had
them repeat a prayer of confession and surrender
to Christ after me, was one long to be remem-
bered, for the melting sense of God that was
upon us.
We have had some of our meetings in some
very remarkable places. In we had them
in the palace of Tippu Sultan, the old Moham-
medan king and tyrant. I stood right under the
throne when I spoke. It made a splendid sound-
ing board in more ways than one. The last night
I asked those who would give themselves to
Christ to meet me in a little room in the rear. It
tilled up with seeking Hindus — some of them in
earnest — a few who had come to challenge and
quibble. I found out later that the room was the
place where two British generals had been
chained to their guards as prisoners of the tyrant.
One of them was named Sir David Baird. When
word went to his old mother in Scotland about
her son, the dour old lady, knowing her boy, said,
“Well, God have mercy on the poor chap that
is chained to our Davy !” But in the very room
where men had been chained to their guards as
90 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
prisoners Christ was making men free, and in the
palace hall where an autocrat had sat with a king-
dom founded upon a bloody sword we were an-
nouncing a new kingdom founded not upon the
sword, but upon the very self-giving of the Son of
God at Golgotha.
At one place a non-Christian literary society
asked to have the meetings under their auspices
and charge. A non-Christian literary society
having charge of Christian evangelistic meetings!
Incongruous, but glorious! They secured the
Maharaja’s theater for the addresses. They said
they were going to get the prince as the chair-
man of the meeting the first night. They naively
suggested that he was hard hit by drink, but
they thought they could keep him sufficiently
sober to be chairman that night! We cannot he
squeamish about those things, we have to take
what we get, glad to put out our gospel in any
situation we can, and since we thought the prince
needed it, we were very glad to have him come.
The prime minister was the chairman the second
nicht and on down the line to lesser officials.
There were about a thousand of the officials of
that leading native state present each night. It
was literally like witnessing before kings and
governors for His name’s sake. When the prince
arose for his chairman’s remarks everyone was
rather nervous as to what he would say, for he
was rather a free lance, and said about what he
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wanted to say. He kept up his reputation for
surprises by saying, “I do not understand w T hy
the speaker has gone so far off to talk about
corruption in government; he needn’t have gone
to China to talk about corrupt officials; he
could have come right here.” Every official
jumped as though he had been shot. Just then
his secretary, w ho was an influential man in the
state, and w r ho was on the platform with us,
hurriedly passed over a note to the prince. He
read it and then announced, “My secretary says
I need not say anything more !”
He invited me to come over to see him at the
palace the next day. I went. I begged him to give
up drink and give himself to Christ, told him
what Christ had done for me. He said, “Mr.
Jones, I can’t do it. The fact is that I w T as
almost a Christian w T hen I first went to Eng-
land, for Christianity appealed to me because of
its sense of brotherhood; but I was educated
there with Macaulay in one hand and a whisky
bottle in the other. But I wall make you this
promise. I am going to America, and since you
have prohibition in America I w r on’t be able to
get it then, so I will give it up when I go there.”
The whole world is bending over in expectancy
to see wffiat we are going to do w’ith this matter
of prohibition. If w r e should fail, it would set
back the clock of moral progress for fifty or a
hundred years. We must not fail. Thus does
32 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
evangelistic work in the Orient depend upon con-
ditions at home.
Nine years ago Dr. John R. Mott was speak-
ing in the fine hall at to a non-Christian
audience. In the midst of his address he used
the name of Christ and the audience hissed him.
Nine years later we were in that hall with one
topic for six nights — “Jesus Christ and Him
Crucified.” The audience increased every night
until the last nights they were standing around
the doors and windows. I gave the invitation
to those who would surrender themselves to
Christ, leaving the question of baptism to their
own inner convictions, to come and take the front
seats. I felt at the time that if one would come
I should be grateful, for William Carey had said
that if one of these high-castes should ever be
converted, it would be as great a miracle as the
raising of the dead. But that night between a
hundred and a hundred and fifty came forward
on that proposal. Cut it down to its lowest pos-
sible significance, and yet we have left the resid-
ual fact that in the hall where the name of
Christ had been hissed nine years before men now
stayed to pray in that same name. It was not
the difference in the speakers, for everything was
in favor of the first speaker ; it was the difference
in the attitude of India toward Jesus in the
meantime. “The psychological climate” has
changed. It was a new day.
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93
In this same city I was invited to speak in
a non-Christian college, and the students gave
up a cricket match in order to attend. In another
place the Hindu students -wanted an extra meet-
ing for themselves. We could find no time, for
I was speaking four times a day. They decided
to have it at seven o’clock in the morning. The
theme was “now to Find a New- Life!”
The Hindu clerks of a certain city wanted an
extra meeting, and since no other time could be
found they came out at 7 :30 a. m. before going
to their offices.
The Non-Cooperators had captured the munici-
pality of and cvere in charge. The whole
city was dressed in white home-spun khaddar,
the sign of the Nationalist. When one w-ent into
the city with other than white garments on he
felt like a speckled bird. Riots had taken place
nearby, and feeling was running very high. The
British official in charge of the district warned
us that if we went into the city for meetings,
he could not be responsible for our safety. But
we felt w-e should go, and went. One of the mis-
sionaries wrote to Mr. Gandhi and told him that
I was giving addresses in the city, and asked
him to kindly write to his Nationalists and ask
them to come. He wrote back immediately, for
he is very prompt in his correspondence, and said
that we would be very happy to have his people
come, in fact, had written them to that effect.
94 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
When they got this word they came to us ami
asked if they could not take charge of the meet-
ings. I told them that I was not going to talk
politics, but Christ. Nevertheless, three of the
leading Hindu Nationalists signed the notices
that went out calling the meetings. The hall
filled up immediately, so we had to go out into
the open air. I saw at once that a good many
of my hearers did not understand English. Let
me say parenthetically, that I speak almost
entirely in English to these non-Christian audi-
ences, for nearly all the intelligentsia know Eng-
lish, since the medium of instruction in the high
schools and colleges is English, so that you can
use the best you have and it is none too good.
But I saw at a glance that some of my audience
was not English-educated. I turned to my chair-
man and said, “I am not sure what I should do,
for I do not know Gujarati [that was the local
language]. I only know Hindustani, and there
is no Christian here to interpret for me.” He
promptly replied, “I shall be very happy indeed
to interpret for you if you like.” Here was a
very long cry from the expectation of suffering
violence at their hands, as the official had feared,
to their taking charge of our meetings and inter-
preting our message! I wondered how I would
get my Christian message through my Hindu
brother, but I remembered that David Brainerd
used to preach through drunken interpreters to
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95
(ho American Indians and the power of the Spirit
rested upon the meetings in spite of this, and I
believed God would do the same thing for us, as
our fine, clean Hindu friend interpreted our mes-
sage. And he did ! The next night they gave
me another interpreter, also a Hindu, and we
gave the message of the cross through him.
At the close of the meeting one night I asked
if they would like me to pray. I never pray
publicly without asking their permission, and I
have never had them refuse. At the close of the
prayer a Mohammedan gentleman came up to
me and said, “That w T as very disrespectful to-
liigdit — you had those people sit down while they
prayed They should have stood up in the pres-
ence of God !”
“All right,” I replied, “to-morrow night they
will stand up.”
When I finished the next night I again asked if
(hey would like me to pray. They assented, so
I asked them to rise. Now, it was the custom
1 iiere that whenever they rose for the close of a
meeting they always gave their national yells,
so when they rose for the prayer across the au-
dience went tremendous w r aves of “Bande Mata-
ram” and “Mahatma Gandhi ki jai” — “Hail to
the Motherland” and “Hail to Mahatma Gandhi !”
Iietween my evangelistic appeal and my prayer
we had the national cries. A glorious mixture !
Somehow it didn’t jar, and when it quieted a
96 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
bit I went on with my prayer as though nothing
had happened. But India is nothing unless she
is mixed — she mingles life and religion in a glo-
rious confusion. I rather like it so !
At the close of the meeting I suggested that I
could not get close enough to them in these big
meetings and asked if we might have a Round
Table Conference with the leading citizens of
this city. They assented, so the next day we met
in the national school. I put off my shoes to the
side and sat among them on the floor in pundit
style. I saw that some of them had been parad-
ing the public streets, for they had placards on
themselves on which was written :
“Don’t pay your taxes to this Government.”
“Go to jail with joy.”
“The tears of the weak will undermine the
strongest wall.”
One would have thought that in an atmosphere
of this kind, with the whole thing nervous with
national excitement, there would be no spiritual
response to my message. Here was a real
struggle going on. Would they respond at all?
On the contrary, there was a fine spiritual sensi-
tiveness. Incidentally, may I say that I have
been struck very forcibly with the difference in
what happens to the spiritual natures of men
who are engaged in warfare with military arms,
And those with weapons of non-violent passive
resistance. While there are many notable and
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97
noble exceptions, it is a truism to say that in war
carried on by physical arms the men who are
engaged in it are brutalized — the more so, the
more efficient. On the contrary, I have found
that the men who threw themselves in with Gan-
dhi and really practiced his program were spir-
itualized; it deepened their sense of moral
values and made them self-sacrificial. Nothing
could be a greater condemnation of the one type
and a commendation of the other than the respec-
tive effects upon the personalities engaged in
them. Here 1 sat before men — very determined
men — who were willing to lose their all in the
tight they were making with a system of govern-
ment from the West to which I belonged, and
(here was no hatred, only a heightened moral
and spiritual appreciation and sensitiveness.
I talked to them of my Master. In the midst
of the discussion I used the phrase the “Christ
of the Indian Road” and I noted how they kept
referring to it again and again. It had caught
their imagination. He seemed so intimately
theirs. He seemed to have come in from the
Indian Road and had sat upon the floor with us
there in the quietness of that Indian twilight.
In the discussion we talked of India and her
need. I did not talk to them as though India
were foreign to me, for it was no longer so. I
was born in the West and love it, but India has
become my home; India’s people have become
98 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
my people; her problems, my problems; her
future, my future; and I would like to wear upon
my heart her sins if I could lift her to my
Saviour. I told them I wanted to be thought of
as at least an adopted son of India. I turned
to them and said : “Brothers, what can we do
with these sixty million outcastes? They are a
millstone around our national neck. Our coun-
try will never be strong until we lift them. How
can we do it?”
A thoughtful Hindu rose and said, “It will take
a Christ to lift them.”
As we sat there in the soft light of that Indian
evening every one of us felt that he was ’right.
It would take a Christ to lift them. But some
of us went further and included ourselves in
it — it would take a Christ to lift us too, and
not all of those who felt this way were avowed
followers of this Christ.
The Indian people are an intensely religious
people, and when the wealth of this wonderful
spiritual capacity is placed at the disposal of
Jesus the product will be beautiful indeed. One
day some prominent Hindus came to me and
said, “They are having a government fair at
K .” (It was very like our County Fair
at home with exhibits, agricultural displays,
horse racing, sports, wrestling, etc.) “It is all
very good, but there is no religion in it. We
have come to ask if you won’t come and put
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99
some religion in it.” I asked what they would
like me to do and they replied, “We want you
to come and give some addresses in the Durbar
Tent.” I gasped, for the Durbar Tent was the
official tent where the government officials held
their functions. I told them to go on and get it
if they could. They returned indignant. “The
idea,” they said, “the official said to us that we
could not have the addresses in the Durbar Tent,
for that would seem to imply that government
was back of religion, but we could have them in
the Wrestling Pit with its tiers of seats all
around. The idea of putting religion into the
wrestling pit! If we can’t put it in the Durbar
Tent we won’t have the meeting at all !” We had
no meetings. But I had the feeling as I talked
with those men that when India really accepts
Christ he will not be put off on the edges of life.
He will be put at the very seat of government
to control and mold and possess all.
The last night I was in India before sailing
for the present furlough I was addressing an
eager crowd of non-Christians in . It was
the last night of the series, and the situation
became tense and electric as I asked them to
then and there make a personal decision for
Christ. I was in the midst of my appeal when a
Hindu suddenly stopped me and said: “Wait
a minute, sir, you ask us to become Christians.
Before you go on will you tell me what you are
100 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
doing in regard to the question of the rights of
Indians in America? Tell us that before you
ask us to follow Christ.” I was compelled to
stop and explain just my position in the matter;
told him how some of us had signed a protest to
the Department of State and so on. He seemed
satisfied, but note this: before I could go on
and finish up my appeal I had to make myself
right on that whole racial situation. I could
not advance another inch without that.
You can see from these little windows I have
thrown open what an amazing evangelistic oppor-
tunity presents itself. There has never been
anything so big and challenging. But we can-
not advance into it, cannot handle it with any
degree of moral and spiritual authority, until
we right ourselves upon some of these great
racial issues.
That leads me to my next chapter, a chapter
which I dislike to face, but the whole program
of the evangelization of the East depends upon
our taking a Christian attitude toward the
nations of the Orient.
CHAPTER VI
THE GREAT HINDRANCE
To understand the attitude of India toward
the West one has to keep in mind the existence
in India of what Professor H. A. Miller calls “an
oppression psychosis.” He defines “oppression”
as “the domination of one group by another, po-
litically, economically, or culturally — singly or
in combination.” And by “psychosis” he means
“those persistent and aggravated mental states
which are characteristically produced under con-
ditions where one group dominates another.”
India feels that she is being dominated cultur-
ally, 'economically, and politically by the West.
An “oppression psychosis” has resulted.
A good deal of the bitter criticism of the West
on the part of India at the present time is un-
doubtedly the result of that psychosis. Under
existing conditions it is almost psychologically
impossible for India to find or appreciate any
good in the West and openly acknowledge it.
Indians may appropriate from the West, but as
long as they are conscious that they are Indians
they cannot acknowledge their debt. I have
found many foreign students in America who
101
102 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
were getting all their education and training
here, but I have not seen a single one who while
being self-conscious as an Indian, could find any-
thing good in America or her civilization. Only
at times when they, for the moment, forgot they
were Indians could they acknowledge any good.
I do not think that India will ever openly and
frankly appropriate from Western civilization
or from the Western church until she is freed
from this oppression psychosis, in other words,
till she is politically self-governing.
Britain has on the whole given India good
government, but until India feels she stands as
a free people there can be no frank and balanced
evaluation of what the West contains.
India can now take from Christ because she is
able to disassociate him from the West, but she
finds it difficult to take from the Christian
Church or from missionaries, for in these cases
the disassociation is not easy. But even here mis-
sionaries may lose their Western identity, so to
speak, and may so merge their lives and endeav-
ors with India that they are no longer a part of
the dominating influences, but take their place
as serving friends and brothers. As a social
thinker, a Hindu, said to me, “Western civiliza-
tion was never at such a low ebb in our estimate
as now, but you missionaries never stood higher ;
you come not to exploit us but to serve us.” If
we come as the servants of the situation, we step
THE GREAT HINDRANCE 103
out of any dominating movement that may be
the program of the West.
In dealing with the criticism of India toward
the West we must keep in mind this psychosis,
make allowances for it, and be patient.
But we fool ourselves if we dismiss it at that.
For this oppression psychosis has very good basis
for its existence — not so much from deliberate
governmental policy as from the daily contacts
of white men with brown; the snobbery, the
taken-for-granted attitude that any white man is
superior to any brown — these are the things that
rub into soreness the soul of India and make it
smart. If the Indian, smarting under these as-
sumed attitudes, turns upon the West in in-
vective and biting criticism, let us remember that
his criticism is pointed with the knowledge the
Indian now possesses that when we take these
attitudes we are cutting absolutely across every-
thing that our religion teaches. He knows that
these things are not Christian.
If the centering of everything upon the person
of Jesus clears the issue and has given us a new
vitalizing of our w r ork in India, nevertheless it
has come back upon us in a terrific judgment.
India is doing nothing less than judging us in
the light — the white light of the Spirit of Jesus.
They have caught the meaning of what it is
to be a real Christian ; in the light of that
they are judging us. We could stand in the light
104 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
of the civilization of other times and climes, and
feel on the whole that we have come off pretty
well, but it is another thing to be judged in the
light of his spirit and demand.
In speaking to an audience in India I have
often mentioned the incident of the church in
South Africa with a sign on it, “Asiatics and
Hottentots not allowed,” and how Mahatma
Gandhi could not get into the church because he
was an Asiatic, and have ended up by saying that
my own Master could not get into the church be-
cause he too was an Asiatic. I have noted the
pained scorn that would go across the faces of
the audience. But the audience was not espe-
cially conscious or disturbed that the low-caste
people were excluded from their own temples, not
by signs, but by the decree of religion and cus-
tom. In the one case they were judging them-
selves in the light of their own religion, but they
were judging us in the light of the Spirit of
Jesus. It is no answer, then, to say that they
do the same things toward their own people—
they are judging us by the religion we avow and
by the Christ whom we profess to follow, and
they have a right to do so. I am personally glad
that they are doing it — cut as it may — for our
salvation as well as theirs depends upon our
being brought back to his mind and purpose.
