Part 12 (2/2)

The Christian Hall Caine 53000K 2022-07-22

And then he spoke of the hopes with which he had come up to London, and how they were being broken down and destroyed; of his dreams of the Church and its mission, and how they were dying or dead already.

”What liars we are, sir! How we colour things to justify ourselves! Look at our sacraments--are they a lie, or are they a sacrilege? Look at our charities--are we Pharisees or are we hypocrites? And our clergy, sir--our fas.h.i.+onable clergy! Surely some tremendous upheaval will shake to its foundations the Church wherein such things are possible--a Church that is more worldly than the world! And then the woman-life of the Church, see how it is thrown away. That sweetest and tenderest and holiest power, how it goes to waste under the eye and with the sanction of the Church in the frivolities of fas.h.i.+on--in drawing-rooms, in gardens, in bazars, in theatres, in b.a.l.l.s----”

He stopped. His last word had arrested him. Had he been thinking only of himself and of Glory? His head fell and he covered his face with his hand.

”You are right, my son,” said the Father quietly, ”and yet you are wrong, too. The Church of G.o.d will not be shaken to its foundations because of the Pharisees who stand in its public places, or because of the publicans who haunt its purlieus. Though the axe be laid to the rotten tree, yet the little seed will save its kind alive.”

Then with an earnest smile and in a gentle voice he spoke of their little brotherhood in Bishopsgate Street; how ten years ago they had founded it for detachment from earthly cares and earthly aims, and for hiddenness with G.o.d; how they had established it in the midst of the world's, busiest highway, in the heart of the world's greatest market, to show that they despised gold and silver and all that the blind and cheated world most prizes, just as St. Philip and St. Ignatius had established the severest of modern rules in a profane and self-indulgent century, to show that they could stamp out every suggestion of the flesh as a spark from the fires of h.e.l.l.

And then he lifted his cord and pointed to the knots at the end of it, and told what they were--symbols of the three bonds by which he was bound--the three vows he had taken: the vow of poverty, because Christ chose it for himself and his friends; the vow of obedience, because he had said, ”He that heareth you heareth Me”; and the vow of chast.i.ty, because it was our duty to guard the gates of the senses, and to keep our eyes and ears and tongue from all inordinateness.

”But the lawful love of home and kindred,” said John; ”what of that?”

”We convert it into what is spiritual,” said the Father. ”All human love must be based on the love of G.o.d if it is to be firm and true and enduring, and the reason of so much failure of love in natural friends.h.i.+p is that the love of the creature is not built upon the love of the Creator.”

”But the love--say of mother and son--of brother and sister?”

”Ah, we have placed ourselves above the ordinary conditions of life that none may claim our affections in the same way as Christ. Man has to contend with two sets of enemies--those from within and those from without; and no temptations are more subtle than those which come in the name of our holiest affections. But the sword of the spirit must keep the tempter away. There is the Judas in all of us, and he will betray us with a kiss if he can.”

John Storm's breast was heaving. He could scarcely conceal his agitation; but the Father had risen to go.

”It is eight o'clock, and I must be back to Compline,” he said. And then he laughed and added: ”We never ride in cabs; but I must needs walk across the park to-night, for I have given away all my money.”

At that the smile of an angel came into his old face, and lie said, with a sweet simplicity:

”I love the park. Every morning the children play there, and then it is the holy Catholic Church to me, and I like to walk in it and to lay my hands on the heads of the little ones, and to ask a blessing for them, and to empty my-self. This morning as I was coming here I met a little boy carrying a bundle. 'And what is _your_ name, my little man?' I said, and he told me what it was. 'And how old are you?' I asked. 'Twelve years,' he answered. 'And what have you got in your bundle?' 'Father's dinner, sir,' he said. 'And what is your father, my son?' 'A carpenter,'

said the boy. And I thought if I had been living in Palestine nineteen hundred years ago I might have met another little Boy carrying the dinner of his father, who was also a carpenter, in a little bundle which Mary had made up for him. So I felt in my pocket, and all I had was my fare home again, and I gave it to the little man as a thank-offering to G.o.d that he had suffered me to meet a sweet boy of twelve whose father was a carpenter.”

John Storm's eyes were dim with tears.

”Good-bye, Brother Paul, and G.o.d send you back to us soon!--Good-bye to you, dear friend; and when the world deals harshly with you come to us for a few days in Retreat, that in the silence of your soul you may forget its vanities and vexations and fix your thoughts above.”

John Storm could not resist the impulse--he dropped to his knees at the Father's feet.

”Bless me also, Father, as you blessed the carpenter's boy.”

The Father raised two fingers of his right hand and said:

”G.o.d bless you, my son, and be with you and strengthen you, and when he smiles on you may the frown of man affect you not!--Father in heaven, look down on this fiery soul and succour him! Help him to cast off every anchor that holds him to the world, and make him as a voice crying in the wilderness, 'Come out of her, my people, saith our G.o.d.'”

When John rose from his knees the saintly face was gone, and all the air seemed to be filled with a heavenly calm.

While he had been kneeling for the Father's blessing he had been aware of a step on the floor behind him. It was his fellow-curate, the Reverend Golightly, who was still waiting to deliver his message.

The canon had been disappointed in one of his preachers for Sunday, and being himself engaged to preside over the annual dinner of a dramatic benevolent fund to be held on the Sat.u.r.day night, and therefore incapable of extra preparation, he desired that Mr. Storm should take the sermon on Sunday morning.

John promised to do so; and then his fellow-curate smiled, bowed, coughed, and left him. A small room was kept for the chaplain on the ground floor of the hospital, and he went down to it and wrote a letter.

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