A thoughtful Hindu said to me one day, “If
you call one of us a Christian man, he is compli-
THE GREAT HINDRANCE
105
mented, but if you call him a Christian , he is
insulted.” In that penetrating statement we get
the epitome of the situation : the designation of
Christian may mean that he is a member of the
Christian community — Indian or European — it
may not mean much ; but to call him a Christian
man is to pay the highest compliment that can
be paid. They see that to be a Christian man is
to catch the Spirit of Jesus.
A little Hindu girl caught the meaning of what
a real Christian is when she gave this definition
of a Christian : “One who is different from all
others.”
But many of the Christians are not Christian.
A Hindu in the great city of said to me,
“If you can show me one real Christian in this
city, I’ll be a Christian.” Overstated? Yes, but
it carries its meaning.
A Hindu teacher said to me one day, “I want
to become a Christian, but I do so in spite of the
lives of the Europeans I have seen here. They
seem to have two loathings — one is religion and
the other is water.” And he did not mean it for
bathing, but for drinking purposes! This was
said in a section of the East — the Straits Settle-
ments — where nearly every European planter
had his native concubine. His race prejudices
do not extend as far as his lusts.
I was in a certain city where two Europeans
had fought a duel and both had been killed. The
106 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
Hindus, out of the kindness of their hearts,
buried them, and wishing to make an offering
to the spirits of the dead, after thinking the mat-
ter over, thought they would love in death what
they had loved in life, so came and offered as an
offering on the tomb a cigar box and a whisky
bottle.
But it is not merely the lives of some local
Europeans that are the great hindrance, but the
whole wide world has now become a whispering
gallery, and India is listening in. I have broad-
cast a number of times since I came home, and
it was uncanny to feel that my conversational
tones spoken into a tiny disk in an obscure
corner were being listened to hundreds and thou-
sands of miles away. That thing is happening
in a broader sense. What we are doing in legis-
lative halls and in the seemingly obscure inci-
dents of racial attitudes is being broadcast to
the rest of the world — and there is a loud speaker
at the other end.
Listen to the loud speaker in this story giving
its message: I sat in the midst of a group of
earnest Nationalists in a Round Table Confer-
ence. I said : “My brothers, I have been talking
to you these nights about Christ. I want you to
tell me frankly and openly why you do not accept
him. Do not spare me, for I am not the issue —
tell me frankly.” A Hindu arose and said, “You
ask us to be Christians; may we ask you how
THE GREAT HINDRANCE
107
Christian is your own civilization? Don’t you
have corruption at your central government at
Washington?” (It was just after the revelations
at Washington when oil began to flow!)
Another asked, “Don’t you lynch Negroes in
America?”
A third: “You have had Christianity in the
West all these centuries, and though Jesus is the
Prince of Peace you have not yet learned the
way out of war. Don’t you know any more about
Christianity than that?”
These things were not said in spleen and
hatred, but in anxiety and thoughtfulness. The
loud speaker was speaking on the other side of
the world.
Here is another scene that has its meaning. I
was in a section of India where, just before our
coming, there had been near-riots over the ques-
tion of the baptism of a Hindu girl. Indignation
meetings had been held and the city was in tur-
moil. We held our meetings with this back-
ground of unrest and resentment. We won-
dered if we would get any hearing at all. To our
surprise there were great crowds and a most re-
spectful and interested hearing. The last night
a room at the rear was filled with earnest seek-
ers after new life through Christ. But on the
threshold of that invitation to give themselves
to Christ was this incident: At question time
a voice came out of the back of the crowd, “What
108 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
do you think of the K. K. K.?” This was about
four years ago, when I had scarcely heard of the
Klan myself. But here in a backwater of India,
a place where I thought the least from the out-
side would penetrate, the loud speaker was
speaking and was embarrassing our witness and
message. I have many fine friends in the Klan,
and they are sincere and earnest, but since they
are a religious organization and have the cross
at the center of their gatherings, their racial
attitudes are a decided embarrassment to us.
The local whisper intended to deal with a
local American problem was resounding around
the world and cutting across the message we
were giving to India.
Nothing spoke louder to that whole Eastern
world than the recent action of Congress in pass-
ing the ill-advised and un-Christian Immigration
Law. I wish America could see what she did in
that bit of hasty legislation. Up to that time
America held the moral leadership of the East.
It was a moral asset to be an American. Japan
v as grateful for what we had done by our won-
derful generosity after the earthquake; China
was more than friendly because of the indemnity
incident and our traditional attitude of friendli-
ness, and India was moved by the idealism of
Wilson and the realism of what we had actually
done in bringing the Philippine Islands so
quickly to practical self-government. In Persia
THE GREAT HINDRANCE
109
we were loved and respected because of the help
that disinterested Americans had given to assist
Persia to her feet financially, as this incident
shows: I was among the Syrian refugees in
Bagdad. They had fled before the Kurds from
Urumiyah, Persia. The watch that I wear was
given to me by the Syrians for what I was able
to do for them in their time of trouble. But this
was nothing compared to the gratitude another
section of them felt when they fled for protection
to the compound of the American Mission in
Persia. As the Kurds came on, bent on blood,
the missionary put out the American flag in
front of the compound. The Kurdish leader did
not know what flag it was. When told it was an
American flag he advanced and was met by the
missionary, who said, “This is an American flag
and in its name I ask for protection for the
refugees here.” The leader thought a moment,
turned to his men and ordered them to retire.
They were spared, protected by the flag. The
refugees, overjoyed, kissed the flag that had de-
livered them. That is what the American flag
stood for in the East at the close of the Great
War and after. In one moment by this Im-
migration Law we renounced the leadership that
was in our hands.
We talk as if this were a Japanese problem,
but India and China are put in the same position
as Japan.
110 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
Do not misunderstand me. I am not advocat-
ing the flooding of America by immigrants. Mv
own views are embodied in the resolution passed
by the Federal Council of Churches of America
and the last General Conference of the Methodist
Episcopal Church :
“We urge a federal law raising the standards !
for admission into the United States, applying
them to all nations alike, and granting the privi-
lege of citizenship to all those thus admitted who
duly qualify regardless of their race, color, or i
nationality.”
This would mean that we could put the bars
as high as we like, provided there is no racial
discrimination and consequent insult.
If the present law were extended to apply to
all nations alike, it would mean, according to
the first provision of the law, namely, that two
per cent of the nationals of the 1890 census can
be admitted, that 40 Japanese, 2,140 Chinese,
and 42 East Indians would be admitted each I
year. But the second section of the law provides
that “the annual quota of any nationality begin-
ning July 1, 1927, shall be a number which bears
the same ratio to 150,000 as the number of in-
habitants in continental United States in 1920 I
having that national origin bears to the number
of inhabitants in continental United States in ,
1920.” This would mean that after July 1, 1927,
the number of Japanese admitted would be 159,
THE GREAT HINDRANCE
111
Chinese 87, and East Indians 4, making a total
of 250 people from Asia. This is nothing among
a population of 114,000,000 and would never
mean an economic or social problem. The fact
is that the East is not keen to flood America.
I was talking to an Indian official, the vice-presi-
dent of the Legislative Assembly, and I said,
“Suppose we should be able to get India put on
a quota basis, it would mean that there would be
actually less Indians admitted into America than
before, for now about eight hundred or nine hun-
dred are being admitted each year, largely ac-
cording to the will of the American Consul in
Calcutta; this would cut the number down to
about four in all; would you not therefore feel
that we had done India an injustice by having
India put on a quota basis?” He replied : “We
do not care how many of our people go to Amer-
ica. We do not want them to go, but we do not
want them nationally insulted if they do go.”
The fact of the matter is that many more than
two hundred and fifty are now being smuggled
into America across the Mexican and Canadian
borders and we have no redress. We can bring
no pressure to bear upon the governments of
these countries to stop this illicit smuggling, for
the whole thing is too sore a point to raise with
them, and they are in no mood to assist us in
stopping it. The shortsightedness of Congress
overreached itself and has left us in a worse con-
112 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
dition regarding flooding than before. But I do
not advocate the modification of the law because
of the self-interest involved, nor because of its
effects upon Christian missions, but because it
is Christian to treat other nations as we our-
selves would like to be treated.
It has been said that to repeal this law would
be worth more than sending one hundred mis-
sionaries to the East. I should be inclined to
doubt that estimate and to go further, and say,
that in certain circles those missionaries who
are there now will either mark time until it is
repealed or win the people in spite of being
Americans. I go back to the East with a heavy
heart, knowing that I shall have to apologize
for the attitude of the land of my birth to the
land of my adoption. I shall meet it in every
public meeting at question time, in nearly every
personal conversation and in the changed atti-
tude of sullen indifference. This legislation has
broken our arms as we stretch them out in friend-
liness and good will toward the nations of the
East, and yet it was from Asia that we got the
one thing that is truly worth while in our civ-
ilization and the one thing that we look to to
save us — Christ.
The Hindus have discovered that Jesus looked
on man apart from race and birth and color;
that he looked on man as man and believed in the
sacredness of personality as such. They know
THE GREAT HINDRANCE
113
that he was color blind and that the vision that
he saw and that he aimed to transmit to others
was that there is “one race, one color and
one soul in humanity.” In the white light of
that conception they are judging us. I have had
this story concerning the origin of the white man
quoted to me by an Indian : “God asked the man
who is now white what he had done with his
brother, and he turned white with fear.” Bead
the book entitled The Black Man’s Burden and
you will come to the conclusion that there is
enough truth in the above story to make it sting.
Mr. C. F. Andrews writes: “A Hindu gentle-
man of my acquaintance said to me, ‘Do you not
see what is happening? Mr. S is tearing
down your work faster than you can build it up.
Every time he calls us niggers it is a blow dealt
to your religion, for you teach us that caste is
sinful, while you Christians are building up a
white caste of your own.’ ”
For the life of me I cannot see any essential
difference between this white caste which we are
building up and the Brahman caste of India,
except that the former is based upon the color
of the pigment of the skin with which one hap-
pens to be born, and the other is based upon the
family into which birth brings one. They are
both based upon the accidents of birth. If there
is any real difference, it is in this, that the Brah-
man caste idea is according to his religion and
114 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
lias its sanction, and our white-caste idea is di-
rectly opposed to our faith and has its condemna-
tion, and therefore of the two ours is the more
hideous and reprehensible. Both should go.
A penetrating, but kindly old philosopher of
India, Bara Dada, the brother of Dr. Rabindra-
nath Tagore, pronounced this judgment: as we
sat in the evening talking for long hours about
these things he thoughtfully said, “Jesus is ideal
and wonderful, but you Christians — you are not
like him.”
If we should be like him, if we should catch
his spirit and outlook, what would happen? A
Hindu lecturer on educational subjects was ad-
dressing an audience of educationalists in South
India when he paused and said : “I see that a
good many of you here are Christians. Now, this
is not a religious lecture, but I would like to
pause long enough to say that, if you Christians
would live like Jesus Christ, India would be at
your feet to-morrow.” He said nothing less than
the very truth.
Another Hindu put the matter just as strongly
but in different words. He was a Hindu head
judge of a native state and was the chairman of
my meeting. At the close of the address he
spoke to the audience in these words : “You have
heard to-night what it means to be a Christian.
If to be like Christ is what it means, I hope you
will all be Christians in your lives.” Then turn-
THE GREAT HINDRANCE
115
ing to us who were Christians he said : “I have
one word to speak to you : If you Christians
had lived more like Jesus Christ, this process of
conversion would have gone on much more
rapidly.” It was sincerely and truly said.
This judgment of the West by the East in the
light of the person of Jesus is powerfully ex-
pressed in the lines which a Bengali poet wrote
on Christmas Day and sent to my friend, Mr.
C. F. Andrews :
“Great-souled Christ, on this the blessed day
of your birth, we who are not Christians bow
before you. We love and worship you, we non-
Christians, for with Asia you are bound with the
ties of blood.
“We, the puny people of a great country, are
nailed to the cross of servitude. We look mutely
up to you, hurt and wounded at every turn of
our torture — the foreign ruler over us the crown
of thorns; our own social caste system the bed
of spikes on which we lie.
“The world stands aghast at the earth hunger
of Europe. Imperialism in the arms of Mam-
mon dances with unholy glee. The three witches
—War Lust, Power Lust, Profit Lust— revel on
the barren hearths of Europe holding their
orgies.
“There is no room for thee there in Europe.
Come, Lord Christ, come away! Take your
stand in Asia— the land of Buddha, Kabir and
116 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
Nanak. At the sight of you our sorrow-laden
hearts will be lightened. O Teacher of love,
come down into our hearts and teach us to feel
the sufferings of others, to serve the leper and
the pariah with an all-embracing love.”
This poetic appeal loses none of its power of
judgment and appeal even if we could have
Avished that he had said that instead of Christ
coming away he had asked that he Avould enter
more deeply into the life of the West. Come,
Lord Christ, come away? Nay, Lord Christ, do
not go away ! For we too have sorroAV-laden
hearts; and if the East is crucified on a cross of
servitude, we are being crucified on a cross of
materialism. We both need thee — desperately.
This judgment of the East is a call calling us
back to our own Master and Lord. As such Ave
welcome it. It shocks us from our smug com-
placency. It is the earthquake that does not
destroy us, but looses our chains. It is the angel
that smites us and says, “Arise.” This searching
criticism of the East is a Godsend to keep us
from falling asleep after taking an overdose of
the opiate of material prosperity. It is God's
own voice to us. It is stabbing us awake.
This story tells Avhat I mean. An Indian
Christian doctor came to see me one morning in
a far-off hill station. He said he was deeply
troubled in mind. He unfolded this story: “I
was a ship’s doctor. In Hongkong I met a Parsee
THE GREAT HINDRANCE
117
with whom I became friendly. One day he
turned to me and said, ‘Are you living the Chris-
tian life?’ ‘It is impossible,’ I answered. ‘Dif-
ficult but not impossible,’ he replied, ‘for His
living Presence gi\ T es you power.’ I found that
though he was a Parsee he Avas more of a Chris-
tian than I was. When my boat sailed back to
India my Parsee friend was on the dock to see
me off. As the ship pulled off from the dock
he put his hands to his mouth and shouted to me
across the widening gulf, ‘Remember, Seek ye
first the kingdom of God and his righteousness,
and all these things shall be added unto you.’
The sight of that Parsee and the sound of his
voice calling to me that phrase ‘Seek first the
Kingdom’ have haunted me. I haven’t been seek-
ing the Kingdom first. I hav r e come to you to
pray with me.” There we knelt, and that fine
doctor made the surrender and arose, adjusted
to the will of Christ — and happy. The Kingdom
was to be first ! But the anomaly : a Parsee had
led him to it !
Across the widening gulf betAveen East and
West I see the awakened East, realizing Iioav
deeply endangered we are by materialism and
racialism, and knowing that only as we are saved
can Ave save them, putting its hands to its lips
and calling to us of the West, “Seek first the
kingdom of God.” May it haunt and avoo us to
repentance and to Christ as it did my Indian
118 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
brother ! Only thus can we turn back and share
and save.
The situation is summed up in the words of a
far-seeing Christian thinker and statesman : “We
recognize that conditions in the West demand
an indubitable and pervasive humility on the
part of Christians, and that a deep sense of na-
tional and racial repentance should accompany
any further missionary work that we may do.”
With these brave words of the Christian
thinker agree the penetrating but kindly counsel
of India’s great soul, Mahatma Gandhi. In con-
versation with him one day I said, “Mahatma
Gandhi, I am very anxious to see Christianity
naturalized in India, so that it shall be no longer
a foreign thing identified with a foreign people
and a foreign government, but a part of the na-
tional life of India and contributing its power
to India’s uplift and redemption. What would
you suggest that we do to make that possible?”
He very gravely and thoughtfully replied: “I
would suggest, first, that all of you Christians,
missionaries and all, must begin to live more
like Jesus Christ.” He needn’t have said any-
thing more — that was quite enough. I knew that
looking through his eyes were the three hundred
millions of India, and speaking through his voice
were the dumb millions of the East saying to me,
a representative of the West, and through me to
that very West itself, “If you will come to us
THE GREAT HINDRANCE
119
in the spirit of your Master, we cannot resist
yon.” Never was there a greater challenge to
the West than that, and never was it more sin-
cerely given. “Second,” he said, “I would sug-
gest that you must practice your religion without
adulterating or toning it down.” This is just as
remarkable as the first. The greatest living non-
Christian asks us not to adulterate it or tone it
down, not to meet them with an emasculated
gospel, but to take it in its rugged simplicity
and high demand. But what are we doing? As
someone has suggested, we are inoculating the
world with a mild form of Christianity, so that
it is now practically immune against the real
thing. Vast areas of the Christian woi'ld are
inoculated with a mild form of Christianity, and
the real thing seems strange and impossible. As
one puts it, “Our churches are made up of people
who would be equally shocked to see Christian-
ity doubted or put into practice.” I am not
anxious to see India take a mild form — I want
her to take the real thing. “Third, I would sug-
gest that you must put your emphasis upon love,
for love is the center and soul of Christianity.”
He did not mean love as a sentiment, but love as
a working force, the one real power in a moral
universe, and he wanted it applied between indi-
viduals and groups and races and nations, the
one cement and salvation of the world. With a
soul so sensitive to the meaning of love no won-
120 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
der there were tears in his eyes when I read him
at that point the thirteenth chapter of First
Corinthians. “Fourth, I would suggest that you
study the non-Christian religions and culture
more sympathetically in order to find the good
that is in them, so that you might have a more
sympathetic approach to the people.” Quite
right. We should be grateful for any truth found
anywhere, knowing that it is a finger post that
points to Jesus, who is the Truth.
When I mentioned these four things to the
Chief Justice of the High Court in North India,
the noble, sympathetic, Christian Britisher ex-
claimed : “He could not have put his finger on
four more important things. It took spiritual
genius and insight to do that.”
When I asked another nationalist leader the
same question as to what we must do to nat-
uralize Christianity, he replied, “You must have
more men like and ,” naming two
men among the missionaries who were devoted
lovers of Christ and of India.
Here, then, is the epitome of the whole thing:
From every side they say we must be Christian,
but Christian in a bigger, broader way than we
have hitherto been.
One word of caution : Some who have little
love for endeavors of uplift for those outside
their own racial group may seize on the above
THE GREAT HINDRANCE
121
chapter as a justification for withdrawing every-
thing from others and concentrating it upon
themselves, forgetting that this is a disastrous
fallacy, for the moment we cease to share with
others where there is seemingly no return and
recompense to ourselves, that moment we cease
to be Christian. We cannot be Christian and
concentrate ourselves on ourselves. America can
never be Christian apart from its world task.
“Oh, East is East and West is West,
And never the twain shall meet.”
So spake a son of man — and erred!
Oh, man is man and man with man shall meet,
So taught the Son of man, and at his feet,
Bade us there learn the worth of human worth;
To see the man apart from race and birth.
To find in Aryan pale and Aryan brown,
In Mongol and in sun-blacked African,
The oneness of humanity — the same
God-touched, aspiring, worthful soul of man.
*••••••••
Boast not, Oh Aryan pale, o’er Aryan brown,
Of greatness not in thee — ’tis in the gift !
For, once, a nail-pierced Hand of Asia touched
Thy life and grants thee now his gracious lift.
Beware, lest in the roll of judging years,
That Hand, withdrawn from thee through pride
of race,
May touch to power those races now despised,
And grant to them thy forfeit — power and place.
122 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
The Master bids thee lose thy petty self
In service, and thy help to brothers give;
And thou shalt truly find thyself again,
’Twill be thy gain, and others too shall live.
Thus freed from tribal mind and attitude,
Thy Christianed soul, with self renounced, shall
find
A larger, richer self of brotherhood;
Since, with the Christ, it has the Kingdom mind.
A Kingdom where there is no East nor West ;
There are no walls dividing clan from clan;
But brotherhood as wide as humankind,
And with a King who is the “Son of man.”
Oh, man is man, and man with man shall meet,
So speaks the Son of man. O Master! shamed,
But learning, sit we here — here at thy feet.
CHAPTER VII
THE QUESTION HOUR
While at one of the university centers of
America it was announced that I would answer
questions at the close if the audience desired.
Among those who stayed were many students,
American and foreign, and among them some
Hindus from India. These Hindu students put
me through a grilling for several hours. At the
close I remarked to someone: “This is the first
time I have really felt at home in America. I
feel as though I have been in India to-night.”
After almost every meeting in India w r e allow
the non-Christians to ask questions — and grilled
we are!
When I began to throw open my meetings in
India for questions I knew I \vas inviting disas-
ter, for the Hindu mind is quite as good as ours,
and he loves argument. Besides the possibility
of having everything you have said in your ad-
dress upset by questions, I was quite conscious
of another danger. Christianity cannot be un-
derstood except in a quiet mood of moral and
spiritual receptivity and insight. Questions
often change the quiet atmosphere to one of bel-
323
124 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
ligerency. Nevertheless, there was so much mis-
understanding, so much rejecting of a caricature
of Christianity, that I felt we should face every-
thing fairly and dodge no issue.
I would not have dared to do it had I not been
given in the very beginning of this work a verse
that has seemed my very own : “And when they
shall deliver you up before kings and governors
for my name’s sake for a testimony unto them, be
not anxious what ye shall speak, for it shall be
given you in that hour what ye shall speak, for
it is not ye that speak, but the spirit of your
Father which speaketh in you.” That assurance
was sufficient for me. I believed it. I could do
nothing less.
The question hour becomes tense at times, but
we have tried to make it a point never to let it
degenerate into a mere quibble, or to allow it to
stir bad blood. To lose one’s temper would be
to lose one’s case, for we are not there to win
arguments, but to win men. I cannot remember
when ill feeling has been left after any single
meeting. We have tried to demonstrate inci-
dentally that one can discuss these thorny ques-
tions with quiet good humor.
There is an amazing range of questions from
those of a confused, but spiritually earnest,
questioner, to the questions of the quibbler who
desires to show off his smartness. To let you see
what questions India is asking, I give a few sam-
THE QUESTION HOUR
125
pies taken almost at random from many hun-
dreds sent up :
Ques. — Is Christianity a universal religion? If so,
why are there sectional feelings going on?
Catholics hate Protestants, the Greek Church
contradicts both.
Ques. — Why did God make a world where he ought
to have known evil would come, where brutes
who trade on hunger, who convert into coin
the patience of the poor, the sweat of slaves,
would exist? Where rascally sycophants
would have power and righteous men rot in
jails; where, in short, Christ would be cruci-
fied? Who is responsible for such a world?
Ques. — Do you sincerely believe that there are many
fine Christians having the true democratic
spirit of Christ? How do you account for
the feeling of racial superiority which the
Westerners have? What Christian spirit is
that which makes Australians, the Cana-
dians, and the people of America, prevent
Indians from coming into their country and
enjoying equal privileges with them?
Ques. — Does not the present war — a war among the
followers of Christ — prove that there is
something wrong with the teachings of
Christ?
Ques. — Supposing that from four corners in a square
four men desire to get to the center.
They will go in different directions, but they
will get to the center. There are different
religions but they all lead to the center : God.
But the ways are not the same. Why do
you say there is only one way? There are
126 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
THE QUESTION HOUR
127
many ways. You cannot prescribe the same
drug for every disease.
Ques. — In your lecture last evening you took it for
granted that all the stories in the gospel are
true. Is it not possible that the writers, who
were not men of culture, either distorted the
facts or exaggerated them ? Could it not be
that their enthusiasm misled them into
wrong judgments and that they wrote out
even false rumors among the ignorant
masses?
Ques.— I wdll pay Christianity the compliment of
thinking that if the w r orld w r ere ruled by
strict Christian tenets, it w'ould be a semi-
paradise. But the grim fact of our experi-
ence is that it is the Christian that has by
iniquitous means come by the major portion
of this planet, which he keeps under his iron
rod. So is it not more proper that the mis-
sionaries, with their gifts of head and heart,
endeavored to moralize their own coreligion-
ists instead of pursuing the wild-goose chase
of conversion, for, after all, numbers are ab-
solutely irrelevant to the greatness of a
faith ?
Ques.— How is it that divorces are a part of Chris-
tianity in the West?
Ques. — Is King George a real Christian? Then,
pointing to a prominent Indian Christian in
front, he asked, “Is Mr. J here a real
Christian ?”
Ques. Don’t you think we could put Mohammedan-
ism and Christianity together? Jesus lived
a very high, a very lofty, a very ideal, a very
sinless life, and he did not marry. Moham-
med did marry, so I suggest that w 7 hen we
put these two religions together we make
Jesus the theory or ideal of the religion and
Mohammed the practice.
Ques. — We are tw r o young men who after hearing
your addresses desire to become Christians.
But as you seem to be a holy man, we would
like to test your powers; we are not going
to sign this letter — can you tell us who we
are?
Ques. — Why do Christians wear neckties? Is it the
sign of the Cross or is it a custom ?
Ques. — How r is it that women in Christianity are in
the lowest degradation, they are considered
an object of scorn, they have no rights of
any kind, while in Mohammedanism when
Mohammed said, “What is due from her is
due to her,” he raised her at one bound to
an equality with man? Is this no improve-
ment on Christianity? (Sent in by a Moham-
medan.)
Ques. — If salvation of human beings lies only
through faith in Jesus, w T hat is to happen to
those w r ho cannot sincerely believe in the
Christian gospel?
Ques. — What is to happen to the souls of those who
have never had the opportunity of hearing
the gospel of Christ?
Ques. — If I suffer for my misdeeds, and if it is right
before God and man that I should suffer,
why should a man in his ignorance come and
help me in the name of love? Is he not un-
consciously weakening my cause, and thwart-
ing God’s plan and Nature’s law? Is not
the social servant an indiscreet almsgiver?
128 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
Ques. — It is again said that after man fell even then
God did not forsake him, but devised a plan
by which he might be restored to a great
happiness that he lost. And what forsooth
is this “plan” ? Why, he sent his Son to die
for them, and this also after having allowed
thousands of years to pass by and millions
of people hopelessly to perish and to go to
that place of torment called “hell,” which he
had prepared for them. Now, is this not an
old woman’s tale such as the nurses frighten
the babes withal?
Ques. — Why does a Hindu accept Christ, but reject
Christianity ?
Ques. — Can moral life, even if it is touched with
emotion, satisfy the human soul which is
yearning for the imperishable and eternal
union with the Eternal Spirit transcending
all limitations of space and relativity?
Ques. — Is the world safe for Christ ? If Christ were
to come to-day among the Christian nations
of the earth, do you think he would not be
crucified ?
Ques. — Can one be a Christian without baptism?
Ques. — Do you think that to be a follower of Christ
fully and truly one should accept Christian
dogma also? Would you agree with the
Frenchman who defined dogma as the living
faith of the dead and the dead faith of the
living?
Ques. — May it be pointed out in all humility and
reverence that it is necessary to preach
Christ instead of Christianity to India?
Ques. — Is the idea of redemption peculiar to Chris-
tianity and foreign to other religions? Do
THE QUESTION HOUR
129
you not think that the idea of God as Friend
and Companion is the insistent note of the
non-monistic school of Indian thought such
as Vaishnavism?
Ques. — If Christianity is fitted to become a universal
religion, what new and exclusive truths has
it to teach over and above what other great
religions like Hinduism or Buddhism have
taught?
Ques. — If a religion should appeal to men of dif-
ferent natures and temperaments in order to
claim universal acceptance, then has not
Hinduism, which shows three paths, namely,
Gnana, Karma, and Bhakti, better claim to
it, than Christianity, w^hich indicates only
the paths of love and Bhakti?
Ques. — Is not Hinduism, which teaches belief in a
personal as well as impersonal God, more
satisfying to less developed as w r ell as more
developed souls alike than Christianity,
which teaches only the former?
Ques. — As materialism, luxury, and intemperance
have been knowm to follow r in the w r ake of
Christianity, how r can it appeal to the Hin-
dus, w r hose outlook on life and its problems
is preeminently spiritual?
Ques. — As Christianity has no system of philosophy
behind it, but is only a God of ethical con-
duct, how r is it suited to satisfy the philo-
sophically minded Hindu race?
Ques. — If Jesus is only a God-man, as you said yes-
terday, wKat better claim has he than other
equally great God-men like Buddha or Rama,
Krishna, Pramahamsa, to become a universal
teacher?
130 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
Ques.-What tests shall I perform, if any, to under,
stand the saving power of Christ ?
Mv most difficult moments are not with the
written questions, but in those meetings where
oral questions are shot at one. I have been cross-
examined by as many as thirty lawyers at one
time trying for hours to beat down the evidence.
But im yei has been true. I cannot remember
a single situation in nine years where it has
failed me. There have been some very close
Ca . lls : For instance > one niglit a man arose and
asked, ‘ Can you put your finger on a verse where
Jesus calls himself the Son of God? Not where
his disciples or someone else called him that but
where he himself did.” A sinking feeling went
over me. I had a rather hazy notion about
where there was such a passage, but I couldn’t
remember just where it was, and he wanted me
to put my finger on it ! I turned to my New Tes-
tament with a prayer to find that verse. As I
opened it the first verse my eyes fell upon was
an entirely different one from the one I was look-
ing for, the one where Jesus met the man whom
he had healed and asked him if he believed on
the Son of God. The man replied, “Who is he,
Lord, that I might believe on him?” Jesus re-'
plied, “Thou hast both seen him, and he it is
that speaketh unto thee.” I read it off as if I
had known about it all the time! They never
THE QUESTION HOUR
131
knew the quiet little miracle that God had per-
formed to fulfill his promise that it should be
given in that hour what one should speak ! But
I knew, and thanked him.
I have found a good many nervous Christians
since coming home who are afraid that this
whole thing of Christianity might fall to pieces
it someone should get too critical, or if science
should get too scientific. Many of the saints are
now painfully nervous. They remind me of a
lady missionary with whom I walked home one
night after a very tense meeting in a Hindu
theater. She said, “Mr. Jones, I am physically
exhausted from that meeting to-night.” When
I asked her the reason she said, “Well, I didn’t
know what they were going to ask you next, and
I didn’t know what you were going to answer,
so I’ve been sitting up there in the gallery hold-
ing on to the bench with all my might for two
hours, and I’m physically exhausted!” There are
many like our sister who are metaphorically
holding to their seats with all their might lest
Christianity fall to pieces under criticism!
I have a great deal of sympathy with them, for
I felt myself in the same position for a long time
after I went to India. The whole atmosphere
was acid with criticism. I could feel the acid
eat into my very soul every time I picked up a
non-Christian paper. Then there came the time
when I inwardly let go. I became willing to turn
132 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
Jesus over to the facts of the universe. I began
to see that there was only one refuge in life and
that was in reality, in the facts. If Jesus
couldn’t stand the shock of the criticism of the
facts discovered anywhere, if he wasn’t reality,
the sooner I found it out the better. My willing-
ness to surrender Christ to the facts was almost
as great an epoch in my life as my willingness to
surrender to him. In the moment of letting go
I could almost feel myself inwardly turning pale.
What would happen? Would the beautiful
dream fade? To my happy amazement I found
that he not only stood, but that he shone as never
before. I saw that he was not a hothouse plant
that would wither under the touch of criticism,
but he was rooted in reality, was the very living
expression of our moral and spiritual universe—
he was reality itself.
I have, therefore, taken my faith and have put
it out before the non-Christian world for these
seventeen years and have said, “There it is, my
brothers, break it if you can.” And the more
they have smitten upon it the more it has shone.
Christ came out of the storms and will weather
them. The only way to kill Christianity is to
take it out of life and protect it. The way to
make it shine and show its genius is to put it
down in life and let it speak directly to life itself.
Jesus is his own witness. The Hindus have
formed societies called Dharm Raksha Sabhas—
THE QUESTION HOUR
133
Societies for the Protection of Religion. Jesus
does not need to be protected. He needs to be
presented. He protects himself.
I could therefore reply to my sister mentioned
above that in that stormy meeting I had been
having the time of my life, that I wanted them
to go into the matter, for if they would only go
deep enough, they would stand face to face with
Jesus. For he did not come to bring a way of
life — he came to be Life itself, and if they go
deep enough into life, they would find themselves
facing Jesus, who is Life itself. He did not come
to bring a set of truths to set alongside of other
truth's, as some have superficially imagined, he
came to be Truth; and if one goes far enough
with truth, it will lead him by the hand till he
faces him who is Truth itself. Dean Inge rightly
says, “Jesus did not come to bring a religion but
to be Religion,” and if we are seriously religious
we will have to be according to his mind and
spirit or else fail to be religious. In the language
of Matthew Arnold, “Jesus is an Ultimate.”
Start in at the thing that you know is worth
while and follow it back to its final form and see
where it lands you. For instance, love is a
worth-while thing in life. We ought to love.
Then trace love back to its ultimate kind and you
will not be far from Him who loved as never man
loved. If purity is a good thing, then start with
it and go on back and see what kind of ultimate
134 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
purity it brings you to, and you will find yourself
looking into the eyes of Him who was “the Pur-
est among the mighty, and the Mightiest among
the pure.” If self-sacrifice is life’s most noble
quality, then run it back to its finest type and
you will find yourself gazing upon a cross.
I am therefore not afraid of the question hour,
for I believe that Jesus underlies our moral and
spiritual universe deeper than the force of grav-
ity underlies our material universe. And al-
though I know I cannot answer many things—
for the case is bigger than the pleader — I believe
that some way, somehow, some time, men's minds,
groping like the tendril of the vine that reaches
out for the wall and finally touching it fastens
itself upon its solid reality, will ultimately fas-
ten upon Jesus as that Reality.
But more difficult to meet than the question
hour is when they test us not with questions but
by whether we have truly caught the Christ
spirit. The big question that India silently and
relentlessly asks is not how keen a mind has he?
but has he the mind of Christ?
This was brought vividly home to me one day
when two Hindu youths, dressed very plainly
and in bare feet, came to talk with me. I had
had many interviews that day, but none of them
did I enjoy like the hour I had with these young
men. They were so eager and alert and respon-
sive. The next day they came again, this time
THE QUESTION HOUR
135
to make an explanation. They told me who they
were — SO ns of the wealthiest and most prom-
inent people in the city. They had purposely
come the day before barefoot and with very poor
clothes on to test me, to see whether I really
meant it when I had said the preceding night
that Jesus looked on people as such, apart from
race and birth and color and possessions, and
whether I would practice it in my attitude to-
ward them dressed in poor clothes! They said
that they had previously thought of becoming
Christians and determined to make this a test
as to whether they would or not. It was all done
so naively and simply that one could not but feel
it was genuine, especially when they said they
were now ready to become Christians.
This event did not elate me, it sobered me,
for the serious thought kept haunting me, how
easy it would have been to have said the careless
word and to have assumed a patronizing atti-
tude— both of which I had often done — when so
much hung upon the slightest act or attitude!
India is asking questions; those that she asks
with her lips are serious and searching, but of
far more vital concern are the silent weighings
and inward judgments of us by which India
comes to her conclusions about Christ.
The High Priest asked Jesus “of his disciples
and of his teaching.” The non-Chistian world is
asking those same two things and always in that
136 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
order. “What life have you?” “What light have
you?”
I took my lamp and went and sat
Where men of another creed and custom
Dwelt together in bonds of common search.
I pressed my lamp close to my bosom,
Lest adverse winds of thought and criticism,
And the damp of unsympathy should snuff it out.
And many a trembling prayer hung upon my lips.
But I determined that I would love — just love.
I loved and listened and learned, and now and
then
Threw in a thought or word or observation.
I heard their gentle speech, saw their mild ways;
Felt the Hand of Peace rest gently on my soul.
Here was not the tearing of the flesh,
Nor the fierce agony of the spirit, in its quest for God.
They gently searched and, through the crevices of
their thought,
The light of our Father’s Face streamed in.
They caught the footfalls of the Mighty Spirit,
As he moved each moment through palpitating
Nature.
And I heard them tune their heart-strings to catch
the music
Of God, as he hummed and sang through things.
But when, in sympathetic talk and mutual quest,
I asked the learned pundit whether he had found
A “jiwan mukta,” one who knew deliverance, here
and now;
He sadly shook his head and said, “I have not seen.”
THE QUESTION HOUR 137
In his voice spoke an aching world: “I have not
seen.”
Then there stole within my heart a quiet joy ;
For I saw, amid the search of peoples and races,
One standing, who, with Chalice in hand, offered here
and now
To thirsty souls a crystal draught of life eternal,
Which, if a man drink, he shall never thirst again.
Had I not drunk? Had he not put the Chalice
To my parched lips and, with thirst assuaged,
Had not my happy soul gone singing down the years?
A child had thus revealed to him, through prayer and
Surrender of the mind and will, that for which
The wise and prudent had vainly searched
And caught but glimpses; while I, unworthy,
Stood face to Face.
As I pondered thus, I glanced, with trembling, at
my lamp —
And lo, it burned up brighter than before!
CHAPTER VIII
JESUS THROUGH EXPERIENCE
Religion is the life of God in the soul issu
ing in the kingdom of God on earth. But first
of all it is the life of God in the soul. Religion
means realization. If not, then religion soon
means ritual, and that means death.
The early disciples had little ritual but a
mighty realization. They went out not remem-
bering Christ, but realizing him. They did not
merely call him back into memory, they com-
muned with him in the deeps. He was not a
mere fair and beautiful story to remember with
gratitude — he was a living, redemptive, actual
Presence then and there. They went out with
the joyous and grateful cry, “Christ liveth in
me !” The Jesus of history had become the Christ
of experience. They were almost irresistible, for
they brought certainty into that uncertain world.
Pliny the Elder had said, “There is nothing cer-
tain save the absence of certainty,” and Plato
longed for “some sure word from God” that
would be a raft to carry him across the uncertain
seas of human existence. The apostles brought
certainty.
138
JESUS THROUGH EXPERIENCE 139
Someone has suggested that the early Chris-
tians conquered that pagan world because they
out-thought, they out-lived and they out-died the
pagans. But that was not enough: they out-
experienced them. Without that it would have
lacked the vital glow. If the word of Christ be-
comes paramount in India, it will be because
i hose who follow' him out-experience those who
do not follow' him. When Elijah stood upon
Mount Carmel he made this the test : “The God
that answers by fire let him be God.” The test
of the surviving God is now different. We say,
“The God that answers by producing radiant
healed men let him be God.” It is just that cer-
tain note that needs to be struck in India. Not
the note of aggressive dogmatism, but the per-
suasive note of Christian experience.
If, as someone suggests, all great literature is
autobiography, then all great appeals to the non-
Christian world must be a witness. Drummond
would never preach anything that had not first
gone through his oxvn experience, and Drum-
mond therefore spoke with pow r er.
Doctor Farquhar said to me regarding this
matter: “There are tw'o things that are almost
irresistible to the Indian mind just now — Christ
and Christian experience.” I agreed most heart-
ily. for it was the thing I had been driven to :
Christ must be interpreted through Christian
experience.
140 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
But the Hindu has this reservation: he does
not feel that a religious experience should be
shouted from the housetops, he feels that to do
this would be indelicate and would take away its
bloom and beauty. Results should be whispered
to one’s neighbors. Doctor Tagore told me of the
man whom he had found who had come into a
great spiritual experience. He asked him if he
was not going to tell it to the world? “No,” he
said ; “if it is real, they will come to me.” When
I told the head pundit of an ashram that I had
found one Hindu who said he was a jiwan mukta
— one who had found living salvation — he re-
plied, “He was not one if he said he was one.”
I can share the hesitancy of the Hindu when he
feels the indelicacy of speaking about it.
But the genius and glory of Christian experi-
ence is that we have not earned it — it is a gift,
absolutely undeserved and unmerited. When
one accepts it he loses all thought of the part
he has had in it, and rapturously thinks of the
Giver. It is not boasting, it is testimony. It
is sharing with others what has been shared
with us. We are to be witnesses in behalf of
Another.
The Christ of the Indian Road pauses as he
passes through the throngs and says, “Who
touched me?” Knowing what the healing has
meant to us, we can only acknowledge that our
trembling touch upon him has meant life to us.
JESUS THROUGH EXPERIENCE 141
This lesson of being a witness was burned into
niv very being by a tragic beginning of my Chris-
tian ministry. When I was called to the min-
istry I had a vague notion that I was to be God’s
lawyer — I was to argue his case for him and put
it up brilliantly. When I told my pastor of my
call lie surprised and thoroughly frightened me
by asking me to preach my first sermon on a
certain Sunday night. I prepared very thor-
oughly, for I was anxious to make a good im-
pression and argue his case acceptably. There
was a large crowd there full of expectancy, for
they wished the young man well. I began on
rather a high key. I had not gone a half dozen
sentences when I used a word I had never used
before (nor have I used it since!) — “indifferent-
ism.” When I used that word I saw a college
girl in the audience put down her head and
smile. It so upset me that when I came back to
the thread of my discourse it was gone — abso-
lutely. I do not know how long I stood there rub-
bing my hands hoping that something would
come back. It seemed an age. Finally I blurted
out, “Friends, I am very sorry, but I have for-
gotten my sermon!” I started down the steps
leading from the pulpit in shame and confusion.
This was the beginning of my ministry, I thought
—a tragic failure. As I was about to leave the
pulpit a Voice seemed to say to me, “Haven’t I
done anything for you?”
142 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
“Yes,” I replied, “You have done everything
for me.”
“Well,” answered the Voice, “couldn't you tell
that?”
“Yes, I suppose I could,” I eagerly replied. So
instead of going to my seat I came around in
front of the pulpit below (I felt very lowly by
this time and was persuaded I did not belong
up there!) and said: “Friends, I see I cannot
preach, but I love Jesus Christ. You know what
my life was in this community — that of a wild,
reckless young man — and you know what it now
is. You know he has made life new for me, and
though I cannot preach I am determined to love
and serve him.” At the close a lad came up and
said, “Stanley, I wish I could find what you have
found.” He did find it then and there. He is a
member of that church now- — a fine Christian
man. No one congratulated me on that sermon
that night, but after the sting of it had passed
away, I have been congratulating myself ever
since. The Lord let me down with a terrible
thump, but I got the lesson never to be forgotten :
In my ministry I was to be, not God’s lawyer,
but his witness. That would mean that there
would have to be living communion with Christ
so that there would always be something to pass
on. Since that day I have tried to witness before
high and low what Christ has been to an un-
worthy life.
JESUS THROUGH EXPERIENCE 143
India wants to know r : What have you found?
The students of a Hindu college asked me to
come and to speak to them at the college and
they suggested the topic: “Tell your own per-
sonal religious experience.” Always, on the last
night of every series, I tell my personal expe-
rience. They forget many, if not most, of my
arguments, but they bring up this matter of
experience again and again. It grips.
While I was telling of my conversion in
I noticed a Hindu college professor nodding his
head with evident delight. At the close he came
up eagerly, gripped my hand and said : “Oh, that
is it. It is the new birth we need.” The next
day he showed me a school book he had written
for use in government colleges. It was Annota-
tions on Macaulay’s History of England. Mac-
aulay has given the Puritans a thrust, saying
that during the Puritan reign the students, in-
stead of studying the classics, were interrogated
as to how and when and in what circumstances
they received the new birth. This non-Christian
professor took up Macaulay in the matter and
in his comments said, “The pity is that Macaulay
did not understand the new birth.” Then he
quoted the whole of the Nicodemus episode and
finished up by saying, “Alas, the Nicodemuses
to-day do not understand how these things can
be.” Here was a non-Christian professor crit-
icizing a Christian historian for his lack of ap-
144 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
preciation of the new birth ! To lead a man like
that professor we must have something real ami
vital.
One day I was in the train with a Hindu law-
yer, and we discussed, almost argued, for abou:
three hours concerning Hindu and Christian
philosophy and teaching. I saw we were getting
nowhere, so I turned to him and said, “Would
you mind my telling you what Christ has done
for me?”
He eagerly replied, “No, I would like to hear.”
When I got through telling of my conversion
and the subsequent years there were tears in his
eyes, and he said : “Mr. Jones, you have attained.
You have reached the last stage of your rebirths.
You will never be reborn into this world.”
“That is probably true,” I replied, “for one
does not have to go through a weary round of
rebirths as you expect to, for here is the new
birth open to you — a straight, short-cut to the
Father.” There was deep earnestness again
when he said, “I wish I had that.” In his voice
spoke the voice of India — it is deliverance from
rebirths that India craves.
A Hindu student wrote to me, “After attend-
ing your addresses I w r ant to be a follower of
Christ, for I now see that my religion is a some-
what roundabout method of obtaining the king-
dom of God.” Somewhat roundabout! Yes,
eight million rebirths, may be. No wonder they
t M
JESUS THROUGH EXPERIENCE 145
shrink from such a prospect — from life itself.
It is a joy to offer the new birth as the way out.
Here is a letter to me from a Jain student
which speaks its own message of longing for
spiritual freedom:
I have deep faith in my own religion. I believe it
to be entirely true, but I need/ not be ashamed to
tell that it exacts unflinching 'duty and knows no
grace. Philosophically it is all right. You may be-
lieve, according to it, that the Power behind things
is supremely just and indifferent, but w r e err we
know not why, we are led on as it were on the waves
of sin and mistakes. There are powers too great for
our frail being, and I wish then that there were a
God who would be kind to me, who would feel my
weaknesses and who would extricate me from the
meshes of sin and temptation.
Can we come to a young man like that with
an argument, a doctrine, a superior Book? Un-
less we can gently and quietly, but with a radi-
ant positiveness share with that young man our
own deliverance and victory, we had better not
come. Has Christ any answer to a letter like
that? Here is the crux of the whole thing — Has
he, or has he not ? Some of us, knowing that v r e
were there, in that very condition, believe that
he has.
Let me pause here just long enough to say
that here is where a good deal of present-day
presentation is weak. That young man needs
146 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
something more than Jesus as Example and
Teacher. What he needed was not a Sage, but a
Saviour, not a moral Example but a moral Ex-
tractor, not a Redirector but a Regenerator, not
truths but Life.
In a class of Hindu and Mussulman students
at the Ashram at one of the students
spoke up suddenly and said, “Sir, would yon
mind telling us what has made your life what it
is?'’ It rather shocked me for a moment. It was
a bolt out of the blue, as there was nothing that
had led up to this. It was so absolutely spon-
taneous and real that I could but stop and
quietly and prayerfully tell them how Christ
had taken an unworthy broken life, and had
made it whole again, and had sent my happy
soul singing its way down these twenty years.
When I had finished, one of them spoke up and
said: “Now, sir, we are happy. That is what
we wanted to hear.” After the class some of
them came with me to my room and we sat and
talked for hours about it. In the afternoon some
of the young ladies wanted an appointment.
When I asked them what they wanted to talk
about, one of them answered and said : “We were
deeply impressed by what you said about your
own personal experience this morning. Do you
mind telling us something more about it?” And
there we sat a long time upon the floor with the
touch of the living Christ upon us all. Our
JESUS THROUGH EXPERIENCE 147
hearts burned within us as we talked with him,
and about him, by the way.
The Indian people are as sensitive to spiritual
things as the electric needle is to the pull of the
pole. In one place a Hindu committee asked
not to have questions at the close of the meet-
ing, “for,” they said, “it disturbs the beau-
tiful spiritual atmosphere of the meetings.” I
saw a Hindu professor go out at the close of
the address one night when the questions began.
When the questions were through and I sug-
gested that we might close the meeting with
prayer, I saw him come in from the veranda. At
the close of the prayer he came up and thanked
me and said : “I went out after your address and
stood on the veranda until the questions were
over, for in your address you had lifted us to
God and I did not want that feeling I had in my
heart dissipated or disturbed by the questions,
so I waited outside for the prayer, since in the
prayer you made us again realize his presence.”
One feels awed in the presence of such beautiful
spiritual sensitiveness as that.
A Hindu came up one night after the prayer
and said, “That was very fine, but why don’t
you begin the meetings with prayer?” I assented
and said I would do so the next night. But in
the anxiety to get in the thick of the battle I
went into the address without public prayer.
Of course one could not get into such a tense
148 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
situation where every word and idea is being |
challenged without preceding it with an hour or |
more of prayer, but I did not pray publicly.
While I was speaking I saw a note coming up;
the chairman handed it over to me. It read, “Sir,
you forgot to begin your meeting with prayer,
as you had promised.” I stopped my address,
acknowledged my fault, prayed, and went on.
But I never forgot the undertone of spiritual
yearning which that little incident revealed.
After I had had a long talk with a Hindu one
day as he was about to go I suggested that if he ,
liked, we might pray together. “Yes,” he said, “I I
will be glad to do so, but on one condition, and
that is, that you do not pray for things hut only
for God.”
“All right, my brother,” I replied, “we will
not pray for things but only for God,” and we
did! Could one face that hour without a deep
sense of need for reality and a joyous sense of
God? It is not a question as to whether we
would or would not interpret Christ through ex-
perience — we must. Or else there is no inter-
pretation that is adequate or touches the depths
of the situation. We cannot merely talk about
Christ to India — we must bring him. He must
be a living vital reality — closer than breathing
and nearer than hands and feet. We must be j
“God-bearers.”
This God-consciousness should be full and !
JESUS THROUGH EXPERIENCE 149
overflowing. A Hindu lawyer recognized this
and said to me one day, “What you Christians
and the church need to-day is a new Pentecost.”
I knew what he meant — we need Christianity as
a well of water within us springing up into ever-
lasting life. Principal Jacks pleads that we get
back “the lost radiance of the Christian reli-
gion.” Queer to hear a Hindu and a Unitarian
both pleading for a new fullness of life akin to
Pentecost! Even so, Pentecost is normal Chris-
tianity. But the church is largely subnormal
and anaemic. Because a few have gone up into
fever and have done queer things in the name of
this great Sanifying and Sanctifying of the hu-
man spirit by the inflooding of the Spirit of the
living Christ, there is no reason why all the rest
of us should be frightened away into an anaemic
Christianity. This Christ of the Indian Road
is saying, “Receive ye the Holy Ghost,” as well
as ‘‘Thy sins are forgiven thee.”
A friend of mine was preaching in the bazaar
in North India when a Hindu came up to him
and said, “I want to ask a question, not through
criticism but for information. I have been read-
ing the New Testament and am especially struck
with the Acts of the Apostles. These men seemed
to have had a wonderful power and fullness of
spiritual life. Sir, have you found what they
had?” My friend was speechless. Though he
was a graduate of a university and was a mis-
150 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
sionary, he knew in the inmost depths of being
that he did not have what the early disciples
seemed to have found. He went home, fell on his
knees, yielded himself fully to Christ and found!
His life became one of the richest and most beau-
tiful I have ever been privileged to see. When he
died a few years ago an Indian minister said.
“It is a good thing that did not die in
India, for we would have committed the sin of
worshiping his grave.”
India is reading the Bible and wants to know
whether our Christianity is like that. An Indian
boy, whose zeal and love were better than his
English, wrote to me about a great awakening
they were having: “We are having a great re-
bible here.” Not a bad mistake! We need to be
rehibled — especially at the place of the Acts of
the Apostles.
It was said of those early apostles that they
“testified and preached.” Their preaching was
throbbing with testimony. Since it came from
the heart it reached the heart. The last night
of a series of meetings in South India I spoke
on “Christ and Certainty.” On the inspiration
of the moment before closing the meeting I said,
“Now there are quite a number of Christians
here. I would like you to tell before your non-
Christian friends in a very few words what you
have found — what has Christ done for you?”
First of all, there stood up a convert from a low
JESUS THROUGH EXPERIENCE 151
caste and told what Christ had done for him. It
was befitting that he should speak first, for in
caste-filled India God was taking the weak
things to confound the mighty, just as it was
befitting that Carey the cobbler should be the
first teacher of Brahman India. After him arose
one who had been a Brahman Hindu and told of
what he had found. Then, to our surprise, the
head British official of the district arose and
said: “Seven years ago I could not have said
that I had found this that we have been talking
about here to-night. But seven years ago I
found it through an old lady, on board ship
coming out to India.” It was a rich testimony
from a very Christian life, simply told and mean-
ing much, for many of the men before him were
his subordinate officers. Then the leading Ro-
man Catholic layman of the city testified : “Of
course I have never spoken in a meeting of
this kind before, but I could not sit here and
refuse to tell before my non-Christian friends
what Christ is to me. I heard him say to me,
‘Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy
laden, and I will give you rest.’ I came. He
gave me rest.” It was a striking testimony.
Now feel the accumulated effect of that whole
thing. Here were low caste and high caste, Amer-
ican and Englishman, Protestant and Catholic,
telling before their Hindu friends what Christ
was to them. The Hindu chairman of the meet-
152 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
ing at the close thoughtfully said to me, “I can
answer most of your arguments, but I do not
know what to do with this.”
There in miniature was seen what a united
witness of the church would mean. Christendom
is now talking in different directions— a good
part of the time against others called Christians
and not much about the Lord — “finding a pre-
carious living,” as someone said of the people of
a certain island, “by washing each others
clothes.” But suppose we should come together
at the place of our common Lord and would with
one joyous voice witness of him, what would
happen — what? Something that would be irre-
sistible, as it was to that Hindu chairman.
In speaking of the witness of the lips, I do not
mean to overlook the fact that it must be a wit-
ness backed by life. “This man who is to speak
to-day is back of everything he says,” said the
chairman of a meeting in introducing a speaker.
He could have said nothing finer. A friend of
mine went into a shoe shop and found the Hindu
shopkeeper in deep distress. He had lost his
only son. My friend to comfort him said, “Well,
my brother, remember in your trouble that God
is love.” The Hindu’s face brightened up and
he said, “Yes, I know God is love.” My friend,
interested at his evident eagerness, asked, “How
do you know God is love?” “Oh,” said the
Hindu, “I worked for Foy sahib in Cawnpore,
JESUS THROUGH EXPERIENCE 153
and no one could work for Foy sahib and not
know God is love.” Here was a witness with
the whole of life behind it. Forty years of beau-
tiful living was speaking to the Hindu in his
hour of distress.
Christ interpreted through experience and
backed by fine living is almost irresistible to-
India to-day.
CHAPTER IX
WHAT OR WHOM?
This Christian spirit scattered here and there
in many hearts in India must express itself in
some kind of corporate relationships. Some kind
of a church will be the final outcome. We will
put our Western corporate experience at the
disposal of the forming church in India and we
will say to her, “Take as much as you may find
useful for your purposes, but be first-hand and
creative and express Christ through your own
genius.”
We know that this has its dangers. It might
be easier to block them off as they do in orphan
asylums and turn them out on a standard pat-
tern — easier and more deadly. The German
missionaries in their thoroughness have done
this in their missions. In the theological sem-
inaries the students are pumped full of truth.
They go out to take charge of churches where
they grind out that truth. In each church in the
whole of the mission the pastors preach on the
same texts, read the same lessons, and preach
the same sermons. They go round the circle of
truth once in three years. Then they begin over
154
WHAT OR WHOM?
155
again. It was all “faultily faultless, icily regu-
lar, splendidly null.”
Jesus did not do that. He gave himself to
(hem. When they got the life they created suit-
able raiment in which to clothe it. Life was more
than raiment.
While we cannot tell what may be the final
outcome of this expression of the Christ of the
Indian Road on the part of his followers in
India, we can see at this distance certain things
that will be avoided and certain things gained if
they center everything upon Christ.
If India keeps this vision clear, she will be
saved from many of the petty divisions that have
paralyzed us in great measure. For at the cen-
tral place of our experience of Jesus we are one.
It is Christ who unites us; it is doctrines that
divide. As someone has suggested, if you ask a
congregation of Christians, “What do you be-
lieve?” there will be a chorus of conflicting be-
liefs, for no two persons believe exactly alike.
Hut if the question is asked, “ Whom do you
trust?” then we are together. If the emphasis
in our approach to Christianity is “What?” then
it is divisive, but if the emphasis is “Whom?”
(lien we are drawn together at the place of this
Central Magnet. One has the tendency of the
centrifugal and the other the tendency of the
centripetal. He is the hub that holds together in
himself the divided spokes.
156 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
The church in China has been rent by con-
troversy. I can see reasons why this has hap-
pened. While there I was struck with the fact
that Christianity was, on the whole, presented to
the Chinese as good teaching, good doctrine, good
national policy. It seemed to me to lack just
this Christo-centric emphasis to which we have
been driven in India. It needed the warm touch
of the personal Christ to make it tingle with life
and radiance. At the Central Fire suspicions
groups could have warmed themselves and would
have felt the glow' of comradeship as they did so.
Christianity with a what-e mphasis is bound
to be divisive, but this tendency is lessened with
a WftoTO-emphasis. Note the things that have
created denominations in the West : baptism, hu-
man freedom, rites, ceremonies, church govern-
ment, dress, orders — the points of division have
been nearly all “wliats.” The church divided
once over the “Whom,” namely, in the Unitarian
issue. Here it had a right to divide, for the ques-
tion of who Jesus is is vital and decisive. Every-
thing is bound up w'ith that question.
This question of who Jesus is was thrown into
the very center of the church in India in recent
years. One keen Indian minister’s discovery of
the modern method rather went to his head land
landed him in a Unitarian position. He threw
the whole matter into the Indian church for air-
ing. Some of us held our breath as we watched
WHAT OR WHOM?
1ST
the controversy rage back and forth in one of
the papers for several years. The missionaries
practically stood out of it and let the growing
church come to its own conclusions as to who her
Lord is. In the beginning the brother of Uni-
tarian view's had the center and held it. But
gradually a change came, and w'hen the battle
was over, our brother and his views had been
pushed to the margin and a divine Christ occu-
pied the center. By the sheer force of his own
Person he had shone into the situation and had
clarified it. The Indian church has fought her
first battle — she knows w r ho her Lord is, not
merely through what the missionaries had said,
but because she had thought it through for her-
self. It was a living victory. At the close she
knelt at his feet w'ith a joy unknown before,
saying, “My Lord and my God.” This victory
came not by dogmatic assertion, but by pains-
taking methods of careful and prayerful re-
search.
Now, the significant thing was this, that at
the end of the battle men of liberal and conserva-
tive minds had been drawn together at Him. He
held them both. The problem of unity w'ill be
well on the way to solution if the Indian church
makes Christ central and all else marginal.
Some of the other problems that are now vex-
ing the mind of the West will not vex us if w r e
keep this Christocentric emphasis. Christianity
158 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
cannot be really understood with a what-emjjhi-
sis, but it can be understood with a Whom-m-
phasis. Take the whole question of the super-
naturalness of Christianity. It claims to be a
supernatural system. Now, as men’s minds have
discovered a universe of law this idea of a super-
naturally imposed system seemed less and less
credible until the attempt has been made to
rationalize the whole system, explain away the
miracles and reduce the whole thing to natural
law. But in Christianity we are not discussing
miracles in the light of natural law but in the
light of the personality of Jesus, and that makes
a difference — a very great one. The question is,
Would miracles happen around such a person-
ality as Jesus?
Now, we used to go at it something like this:
Jesus was born in a supernatural way, he did
supernatural things, he arose in a supernatural
manner, therefore he was a supernatural Person.
The miracles carried Jesus — the what carried
the Whom. This is obviously weak. It sends
the minds of men to the whats , where they wran-
gle over them and only incidentally get to the
Whom. If we were wiser, we would ask men to
lay aside the question of birth and miracle for
a moment, until they get under the sway of this
Person. Let them catch the force of this Mind
and Soul into which no impurity had ever en-
tered, no sin had ever marred, let them feel the
WHAT OR WHOM?
159
touch of him upon them, and then let them turn
from the standpoint of this Person to the ques-
tion of miracles and they become credible in the
light of what he is. In the light of natural law
miracle seems absurd, but in the light of this
person of Jesus it becomes the most natural of
things.
I once asked Professor Dreisch, the great Ger-
man philosopher and exponent of “Vitalism,”
this question : “Whenever you get a higher type
of life do you not expect that around that life
there will be a higher type of manifestation?”
He assented to this, and I asked him further,
‘•If Jesus represents a higher type of being,
would you not have to make room in your think-
ing that around that life would be a higher type
of doing which to us on a lower plane might be
considered miracle?” He replied : “Yes, if Jesus
represents a higher type of being, I would have
to make room in my thinking that around that
life would be the possibility of what might seem
to us on a lower plane miracle. But it would
have to be examined scientifically.” Precisely !
We are willing to rest everything on the ques-
tion of whether or not Jesus represented a higher
type of being. There is only one way to settle it :
.Stand before Jesus in inward moral surrender
and obedience and see if you can feel that what
you stand before is mere human nature. If he is
human nature, then we are not — we are sub-
160 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
human, for he stands above saint as well as sin-
ner. Professor Hogg, who has companioned with
this Christ of the Indian Road for many years
and knows him well, puts the matter in these
burning words : “When, as detached bystanders,
we look upon his features, as it were, in profile,
considering them singly and in repose, we seem
to find none that is not human, none at least that
does not belong to the nature which God designed
for man. But let us move in front and catch
his glance, so that the personality which lived
by means of these human endowments may pierce
our consciousness with a look in which its eager
passion and its tender pity, its searching purity
and its gracious comprehendingness, its assur-
ance of a world-redeeming vocation and its unaf-
fected neighborliness, its kingly demands and
its selfless devotion, make simultaneous impact
on our souls, and we shall then lose all intent
to measure or to classify; we shall know our-
selves in the presence of the utterly unique—
One who exacts worship instead of submitting
to appraisal. Merely look at Jesus, and you
behold a Man. But meet him face to face in
the inwardness of comradeship and obedience,
of faltering need and kingly succor, and you
know yourself to be meeting the very Person,
the very Self of God. I do not explain this; I
simply testify” ( Redemption From This World,
Hogg, pp. 65, 66 ) . And who that has tried it has
WHAT OR WHOM? 161
not felt what Professor Hogg so graphically ex-
pressed?
Here is the central miracle of Christianity:
Christ. The central miracle is not the resurrec-
tion or the virgin birth or any of the other mir-
acles; the central miracle is just this Person,
for he rises in sinless grandeur above life. He is
life’s Sinless Exception, therefore a miracle.
Now, turn from that Central Miracle toward
these lesser miracles and they become credible
in the light of his Person. Being what he was,
it would be amazing if he did not touch blind
eyes and make the lame to walk. These miracles
tit in with the central miracle of his Person.
‘ Being a miracle, it would be a miracle if he
did not perform miracles.” The miracles do not
carry Jesus — he carries them. The “whom” car-
ries the “what,” the Person carries the manifes-
tation. But say miracle apart from him and it
is confusing.
From this standpoint let us approach the
vexed question of the virgin birth. Discuss “vir-
gin birth” apart from Jesus and it seems in-
credible and absurd, but connect it with him
and it fits in with the whole and becomes cred-
ible. Let it be said at once that I do not base his
divinity on how he was born. If it had been said
that he was born in an ordinary way and I still
saw in him what I now see in him, I would still
believe in him as divine. Not how he came into
1C2 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
the world, but ivhat he was after he got here is
the most important thing. But in the light of
his Person I see no difficulty whatever in believ-
ing in the virgin birth. Since he rose above life
in sinless grandeur, it becomes possible to believe
that he arose above the ordinary processes of
birth. “The virgin life of Jesus makes it possi-
ble to believe in the virgin birth of Jesus.” An
Arya Samajist asked me if I could produce in
human history another example of the virgin
birth. I replied that I could not, for I could
not produce another Jesus Christ. He was the
Unique, and therefore did the unique.
A converted Jew was talking to an uncon-
verted Jew when the latter asked, “Suppose there
were a son born among us and it were claimed
that he was born of a virgin, would you believe
it?” The converted Jew very thoughtfully re-
plied, “I would if he were such a Son.” That is
the point. He makes it possible to believe in it.
But the virgin birth does not carry Jesus; he
carries it. When the emphasis is on the whom
then the how becomes credible. But turn it the
other way and it is dark and difficult.
In regard to the resurrection the same thing
holds. Jesus rose above life, this makes it per-
fectly credible that he would rise above death.
Two things take us all — sin and death. Jesus
conquered the first — our own inward moral con-
sciousness being witness. Will he conquer the
WHAT OR WHOM?
163
second? It would be surprising if he did not.
I say it reverently: If Jesus did not rise from
the dead, he ought to have done so. The whole
thing would come out wrong if the grave had
held him captive. When the broken and dispirited
disciples, now radiant with a wild hope, whis-
pered to each other, “He is arisen,” they were
simply echoing what his whole life had done.
Throughout his life he arose. Where we sank,
In* arose. The resurrection fits in with that fact.
There must be an empty tomb where there is
such a fullness of Life. Jesus carries the resur-
rection.
Christianity breaks into meaning when we see
Jesus. The incredible becomes the actual; the
impossible becomes the patent.
Do not misunderstand me: The whats of
Christianity are important, a body of doctrine is
bound to grow up around him. We cannot do
without doctrine, but I am so anxious for the
purity of doctrine that I want it to be held in
the white light of his Person and under the con-
stant corrective of his living Mind. The only
place where we can hold our doctrines pure is
to hold them in the light of his countenance,
llere their defects are at once apparent, but only
here.
But we must hold in mind that no doctrine,
however true, no statement, however correct,
no teaching, however pure, can save a man. “We
1G4 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
are saved by a Person and only by a Person, and.
as far as I know, by only one Person,” said
Bishop McDowell. Only Life can lift life. A
doctor lay dying — a Christian doctor sat beside
him and urged him to surrender to and have
faith in Christ. The dying doctor listened in
amazement. Light dawned. He joyously said,
“All my life I have been bothered with what to
believe, and now I see it is whom to trust.” Lite
lifted life.
But further, we shall soon see that as we draw
closer to him we shall be closer to each other in
doctrine. Suppose the essence of Christianity
is in utter devotion to Jesus, and truly following
him is the test of discipleship, will not such doc-
trine as the new birth take on new meaning?
If I am to follow such as he, I must be born again
and born different. A new birth is a necessary
beginning for this new life. And as for the doc-
trines of sanctification and the fullness of the
Spirit, apart from him, they may become hollow
cant, as they, in fact, have often become; but in
the business of following Jesus they become, not
maximum attainments, but minimum necessities.
It I am to follow him, he will demand my all, and
I shall not want to offer him less. Holiness has
been preached very often until it has become a
synonym for hollowness. The word has got
loosed from Christ and has lost its meaning.
Had it kept close to Christ, we would have
WHAT OR WHOM? 165
preached less holiness and more of a Christ who
makes men holy.
Surely, it is not difficult to believe in atone-
ment when we think of Christ. Would such love
as that let us go? Would he not go to the limit
for us? Put all the content in the word “atone-
ment” you can and it still but faintly tells what
Jesus would do for men.
As for the inspiration of the Scriptures, it
takes a deepened meaning from him. Discuss
the matter of the mechanics of it apart from
Jesus and it often becomes a haggle, but dis-
cuss it with our gaze upon him and it becomes a
necessity. It was inconceivable that such a per-
sou as Jesus could have come out of an unin-
spired or an ordinarily inspired Book. The
ideas, the conceptions, the Person is too lofty to
have been conceived by human intelligence how-
ever lofty it might have been. Just as he, being
the miracle that he was, created miracles around
him in human nature and the physical universe,
so also around him would be created the miracle
in human intelligence and insight, until things
which “eye had not seen, nor ear heard, neither
have entered into the heart of man,” would be
given forth to the world under the sway of that
Person.
But the statement made above about Jesus
coming out of an uninspired Book must be cor-
rected a bit, for Jesus did not come out of the
1G6 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
Book ; it came out of liim. It did not create him;
he created it.
And since, as someone has suggested, litera-
ture can never rise higher than life — for life puts
content and meaning into the literature — so you
cannot get a better Book until you get a better
life than the life of Jesus.
The strongest way to hold to the inspiration
of the Scriptures is to hold to the Person.
We must call men not to loyalty to a belief but
loyalty to a Person. We may be loyal to a belief
and be dead spiritually, but we cannot be loyal
to this Person and be other than alive spirit-
ually. He creates belief. He is the great Be-
liever himself, and in the light of his radiant
faith we cannot but believe. But we do not get
Jesus from our beliefs, we get our beliefs from
Jesus. And they must of necessity be under con-
stant correction by his mind and spirit.
If some are afraid of what might happen if we
were to give India Jesus without hard-and-fast
systems of thought and ecclesiastical organiza-
tion, lest the whole be corrupted, let our fears lie
allayed. Jesus is well able to take care of himself.
He trusted himself to the early disciples, who
were no better and no worse than the Indian
people; and having got hold of him they went
forth in that name with power. Having little
ecclesiastical system, little body of set doctrine,
they created their own forms out of the passion
WHAT OR WHOM?
16 ?
of love they had for him. These forms were real
because they came out of the white heat of that
passion. They expressed life. We believe that
India will fall intensely in love with the Christ
of the Indian Road, that love will turn to glad
submission to him as Saviour and Lord, that out
of that loving submission will come a new radi-
ant expression of him in thought and life.
We who feel that we must be steadiers of the
ark must remember that Jesus can take care of
himself, even in moments when there seems most
to fear. He fell into the hands of his Jewish
enemies — and lo, there was an atonement and a
resurrection! Are we afraid to have him fall
into the hands of his Indian friends? Will he
be swallowed up? Never mind, he was swal-
lowed up once before and there was a resurrec-
tion. There may be another ! I only know that
since he has come into India’s thought and life
everywhere there is the cracking of old things
and the breaking up of dead forms. It looks to
ns as though there is a resurrection taking place
now!
There is no real danger lest Jesus be lost
among the many in all this, that it may end up
in his being put in the Pantheon of Hinduism.
Greece and Rome tried that and the Pantheons
amid which he was placed are gone — Jesus lives
on. He is dynamic, disruptive, explosive like the
soft tiny rootlets that rend the monuments of
168 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
man’s pride. Like the rootlets lie quietly and
unobtrusively goes down into the crannies of I
men’s thinking, and lo, old forms and customs
are broken up. Absorb him? You may as well
talk about the moist earth in springtime absorb- I
ing the seed ! The seed absorbs it, for it is life. 1
Jesus is Life. He will take care of himself.
“Give us Jesus,” said a Hindu to me, “just I
Jesus. Do not be afraid that we will make a
human Jesus out of him, for his divinity will 1
shine out of its own accord.”
At any rate there never was a situation in
which Jesus was not Master, and never more so |
than when he was upon the cross, and even in I
the tomb. He will be Master upon the Indian
Road — yes, even at the crossroads of India where I
rival creed and clashing thought flow at cross I
purposes.
“Where cross the crowded ways of life,
Where sound the cries of race and clan
Above the noise of selfish strife,
We hear thy voice, O Son of man.”
CHAPTER X
CHRIST AND THE OTHER FAITHS
As Christ meets India and her past what is his
demand?
When Mohammedanism confronted Hinduism
the demand was of absolute surrender — a com-
plete wiping of the slate of the past and the dic-
tates of the prophet written in its stead. It is
no wonder that Hinduism withstood it, and does
withstand it, for its very life and past are
involved.
Does Jesus take that same attitude? Are his
demands upon India the same as Mohammed?
Is the slate to be wiped clean and the past abso-
lutely blotted out?
It must be confessed that this has often been
the attitude and demand of the Christian mis-
sionary. If Christianity is more or less identi-
fied with Western civilization and presented as
such, or if it is a system of church government
and a more or less fixed theological system,
blocked off and rigid and presented as such, then
I do not see how we can escape the attitude of
the Mohammedan. The past must be wiped out
and a clean slate presented for our theological
169
170 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
systems, our ecclesiastical organizations, and our
civilization to be written in its stead.
But if our message be Christ, and Christ alone,
then this does not necessarily follow. He may
turn to India as he turned to Judaism and sav,
“I came not to destroy but to fulfill.” Just as
he gathered up in his own life and person every-
thing that was fine and beautiful in Jewish teach-
ing and past and gave it a new radiant expres-
sion, so he may do the same with India. The fact
is that the words that he used would imply that,
for it is a generic term : “I came not to destroy
but to fulfill,” it is locally applied to the Law
and the Prophets, but capable of a wider appli-
cation to truth found anywhere.
There is no doubt that devout Hindus who see
worth-while and beautiful things in their faith
are deeply concerned as they see the decay of that
faith and wonder what the future will bring,
Hindus themselves frankly tell of that decay,
but always with a pang. The brilliant Hindu
editor of a newspaper in India said, “It is with
a pang that I see Hinduism decaying and dying.
. . . But I know how the Dhoms (outcastes)
feel, for I myself am an outcaste.” He had been
outcasted on his return from foreign study and
spoke out of a bitter experience.
The Hindu census commissioner of Baroda in
his report of 1921 states, “Hinduism perhaps
more than other faiths shows on its social side
CHRIST AND THE OTHER FAITHS 171
and its religious practices increasing signs of
disintegration.”
This open letter to M. T. Sheshagiri Aiyar,
Member Legislative Assembly, who introduced
legislation concerning the use of endowments to
temples, appeared in The Hindu Message, an or-
thodox paper : “I belong to the orthodox section
of Hinduism. ... I believe that you are aware
that the orthodox section, though in the majority,
are weak, disorganized, and voiceless. They be-
long to a rapidly dying race. In a generation or
two at the most they will be nowhere, and re-
formers like your esteemed self will have a
smooth way in seeking your cherished objects.
It is exactly therefore you that should show some
compassion toward the orthodox community and
allow it to pass away without feeling agony, for
chivalry does not consist in striking a fallen foe.
... In your recent bill which has become the
law of the land you have not provided for reli-
gious efficacy, but simply took compassion on
what you consider to be the woeful position of
women and have shed pious tears. Thus you
have helped to destroy the fabric of the ancient
Hindu institutions. . . . Though weak, the or-
thodox has to live in this world until he is thor-
oughly exterminated, and until then he is
destined to struggle for life.” That letter tells
its own story.
This scene also has its own inner meaning.
172 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
I was sitting in the train one day when two
members of the Legislative Council for Madras
began a heated conversation. One was a Brali
man and the other a non-Brahman, both able men.
They talked partly to me and partly at each
other. I remained outwardly neutral. The non-
Brahman in the midst of the argument said,
“Yes, there was a time when we would wash your
sacred feet and drink the water to purify our-
selves, but now our eyes have been opened and
we have thrown you over.”
“Yes,” replied the Brahman, “you have, and
with it you have thrown over your religion.’’
“Well,” shot back the other, “if this is reli-
gion, then religion be damned!”
There is no doubt that Brahmanism as a re-
ligion centering in the Brahman is being slowly
undermined — very rapidly so, some would say.
This feeling is at the back of the Brahman at-
tack upon Gandhi for his anti-untouchability
campaign.
A keen Hindu put the matter to me in rather
vulgar but vivid language: “Christianity is in-
creasing and Hinduism is dying — damn it!”
When he says that Hinduism is dying it must
be qualified a bit. Some of the outward prac-
tices of Hinduism are dying, but there are behind
these practices some ideas that constitute the
living spirit of Hinduism and have made it sur-
vive through the centuries. Caste and idolatry
CHRIST AND THE OTHER FAITHS 173
and Brahmanism w r ill drop away, but there will
be left what will constitute the core of the Indian
heritage. It will be worth preserving. A lady
in Baltimore found some seeds in the hands of
an Egyptian mummy and planted them. Morn-
ing glories came up. In the hand of the mum-
mied forms and customs of Hinduism I think
there are five living seeds : ( 1 ) That the ulti-
mate reality is spirit. (2) The sense of unity
rnnning through things. (3) That there is jus-
tice at the heart of the universe. (4) A passion
for freedom. (5) The tremendous cost of the
religious life. I do not believe that the world
can afford to lose those five things so deeply im-
bedded in India’s thought and life.
It is worth something that a nation is com-
mitted to the thought that the ultimate real is
spirit. As Bernard Lucas says, “We of the West
posit the material and infer the spiritual, but
India posits the spiritual and infers the ma-
terial.” India is sure that the spiritual is real,
but not quite sure that the material is, in any
sense, a reality. Is that not an outlook on life
that may have been providentially held to be
loosed upon the world just at the time when
materialism is so rampant and deadening?
Again, is it worth while to preserve that sense
of the unity of things? India has gone too far
and has slipped into pantheism — everything
God— but that will be corrected to a panentheism
174 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
everything in G-od. This will bring us a sense
of the unity of all life. It should make a more
friendly and meaningful and kindly universe.
Again, is it worth while that India feels that at
e heart of things is a strict and unfailing jus-
tice? The ironlike and heartless inhumanities
that have grown up around the thought of karma
will be modified and cleansed away, but this
thought that strict justice is at the heart of
things may tend to correct a good deal of our ten-
dencies toward an easy forgiveness. Then the
passion for inner freedom, the craving to break
the thralldom of the outward and the seeming —
that is a beautiful passion that has beat in the
soul of India, and, corrected by the passion for
the freedom of others, will make a great contri-
bution to our collective life. But above all, India
standing for the tremendous cost of the religious
life, that religion demands all and holds all, will
correct much of our compartmentalized and
tentative religious thinking and acting. It
should bring us abandon.
The shell of Hinduism breaks and falls away
and leaves us these values. How can they be
preserved? This is of vital interest to both
East and West.
I do not think that they can be preserved
through the old forms. They are falling away.
They cannot be revived. A new mold and motive
must be supplied for then*: “The seat of au-
CHRIST AND THE OTHER FAITHS 175
thority must be new,” says Maciver in another
connection, but applicable here. “Insofar as the
external sanctions fall away and cease to be de-
terminants of men’s conduct, it is no use any
more binding them back to these and attempting
to supply them with motives. They must at-
tain to a new unity of life — they cannot regain
the old” (R. M. Maciver, Community', p. 300).
Now where will that “new unity of life” be
found?
Hindus themselves are beginning to see where
it will be. Catch the significance of this scene
and question. In the Brahmans took
absolute charge of our meetings. They sent out
the notices through government chaprasis, or
runners. They decided to have the meetings in
the inclosed compound of a Hindu temple — an
unheard-of place to hold a Christian meeting.
It was specially decorated with streamers for
the occasion. Hindu ushers ushered in the
crowd and the leading Hindu of the city was the
chairman of the meetings. Since there was no
Christian to interpret for me they gave me a
Hindu interpreter, a man of beautiful spirit and
keen mind. He interpreted in a very dignified
manner the first night, holding his hands on his
cane in front of him, but the second night he so
caught the spirit of things that he began ges-
ticulating exactly as I was doing ! When I was
about half way through my address the first
176 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
night the temple bells began to ring and the
conch shells to blow for evening worship. As
the temple was within a few feet of us there was
a terrible racket. I could scarcely hear mvself
talk. I stood there nonplussed, when a Hindu
gentleman arose and said: “Sir, just sit down.
It will all be over in ten minutes ; we will sit here
and wait.” I sat down. Not a half dozen people
of that great crowd went into the temple. They
sat and waited. It was all over in five or six
minutes, and I resumed as though nothing had
happened. The next night I spoke on the “Uni-
versality of Jesus.” At the close a Hindu law-
yer arose and asked this question: “Don’t you
think that Hinduism will gradually evolve and
change into Christianity without losing its good
points?” I assured him that I thought that
very thing was taking place ! He saw that there
was a constant drift away from the old and he
was anxious that its good points should be pre-
served. I could assure him from my heart that
Jesus came not to destroy that good, but to
preserve it. This new unity of life that India
must have— is it Christ? It is.
A leading Hindu lawyer of Madras expressed
his belief in that conclusion in these words:
“The reinvigoration of Hinduism is only possible
through the Christ spirit.” A Hindu High Court
judge put it even more pointedly: “Christ is the
only hope of Hinduism.”
CHRIST AND THE OTHER FAITHS 177
Would these ideas that form the finest things
in India’s past find new life should they die into
Christianity? Would they be expressed in a
new living way? Would Christ be the new mold
and motive?
I believe that “these divine ideas which had
wandered through the world until they had
almost forgot their divine origin will at last
clothe themselves in flesh and blood, the idea and
the fact will meet together and will be wedded
henceforth and forevermore.” Jesus is that
flesh and blood in which they will reclothe them-
selves, and that Fact in which the ideas will
find living expression.
The role of the iconoclast is easy, but the
role of the one who carefully gathers up in him-
self all spiritual and moral values in the past
worth preserving is infinitely more difficult and
infinitely more valuable. Hence we can go to
the East and thank God for the fine things we
may find there, believing that they are the very
footprints of God. He has been there before us.
Everywhere that the mind of man has been open,
through the crevices of that mind the light of
God has shone in. That scattered light which
lighted c-very man that came into the world was
focused in the person of Jesus, and the Life be-
came the Light of men.
To see how Jesus remarkably fulfills the finest
striving of both East and West note the ends of
178 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
life discovered by the Greeks and those discov-
ered by the Hindus and the announcement that
Jesus made about himself. The Greeks were
the brain of Europe and did its philosophic
thinking, just as the Hindus are the brain
of Asia and have done the philosophic think-
ing for Asia. The Greeks said the ends of
life were three: the Good, the True, and the
Beautiful. The Hindus also say the ends of life
are three: Gyana, Bhakti, and Karma. With
this difference that the Hindus were the more
religious people and made these ends means—
the end was Brahma, the means to attain that
were the three ways : the Gyana Marga, the way
of knowledge; the Bhakti Marga, the way of
devotion or emotion; the Karma Marga, the way
of works or deeds.
Jesus stood between the Greeks and the Hin-
dus, midway between East and "West, and made
this announcement, “I am the Way, the Truth,
and the Life.” Turning toward the Greeks he
says, “I am the Way” — a method of acting— the
Greek’s Good; “I am the Truth” — the Greek’s
True; “I am the Life” — the Greek’s Beautiful,
for Life is beauty — plus. Turning toward the
Hindus he says, “I am the Way” — the Karma
Marga, a method of acting; “I am the Truth”—
the Gyana Marga — the method of knowing; “I
am the Life” — the Bhakti Marga — the method of
emotion, for Life is emotion— plus.
CHRIST AND THE OTHER FAITHS 179
Jesus thus says: “I am the Good, the Beauti-
ful, and the True; I am Gyana, Bhakti, and
Karma, for I am the Way, the Truth, and the
Life.”
The Greeks’ ends were only beautiful ideas
before Jesus made them fact. “Ideas are poor
ghosts,” says George Eliot, “until they become
incarnate.” Then they look out at us from sad
eyes and touch us with strong hands ; then they
become a jxtwer. Only as the Word becomes
flesh does it move us. “The Universal Beauty
must create a picture before I can say, I see.
Universal Goodness must perform an action
before I can say, I love. Universal Truth must
have a biography before I can say, I understand.”
Jesus is that Universal Beauty become a Picture,
that Universal Goodness become an Act, that
Universal Truth become a Biography. He is the
concrete universal.
The Gyana Marga is devotion to an Idea ; the
Karma Marga is devotion to a Code; the Bhakti
Marga is devotion to a Person. Jesus is that
Idea become a Fact, the code is now a Character,
the person, the Supreme Person.
But Jesus not only faces the Greeks and the
Hindus ; he faces human personality everywhere
and fulfills it. The modern thinker analyzes per-
sonality into Intellect, Feeling, and Will. Jesus
says: “I am the Way” — here is the response of
the Will; “I am the Truth” — here is the response
180 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
of the Intellect; “I am the Life”— here is the re-
sponse of the Feeling. Jesus is the great
“Amen,” the great “Yes” to human personality.
He is its fulfillment, since he is the Supreme
Person.
But more, he faces all thought and culture of
all ages of the world and says, “I am the Way”—
that is Ethics; “I am the Truth”— that is Philos-
ophy; “I am the Life”— that is Religion. Jesus
is Ethics, Philosophy, and Religion, for he is
Life, and Life includes all these and overflows
them. He is the Word that sums up all other
words.
But someone objects — then all these things
were here before him. There was nothing new
in him. Mackintosh tells of an antiquarian who
shows his friend how one by one the characteris-
tic features of Greek sculpture had been antici-
pated by the Assyrians, the Hittites and the
Egyptians, and he exclaimed in triumph that the
Greeks had, in fact, invented nothing. “Noth-
ing,” rejoined the other, “except the Beautiful.”
Jesus invented nothing new? He himself was
the new.
CHAPTER XI
THE CONCRETE CHRIST
India is the land of mysticism. You feel it in
the very air. Jesus was the supreme mystic. The
Unseen was the real to him. He spent all night
in prayer and communion with the Father. He
lived in God and God lived in him. When he
said, “I and the Father are one” you feel it is so.
Jesus the mystic appeals to India, the land of
mysticism. But Jesus the mystic was amazingly
concrete and practical. Into an atmosphere
Mled with speculation and wordy disputation
where “men are often drunk with the wine of
their own wordiness” he brings the refreshing
sense of practical reality. He taught, but he
did not speculate. He never used such words as
“perhaps,” “may be,” “I think so.” Even his
words had a concrete feeling about them. They
. fell upon the soul with the authority of certainty.
He did not discourse on the sacredness of
motherhood— he suckled as a babe at his moth-
ftrs breast, and that scene has forever conse-
crated motherhood.
He did not argue that life was a growth and
character an attainment — he “grew in wisdom
and stature, and in favor with God and men.”
1S1
182 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
He did not speculate on why temptation
should he in this world — he met it, and after
forty days’ struggle with it in the wilderness he
conquered, and “returned in the power of the
Spirit to Galilee.”
He did not discourse on the dignity of labor —
he worked at a carpenter’s bench and his hands
were hard with the toil of making yokes and
plows, and this forever makes the toil of the
hands honorable.
We do not find him discoursing on the neces-
sity of letting one’s light shine at home among
kinsmen and friends — he announced his program
of uplift and healing at Nazareth, his own home,
and those Avho heard “wondered at the words of
grace which proceeded out of his mouth.”
As he came among men he did not try to prove
the existence of God — he brought 'him. He lived
in God and men looking upon his face could not
find it within themselves to doubt God.
He did not argue, as Socrates, the immortal-
ity of the soul — he raised the dead.
He did not speculate on how God was a Trin-
ity — he said, “If I by the Spirit of God cast out
devils, the kingdom of God is come nigh unto
you.” Here the Trinity — “I,” “Spirit of God”
“God” — was not something to be speculated
about, but was a Working Force for redemption
— the casting out of the devils and the bringing
in of the Kingdom.
THE CONCRETE CHRIST
183
He did not teach in a didactic way about the
worth of children — he put his hands upon them
and blessed them and setting one in their midst
tersely said, “Of such is the kingdom of God,”
and he raised them from the dead.
He did not argue that God answers prayer
lie prayed, sometimes all night, and in the morn-
ing “the power of the Lord was present to heal.”
He did not paint in glowing colors the beauties
of friendship and the need for human sympathy
he wept at the grave of his friend.
He did not argue the worth of womanhood and
the necessity for giving them equal rights — lie
treated them with infinite respect, gave to them
his most sublime teaching, and when he rose
from the dead he appeared first to a woman.
He did not teach in the schoolroom manner the
necessity of humility— he “girded himself with
a towel and kneeled down and washed his disci-
ples’ feet.”
He did not discuss the question of the worth
of personality as we do to-day— he loved and
served persons.
He did not discourse on the equal worth of
personality he went to the poor and outcast
and ate with them.
He did not prove how pain and sorrow in the
universe could be compatible with the love of
God— he took on himself at the cross everything
that spoke against the love of God, and through
184 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
that pain and tragedy and sin showed the very
love of God.
He did not discourse on how the weakest hu-
man material can be transformed and made to
contribute to the welfare of the world — he called
to him a set of weak men, as the Galilaean fisher-
men, transformed them and sent them out to
begin the mightiest movement for uplift and re-
demption the world has ever seen.
He wrote no books — only once are we told that
he wrote and that was in the sand — but he wrote
upon the hearts and consciences of people about
him and it has become the world’s most precious
writing.
He did not paint a Utopia, far off and unreal-
izable — he announced that the kingdom of
heaven is within us, and is “at hand” and can be
realized here and now.
John sent to him from the prison and asked
whether he was the one who was to come or
should they look for another? Jesus did not
argue the question with the disciples of John—
he simply and quietly said, “Go tell John what
you see, the blind receive sight, the deaf hear,
the lame walk, and the poor have the gospel
preached to them.” His arguments were the
facts produced.
He did not discourse on the beauty of love—
he loved.
We do not find him arguing that the spiritual
THE CONCRETE CHRIST
185
life should conquer matter — he walked on the
water.
He greatly felt the pressing necessity of the
physical needs of the people around him, but he
did not merely speak in their behalf— he fed
five thousand people with five loaves and two
fishes.
They bring in to him a man with a double
malady sick in body and stricken more deeply
in his conscience because of sin. Jesus attended
first of all to the deepest malady and said, “Thy
sins are forgiven thee.” In answer to the ob-
jections of the people he said, “Which is easier
to say, Thy sins are forgiven thee? or to say,
Take up thy bed and walk? And that they might
know that the Son of man had power on earth to
forgive sins, he said to the palsied man, Take
up thy bed and walk.” The outward concrete
miracle was the pledge of the inward.
Jesus has been called the Son of Fact. We find
sti iking illustration of his concreteness at the
Judgment seat. To those on the right he does
not say, “You believed in me and my doctrines,
therefore, come, be welcome into my kingdom.”
Instead, he said, “I was an hungered and you
gave me food; I was athirst, and you gave me
drink; I was sick, and you visited me; in prison,
and you came unto me; a stranger, and you took
me in ; naked, and you clothed me.” These “sons
of fact,’ true followers of his, were unwilling to
186 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
obtain heaven through a possible mistake and
so they objected and said, “When saw we thee an
hungered and fed thee, thirsty and gave thee
drink, sick and visited thee?” and the Master
answered, “Inasmuch as ye did it to one of the
least of these ye did it unto me.” He was not
only concrete himself, he demanded a concrete
life from those who were (his followers.
He told us that the human soul was worth
more than the whole material universe, and when
he had crossed a storm-tossed lake to find a
storm-tossed soul, ridden with devils, he did not
hesitate to sacrifice the two thousand swine to
save this one lost man.
He did not argue the possibility of sinlessness
—he presented himself and said, “Which of you
convinceth me of sin ?”
He did not merely ask men to turn the other
cheek when smitten on the one, to go the second
mile when compelled to go one, to give the cloak
also when sued at the law and the coat was taken
away, to love our enemies and to bless them — he
himself did that very thing. The servants struck
him on one cheek, he turned the other and the
soldiers struck him on that; they compelled him
to go with them one mile — from Gethsemane to
the judgment hall — he went with them two — even
to Calvary. They took away his coat at the judg-
ment hall and he gave them his seamless robe at
the cross; and in the agony of the cruel torture
THE CONCRETE CHRIST
187
of the cross he prayed for his enemies, “Father,
forgive them, for they know not what they do.”
He did not merely tell us that death need have
no terror for us — he rose from the dead, and lo,
now the tomb glows with light.
Many teachers of the world have tried to ex-
plain everything — they changed little or nothing.
Jesus explained little and changed everything.
Many teachers have tried to diagnose the dis-
ease of humanity — Jesus cures it.
Many teachers have told us why the patient
is suffering and that he should bear with forti-
tude — Jesus tells him to take up his bed and
walk.
Many philosophers speculate on how evil en-
tered the world — Jesus presents himself as the
way by which it shall leave.
He did not go into long discussions about the
Way to God and the possibility of finding him —
he quietly said to men, “I am the Way.”
Many speculate with Pilate and ask, “What is
truth?” Jesus shows himself and says, “I am
the Truth.”
Spencer defines physical life for us — Jesus de-
fines life itself, by presenting himself and saying,
“I am the Life.” Anyone who truly looks upon
him knows in the inmost depths of his soul that
he is looking on Life itself.
There is no deeper need in India and the world
to-day than just this practical mysticism that
188 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
Jesus brings to bear upon the problems of life.
“No man is strong who does not bear within
himself antitheses strongly marked.” The
merely mystical man is weak and the merely
practical man is weak, but Jesus the practical
Mystic, glowing with God and yet stooping in
loving service to men, is Strength Incarnate.
It is no wonder that India, tired of specula-
tion, turns unconsciously toward him, the mystic
Servant of all.
CHAPTER XII
THE INDIAN INTERPRETATION OF
JESUS
The answer to the question as to what will be
the distinctive notes in the interpretation of
Christ through Indian genius and bent can be
given only tentatively. That answer can only
be left with India. But that there will be a dis-
tinctive note is certain.
The Christian Church in its sanest and most
spiritual times has fixed upon the person of Jesus
as the center and real essential of Christianity.
But as his teaching and life goes through each
national genius it receives a tinge from the life
through which it passes. Paul speaks of “my
gospel.” It was a gospel that had gone through
the thinking and mentality of a man deeply
soaked in Judaism. He poured the richness of
that gospel through those modes of thinking.
Paul could truly say, “It is my gospel,” for no
one else could give exactly that same expression
of Christianity that Paul could give, since no
one else had the same social inheritance through
which to express it.
When Christianity went further and touched
189
190 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
the brain of Europe in Greece it received an-
other expression. As we look back to Christian-
ity we largely see it through “the binocular of
Greek metaphysics and Roman law.” Greece
did the thinking for Europe, and it was in this
atmosphere that some of our creeds were formed.
Someone has said that at Pentecost everyone
heard the gospel in his own tongue, but at Nicea
the voice was Greek. We are deeply grateful for
that voice and for those creeds. They have kept
Christianity very often from drifting into a
meaningless tolerant theosophy. Carlyle taunted
Christendom that it had been divided over a
diphthong, but later he acknowledged that the
whole of Christianity was probably bound up in
the question of that diphthong. This preciseness
of Greek intellect has been a mighty steadying
force as Christianity has gone on its way. But
it has by that very preciseness helped to stereo-
type Christianity in certain mental forms. As
Christianity went through the Romans many of
the theories of the atonement were largely taken
out of forms found in Roman law. When we
read of some of those discussions on the atone-
ment we feel the legal atmosphere — God is the
Judge, men are mere subjects, the universe has
law written in it and the relationship between
God and men is a legal relationship. Certainly,
it is a great gain thus to have an orderly universe
and the thought of iron law at the center of
INDIAN INTERPRETATION OF JESUS 191
things. But though it had received this con-
tribution, Christianity found itself cramped in
the Roman legal forms, even crippled. God is
more than law; he is love expressing himself
through law. The world is not a courtroom, but
a family ; and the relationship between God and
man is not a legal one of ruler and subject, but a
filial one between Father and son. Our inher-
itance from both Greek and Roman has helped
and yet seriously hindered.
The Anglo-Saxon inheritance has deeply influ-
enced Christianity. MacDougall reminds us that
the Norsemen, the ancestors of the Anglo-Saxon
people, dwelt on the rugged coast-line of Norway.
They got most of their living from the sea, but
it was not sufficient, so they cultivated those
rugged hillsides. It was a precarious existence
and could sustain only a limited number. When
the sons came on they were compelled to launch
out for themselves, for the hillsides could not
sustain them. Hence they went to distant lands
and conquered and settled. Out of this social
inheritance came three great characteristics:
self-reliance, aggressiveness, and the love of in-
dividual freedom. Each family became self-suf-
ficient through its own self-reliance and de-
pended little on the settled community.
Those three characteristics are among the
Anglo-Saxons to-day. Christianity coming in
contact with this social inheritance has been ex-
192 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
pressed largely in terms of self-reliance, ag-
gressiveness, and individual freedom. An Eng-
lishman speaking before an audience said, “I
trust I am a Christian Englishman, but I cannot
help but remember that I am an English Chris-
tian and that my life has been molded by the
teachings of the New Testament and by contem-
poraneous English society.” The forms of ex-
pression of Christianity in Anglo-Saxon lands
have been largely individualistic and aggressive.
This is certainly an inheritance that has en-
liched, but it has also given only a partial ex-
pression of Christianity and has lacked those
deep social meanings and social expressions
which lie at the heart of Christianity. Prot-
estantism with its love of individual liberty flour-
ished in this atmosphere. But as someone has
said, “Protestantism in breaking up the idea of
a universal church came near losing the idea of
our universal humanity.” We are just now try-
ing to counteract that bad effect by the message
of the social application of the gospel.
America is also giving us a type of Christian-
ity that loves such words as “pep,” “snappiness,”
and “accomplishment.” The Negro question has
also determined some of the forms that Chris-
tianity has taken in America. In a certain place
in America the Negroes and the white people
had a union service. At the close a lady on her
return home said, “It was all very nice and all
INDIAN INTERPRETATION OF JESUS 193
very Christian, but if we are to be Christian in
our churches what is it going to lead to?” Here
was Christianity trying to break through a social
inheritance and express itself in universal terms,
but caught and cramped by a social inheritance
that practically forbade universality.
The religious genius of India is the richest in
the world, the forms that it has taken have often
been the most extravagant, sometimes degrading
and cruel. These forms are falling away, or will
fall away, but the spirit persists and will be
poured through other forms. As that genius
pours itself through Christian molds it will en-
rich the collective expression of Christianity.
But in order to do that the Indian must remain
Indian. He must stand in the stream of India’s
culture and life and let the force of that stream
go through his soul so that the expression of his
Christianity will be essentially Eastern and not
Western. This does not mean that Indian Chris-
tianity will be denied what is best in Western
thought and life, for when firmly planted on its
own soil it can then lift its antenna? to the heav-
ens and catch the voices of the world. But it
must be particular before it can be universal.
Only thus will it be creative — a voice, not an
echo.
Someone writing to me on the subject said,
“The first thing necessary is to create a live In-
dian” — a man alive to his past, his possibilities,
194 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
his religious genius. Given that spirit Indian
Christianity will And its own forms as the day
follows the night.
The reason that the Indian Christian has not
made any real contribution to Christian theology
is because he has been trying, on the whole, to
think through Western forms and here he is like
a fish out of water. But now that India is awak-
ened and self-conscious and the process of de-
nationalization is probably over, we may expect
that genius to work. We must be willing to trust
the Indian to make his contribution.
It is no more fair to say that we cannot trust
Indian genius to interpret Christianity because
of the extravagances of the past than to have said
that the Western mind could not be trusted be-
cause the Druids in England used to perform
human sacrifices in their religion and the Scots
practiced cannibalism.
Every nation has its peculiar contribution to
make to the interpretation of Christianity. The
Son of man is too great to be expressed by any
one portion of humanity. Those that differ from
us most will probably contribute most to our
expression of Christianity.
Here is the inward feeling of a patriotic Slav
as to the contribution of his race. In a personal
letter written to Professor H. A. Miller more
than a year before the war by a Bohemian who
for thirty years had been a professor of German
INDIAN INTERPRETATION OF JESUS 195
in a German Gymnasium, he unbosoms his hopes
for his people thus : “I am not pessimistic enough
to give Tip all hopes that Providence may have
some good things in store for the Slavs. What
keeps me up is a certain hazy impression that
human development may some time be in want
of a new formula, and then our time may come.
I conceive ourselves under the sway of the Ger-
man watchword which spells ‘force,’ and as
watchwords come and go, like everything else
human, perhaps the Slavs may some time be
called on to introduce another which I would
like to see spelled ‘charity’ ” (Quoted in Races,
Xations, and Classes, Miller, p. 80.)
India too hopes that the world may some day
be in need of a new formula. She too has her
word ready. It will be spelled “Atma” — spirit.
That word “Atma” runs like a refrain through
everything in India. The followers of the Christ
of the Indian Road will show us the real mean-
ing of a spiritual life. They will sit lightly to
earthly things and abandon themselves to the
spirit.
Along with that will come the sense of the
unity and harmony running through things.
“Don’t you think atonement would mean attune-
ment?” said a Hindu to me one day. He felt his
life was “like sweet bells jangled out of tune”
by sin and evil, and to his mind, craving inward
peace and harmony, atonement would bring at-
19C THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
tunement to the nature of God — music instead of
a discord. No wonder peace has been the great
thought and craving of India. Anything like
losing one’s temper is thought to be utterly in-
compatible with the truly religious life. “I know
I haven’t salvation yet” said a villager to me
one day, “for while I have conquered everything
else anger still remains, I haven’t got it yet.”
The followers of the Christ of the Indian Road
will be harmonized and peaceful. Meditation to
them will be real. Religion will mean quiet
realization. God will be the harmonizing bond
of all.
Finally the followers of the Christ of the In-
dian Road will know the meaning of the cross, for
India stands for the cost of being religious. Re-
nunciation will be a reality, for India instinc-
tively grasps the meaning of Jesus when he says
that the way to realize life is to renounce it — to
lose it is to find it. In the footprints of many of
his followers as they walk along the Indian Road
will be blood stains, for they will be Apostles
of the Bleeding Feet. They will know the mean-
ing of being crucified followers of a crucified
Lord.
There is a term and conception that sums up
these ideas and gives them vital expression — a
term that is deeply imbedded in India’s thought
and practice, namely, “Bhakti.” It means faith,
and yet more than faith ; it means devotion, and
INDIAN INTERPRETATION OF JESUS 197
yet is deeper than devotion ; it expresses follow-
ing another, and yet is richer than that. It
means Self committed to Another — an utter self-
abandonment, until that Other becomes the life
of our life, the very center of our being. The
lesser life is transformed into the moral and
spiritual image of the Object of the Bhakti and
draws its very life from the Other. I say “Ob-
ject,” but that sounds too distant for this rela-
tion, for here Subject and Object almost cease
to be, for Life follows into life, Being into being.
This was doubtless Paul’s conception of faith,
but the word has lost some of its deep original
meanings and has become more or less identified
with belief or trust. Self-committal is not its
principal content. India will restore this
through Bhakti.
But in taking Bhakti from India Christianity
will broaden and enrich it. With India Bhakti
has had its center in the emotions. In Christ it
will be in the whole man. For Christ brings life
to the whole of life.
Now, we believe God to be personal — not cor-
poreal, but personal. In personality there are
at least three things, grounded in a fourth — in-
tellect, feeling and will — these grounded in self-
consciousness. We too are personal — we have
those four things. Now, religion is the response
of my personality to the personality of God. Re-
ligion means, then, that I would think God’s
198 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
thoughts after him, feel his feelings after him,
will his purposes after him and become his being
after him. But apart from Jesus I know little
of God, so religion means to me to think Christ’s
thoughts, feel his feelings, will his purposes, and
become his being.
Christianity uses ritual, but it is not ritual;
it has beliefs, but it is not a belief; it has institu-
tions, but it is not an institution. In its deepest
meaning it is person giving itself to Person, life
to Life.
Jesus said that Bhakti was to be of the whole
man : “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all
thy heart [the feeling nature], with all thy mind
[the intellectual nature], with all thy soul [the
volitional nature], and with all thy strength
[the physical nature]. The whole man, includ-
ing the physical, is to be brought under the sway
of God. But with all thy strength would go
further than the strength of the physical— it
would mean the strength of the mind, the
strength of the feeling, the strength of the will.
Many are loving God in an unbalanced and
unsymmetrical way and, therefore, weak way.
They love him with the strength of the feeling
and the weakness of the mind — that makes the
emotionalist in religion ; some love him with the
strength of the emotions and the weakness of
the will — that makes the sentimentalist in reli-
gion; others love him with the strength of the
INDIAN INTERPRETATION OF JESUS 199
mind and the weakness of the emotions — the
mere intellectualist in religion ; others love him
with the strength of the will and the weakness
of the emotions — this produces the man of iron,
very moral, but unlovely and unlovable. The
really strong Christian is one that loves with the
strength of the mind, the strength of the emo-
tions, the strength of the will — the strength of
the whole personality — the entire being caught
up in a passion of love and self-surrender to
Christ. As Christ gives all, he claims all.
So the Christian Bhakta or devotee will prac-
tice neither the asceticism of the mind, nor of the
feeling, nor of the will — not asceticism but con-
secration; not drying up but development; self-
renunciation in order to self-development. The
soul thus becomes like a well-directed sailboat—
a directing mind guiding the rudder (the will)
and with the sails (the emotions) filled with the
winds of heaven. The whole of life will go ahead
and progress.
“Bhakti” is a beautiful and rich term and
broadened by the original Christian conception
should enrich our expression of Christianity.
When I think of the type that sums up these
realities and gives us a sample of a really Indian
expression of Christianity, I think of Sadhu
Sundar Singh. In his besandalled feet, his long
flowing yellow robe, in his lack of earthly pos-
sessions, in the quiet calm and joy of his face,
200 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAI)
he looks as though he had just stepped out of
the pages of the New Testament. Here is Chris-
tianity going through a truly Indian spirit and
the world bends over to catch the music of it.
When he goes to Europe there are no halls or
churches large enough to hold the crowds in
large university centers. As they listen they
catch the accents that amid the complexity of
our civilization sound new-life that has caught
the meaning of the supremacy and reality of the
spirit, that knows harmony and peace and is
utterly abandoned to the Christ of the Indian
Road.
As someone has said, “The final commentary
on the Gospels cannot be written until India has
been Christianized.”
CHAPTER XIII
THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
Some time ago I was criticized kindly but
earnestly by a missionary in India who com-
plained that “I preached a living Christ instead
of a dead Christ.” I think I knew what he
meant. He felt I did not enough emphasize what
Jesus did, expressed in fixed formulas and set
systems, not enough of that onee-and-for-all-ac-
complished idea. I pleaded guilty, though I
could say with my brother that I thought I could
go as far as he went — maybe further — in believ-
ing in what Jesus accomplished for us upon the
cross. He died for me. Fill those words with
all the wealth of meaning that grateful human
hearts can put into them and I still feel there
is room for something else to be said. He was
the Unspeakable Gift. I weave my formulas
about him and he steps out beyond them ! The
Word is too big for my words. But I believe in
that past. J esus is the same yesterday. Cut the
historical from the experimental and there will
soon be no experimental. We must have the
past.
A et Christ is living to-day. He not only ac-
201
202 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
complishes for us in the past, he accompanies
with us in the present. He is no spent force. He
is the Great Contemporary. Studdart Kennedy
is right when he says that we do not know what
it is that is troubling us in our modern world, but
that it is this : Christ has got hold of us. We are
not nearly as smugly complacent as we were.
We cannot bring ourselves to obey him abso-
lutely or to turn away from him. He is getting
hold of us in East and West.
I find him in places and movements I had
never dreamed of and by the quiet sense of his
presence he is forcing modification everywhere.
Call the roll of the reforms that are sweeping
across India, and whether they be economic, so-
cial, moral, or religious, they are all tending
straight toward Christ and his thought. Not one
of them is going away from him, that is, if it be
a reform and not a reaction.
A friend in describing Sir George Gabriel
Stokes, the discoverer of the science of spectro-
scopy and the theory of the undulation of light,
told me of how very gentle and retiring he was.
Along with this modesty he w r as a saint. He did
not care a scrap if people did not recognize him
as the author of these discoveries. He was con-
stantly behind Kelvin and Thomson and others
pushing them forward w'hile he remained un-
noticed. “I cannot tell you,” he concluded, “how
many things he was behind.” As we sat there
CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD 203
we talked of how many things Jesus was behind
in India and the East, though often unnoticed.
A Cabinet minister in Japan, in reply to the
question, “How do you account for the immense
increase of labor unrest since the war?” instead
of attributing it to Bolshevism, said, “It is Chris-
tianity working among the people; the working
man is testing Christ’s preaching of larger life
and freedom.” As a non-Christian laborer put it
to one of our missionaries: “We laborers under-
stand Christ, for he was a laboring man and bore
a cross. Every laborer understands that cross,
for he has to bear one.” Back of many of the
movements throughout the East the living Spirit
of Jesus can be felt.
The last Mohammedan king of Oudh had three
hundred and sixty-five wives. One of his palaces
has now been turned into a Legislative Council
Hall. I sat there in that former harem and
listened to a debate on woman’s suffrage, and saw
Hindus and Mohammedans pass the bill unani-
mously. Up in the galleries was a fine group of
our splendidly trained and educated young
women of the Isabella Thoburn College. Again
and again the speakers referred to their presence
and one of them said, “We’ve got to give them
suffrage — see who are looking down on us.”
Without a word there was the silent pressure of
the Christian spirit upon the situation. Jesus
was back of it.
204 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
Travancore is the most caste-ridden section
of India. Yet in the very center of it we sat
down to an intercaste dinner — a hundred high-
caste Hindus, a hundred outcastes, a hundred
Indian Christians, a few Mohammedans, and sev-
eral of us of the West. They mixed xis up so
that here was a high caste, next to him an o\it-
caste, a Mohammedan, one of us, an outcaste
again, and so on down the line. I sat between a
Mohammedan and an outcaste. As I sat down
the Mohammedan said, “Well, thank God we are
all down together at last.” As I sat there and
watched the amazed faces of those outcastes,
faces that bore the marks of the centuries of
suppression, I thought I saw One standing back
of them saying, “I was in prison and you visited
me.” The chains of the centuries were being
broken by the pressure of the Spirit of the Son
of man upon the conscience.
By the silent pressure of his presence he is
forcing modification everywhere. Movements
are springing up, many of them but dimly recog-
nizing that the impelling Spirit of Jesus is be-
hind them. “Hindu Christians !” said a discern-
ing Hindu with a smile to me as we watched a
crowd of earnest Hindu social workers. Christ
is abroad upon the Indian Road, and as he sits
by the wayside the sensitive soul of India knows
that he understands toil and pain and sorrow
and enters in and feels with them. One of
CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD 205
the leading Hindu thinkers of North India at the
close of my address expressed the truth in these
beautiful words: “The thing that strikes me
about Jesus is his imaginative sympathy. He
entered into the experiences of men and felt with
them. He could feel the darkness of the blind,
the leprosy of the leper, the loneliness of the rich,
the degradation of the poor, and the guilt of
the sinner. And who shall we say he is? He
called himself the Son of man. He also called
himself the Son of God — we must leave it at
that.” This professor beautifully expressed what
men are vaguely feeling.
Jesus does not stand before the blind and the
leper and the poor and the sinner and discourse
philosophically on why they are in such con-
dition, but lays his hands of sympathy upon
them and heals them through his servants; and
more — he puts his gentle but condemning finger
upon the conscience of the hale and hearty Phari-
see in the crowd and asks why he has allowed all
this. “Why?” he persists in asking. And for the
first time men begin to feel that they are in very
truth their brother’s keeper, and that the wretch-
edness of the poor and the sick is not a sign of
their sin of a previous birth, but the sign of the
sin of the privileged in this birth for allowing it.
Movements come out of such thoughts as these,
and such thoughts are coming from Christ, very
often standing unnoticed in the shadows.
206 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
Some do recognize what is happening. The
Hindu professor of modern history in a South
India college said to me, “My study of modern
history has shown me that there is a Moral Pivot
in the world to-day, and that the best life of both
East and West is more and more revolving about
that center— that Moral Pivot is the person of
Jesus Christ.” It is as interesting as a novel
to watch men’s thoughts and spirits as they -et
within the sphere of his influence, being caught
by the attraction of his person and their life be-
ginning to revolve about him. This is the sphere
of influence that we watch with bated breath.
All other spheres of influence in the East created
for purposes of exploitation and political in-
trigue are the breeding places for jealousy and
strife, but this sphere of influence of Jesus is
healing and cementing and saving.
Listen to the testimony of this outstanding
philosopher of India, a man deeply read in the
philosophy of East and West. When I asked
him my question I inwardly steeled myself for
the shock of his criticism, for I knew it would be
^? en ' 9 " P T rofessor > what do you think of Jesus
Hirist. I asked. He replied: “We had high
ideas of God before Jesus came. But Jesus is
the highest expression of God that we have seen
He is conquering us by the sheer force of his own
person even against our wills.” Jesus wins, not
because of any religious trick o? cleverness, but
CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD 207
because he is winsome; he compels, not because
he calls in Caesar’s help, but because he is com-
pelling; he is Saviour just because men find in
him what a Saviour ought to be — he saves; he
draws the world just by being lifted up.
Christ is confronting men everywhere. He has
got hold of us. A Hindu lawyer of fine ability
gave an address to which I listened on the topic,
“The Inescapable Christ.” He said: “We have
not been able to escape him. There was a time
when our hearts were bitter and sore against
him, but he is melting them by his own winsome-
ness. Jesus is slowly but surely entering all men
in India — yea, all men.” The only thing that 1
could think of all through the address was this :
“Other sheep I have, which are not of this fold.
Them also I must bring.” How is it possible to
limit or demarcate the lines of the Kingdom any
more? He steps beyond them, and shocked and
frightened like the Pharisees of other days we
stand and wonder how far he will go in his warm
sympathy and understanding. He eats with pub-
licans and sinners and with the Hindu too. No
wonder H. G. Wells in summing up the influence
of Jesus upon human history in his Outline of
History exclaims, “The Galilsean has been too
great for our small hearts.”
When this Galilaean was upon earth with us he
said of the outside Gentile’s faith, “I have not
found so great faith even in Israel.” He must be
208 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
saying the same thing again, for the “outside”
world surprises us again. I talked in Hindi
with a Sadhu one day. In the midst of the con-
versation he broke out into the purest English,
and pulling a New Testament from under his
cloak, he said, “This is my meat and drink.”
“But,” I said, rather taken aback, “you are
connected with this temple, what are you doinf
with that?” &
“Yes,” he said, and then repeated, “It is mv
meat and drink.”
^ hen I asked him what he thought of it he
eagerly replied : “All other religions are passing
aw a ' or pass away ; J esus alone will remain.”
Is the faith of the Sadhu being realized? Are
other things passing away and is Jesus begin-
ning to fill the horizon? I know it is easy in a
matter of this* kind to overdraw the picture, to
read into the situation what one would like to
see, but in the narrative of this little book I have
let the testimony of Hindus tell the story. If
it is overdrawn, they have overdrawn it. But the
facts themselves tell me that the Sadhu is right.
Jesus is forcing modification everywhere He
stands unmodified. In all this battle and strug-
gle of things and Jesus hasn’t won this place in
the soul of India without his Calvarys of mis-
understanding and abuse, and there are more to
come— nevertheless, in this clash of ideas and
ideals we have not been called upon to modifv
CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD 209
a single thing about him. We are called upon,
with deep insistence, to modify our civilization,
our church, ourselves — everything, except him.
A Hindu principal of a college said to me, “Your
trouble is with the Christian Church.” Even so,
but that is remediable. We can remedy our
church, our civilization, ourselves. But suppose
he had been able to say, “Your trouble is with
your Christ” — that would be irremediable; it
would be fatal. “Smite the shepherd, and the
sheep will be scattered abroad.” Smite Jesus
with a legitimate moral or spiritual criticism,
and we are worse than scattered abroad. We are
done for. But I say the literal truth when I say
that men are not asking for modification there;
the demand is for interpretation and imitation.
Jesus walks along the roads of India’s thought
and life and everywhere there is a new sense of
values, a new feeling that there is healing in the
air, a new sense that there is a springtime of the
soul upon us as the old frozen forms of life break
up and melt and there are stirrings of new life
all around, a new hope — a regenerating Presence
has come. I had baptized a group of outcastes
in their section of the village. At the close of
the ceremony the father of the house took me by
the hand and said, “Sir, I want you to walk
through my compound and through my little
house, and when you have passed through all the
impurities and sin of our past will be taken
210 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD
away and all will be purified.” I marveled at
his simple faith in me and shrank from its im-
plications. But I was grateful that I did know
One who was walking along the highways of
India, through her compounds, into her lowly
cottages and through the bazaars, and every-
where he goes there is a new sense of purity, a
new feeling of the worth-whileness of life, a new
eagerness to sei*ve — there is renewal, regenera-
tion.
“We have met Christ to-day, haven’t we?”
said a Sadhu with shining face, as he was leaving
my room. Yes, we had.
It is India’s day of meeting Christ — and ours.
In their meeting him, w'e too have met him.
As I have sat writing the experiences of these
seventeen years two simple incidents have kept
recurring again and again. They were so simple
that they should have faded with the moment,
but while the introductory statements of chair-
men of our meetings have been forgotten, these
two things persist, and in their persisting bless.
A little Indian girl of about seven years was play-
ing around the bungalow with our little girl. I
was seated on the veranda at my writing. As
they darted past me the little Indian girl paused,
and in her shy way came up to me, passed her
little brown hand across my cheek and said,
“Apke munb mujke bahut piyara lagta’W‘Your
CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD 211
face is very dear to me.” As she ran on I brushed
away a tear and went on with my writing. But
my heart was very warm. As I have sat writing
this book here in America I have felt again the
soft touch of India’s hand upon my cheek, and
my heart has been warm, for India has become
very dear to me. But I find that my love for
India has a quality in it now that it did not have
in the early days. I went to India through pity,
I stay through respect. I love India because she
is lovable, I respect her because she is respect-
able; she has become dear to me because she is
endearing.
The other occurred when I was in Shantineke-
tan at the Ashram of Tagore. I sat on the edge of
the steps and watched the temple service one day.
At the close a student went forward, took a lotus
flower — the national flower of India — from a
bowl upon the table in front, came back and pre-
sented it to me. As I arose to receive it he bent
and touched my feet, as is the custom with their
gurus, or teachers. It was done very simply and
very beautifully. I had come there a stranger
and a foreigner, I had come openly with another
faith, and I wondered how I would be received,
but when this student gave me this lotus flower
before all, then I knew I was accepted as friend
and brother — and teacher. To be accepted as
teacher was the goal of my hopes. But I felt my-
self as much a learner as a teacher. I had come
212 THE CHRIST OF THE INDIAN EGAD
to India with everything to teach and nothing
to learn. I stay to learn as well, and I believe 1
am a better man for having come into contact
with the gentle heart of the East.
But is “teacher” the right word? I wonder
if “introducer” isn’t better? I spoke to a Hindu
student one night in the aftermeeting of a series
and asked him if he didn’t want to know Christ.
“Yes,” he said, eagerly, “but I do not know how
to go to him. I need someone to introduce me
to him.” I suggested that I should love to intro-
duce him to my Master. I saw quite vaguely
then what is clear to me now : my chief business
and chief joy is to introduce men to this Christ
of the Indian Road.
If I do that, I must know him myself, and
that means much. “Have you seen Jesus?” a
Hindu lawyer asked me one day. I could not
glibly reply, but slowly said, “Yes, I believe I
have.” “Then,” said he, “you have found some-
thing that I have not yet found. I must get it.”
To know him, to introduce him — this is my
task.
There is a beautiful Indian marriage custom
that dimly illustrates our task in India, and
where it ends. At the wedding ceremony the
women friends of the bride accompany her with
music to the home of the bridegroom. They
usher her into the. presence of the bridegroom —
that is as far as they can go, then they retire
CHRIST OF THE INDIAN ROAD 213
and leave her with her husband. That is our
joyous task in India: to know Him, to introduce
Him, to retire — not necessarily geographically,
but to trust India with the Christ and trust
Christ with India. We can only go so far — he
and India must go the rest of the way.
India is beginning to walk with the Christ
of the Indian Road. What a walk it will be !
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