Surrender
to
God
from a sermon for the first Sunday in
Lent
by John
Henry Newman
I suppose
it has struck many persons as very
remarkable, that in the latter times the
strictness and severity in religion of
former ages has been so much relaxed. There
has been a gradual abandonment of painful
duties which were formerly enforced upon
all. Time was when all persons, to speak
generally, abstained from flesh through the
whole of Lent. There have been dispensations
on this point again and again, and this very
year there is a fresh one. What is the
meaning of this? What are we to gather from
it? This is a question worth considering.
Various answers may be given, but I shall
confine myself to one of them.
We must subdue ourselves
to Christ
I answer that
fasting is only one branch of a large and
momentous duty, the subdual of ourselves to
Christ. We must surrender to him all we have,
all we are. We must keep nothing back. We must
present to him as captive prisoners with whom
he may do what he will, our soul and body, our
reason, our judgment, our affections, our
imagination, our tastes, our appetite. The
great thing is to subdue ourselves;
but as to the particular form in which the
great precept of self-conquest and
self-surrender is to be expressed, that
depends on the person himself, and on the time
or place. What is good for one age or person,
is not good for another.
There are
other instances of the same variation. For
example …the present war with evil spirits
would seem to be very different from what it
was in former ages. They attack a civilized
age in a more subtle way than they attack a
rude age. We read in lives of saints and
others of the evil spirit showing himself
and fighting with them face to face, but now
those subtle and experienced spirits find it
is more to their purpose not to show
themselves, or at least not so much. They
find it in their interest to let the idea of
them die away from the minds of men, that
being unrecognized, they may do the more
mischief. And they assault men in a more
subtle way – not grossly, in some broad
temptation, which everyone can understand,
but in some refined way they address
themselves to our pride or self-importance,
or love of money, or love of ease, or love
of show, or our depraved reason, and thus
have really the dominion over persons who
seem at first sight to be quite superior to
temptation.
Now apply
these illustrations to the case in point.
From what has been said it follows that you
must not suppose that nothing is incumbent
on us in the way of mortification, though
you have not to fast so strictly as
formerly. It is reasonable to think that
some other duty, of the same general kind,
may take its place; and therefore the
permission granted us in eating may be a
suggestion to us to be more severe with
ourselves on the other hand in certain other
respects.
And this
anticipation is confirmed by the history of
our Lord's temptation in the wilderness. It
began, you will observe, with an
attempt on the part of the evil one to make
him break his fast improperly. It began,
but it did not end there. It was but the
first of three temptations, and the other
two were more addressed to his mind, not his
bodily wants. One was to throw himself down
from the pinnacle, the other the offer of
all the kingdoms of the world. They were
more subtle temptations.
Subtle
temptations and subtle sins
Now, I have
used the word "subtle" already, and it needs
some explanation. By a subtle temptation or
a subtle sin, I mean one which it is very
difficult to find out. Everyone knows what
it is to break the ten commandments, the
first, the second, the third, and so on.
When a thing is directly commanded, and the
devil tempts us directly to break it, this
is not a subtle temptation, but a broad and
gross temptation. But there are a great many
things wrong which are not so obviously
wrong. They are wrong as leading to what is
wrong or the consequence of what is wrong,
or they are wrong because they are the very
same thing as what is forbidden, but dressed
up and looking differently.
The human
mind is very deceitful; when a thing is
forbidden, a man does not like directly to
do it, but he goes to work if he can to get
at the forbidden end in some way. It is like
a man who has to make for some place. First
he attempts to go straight to it, but finds
the way blocked up; then he goes round about
it. At first you would not think he is going
in the right direction; he sets off perhaps
at a right angle, but he just makes one
little bend, then another, till at length he
gets to his point. Or still more it is like
a sailing vessel at sea with the wind
contrary, but tacking first this way, and
then that, the mariners contrive at length
to get to their destination. This then is a
subtle sin, when it at first seems not to be
a sin, but comes round to the same point as
an open direct sin.
To take
some examples. If the devil tempted one to
go out into the highway and rob, this would
be an open, bold temptation. But if he
tempted one to do something unfair in the
course of business, which was to one's
neighbor's hurt and to one's own advantage,
it would be a more subtle temptation. The
man would still take what was his
neighbor's, but his conscience would not be
so much shocked. So equivocation is a more
subtle sin than direct lying. In like manner
a person who does not intoxicate himself,
may eat too much. Gluttony is a more subtle
sin than drunkenness, because it does not
show so much. And again, sins of the soul
are more subtle sins than sins of the body.
Infidelity is a more subtle sin than
licentiousness.
Even in
our Blessed Lord's case the Tempter began by
addressing himself to his bodily wants. He
had fasted forty days, and afterwards was
hungered. So the devil tempted him to eat.
But when he did not consent, then he went on
to more subtle temptations. He tempted him
to spiritual pride, and he tempted him by
ambition for power. Many a man would shrink
from intemperance, of being proud of his
spiritual attainments; that is, he would
confess such things were wrong, but he would
not see that he was guilty of them.
Fertile excuses and
evasions
Next I
observe that a civilized age is more exposed
to subtle sins than a rude age. Why? For
this simple reason, because it is more
fertile in excuses and evasions. It can
defend error, and hence can blind the eyes
of those who have not very careful
consciences. It can make error plausible, it
can make vice look like virtue. It dignifies
sin by fine names; it calls avarice proper
care of one's family, or industry, it calls
pride independence, it calls ambition
greatness of mind; resentment it calls
proper spirit and sense of honor, and so on.
…What all
of us want more than anything else, what
this age wants, is that its intellect and
its will should be under a law. At present
it is lawless, its will is its own law, its
own reason is the standard of all truth. It
does not bow to authority, it does not
submit to the law of faith. It is wise in
its own eyes and it relies on its own
resources. And you, as living in the world,
are in danger of being seduced by it, and
being a partner in its sin, and so coming in
at the end for its punishment. Now then let
me in conclusion, suggest one or two points
in which you may profitably subdue your
minds, which require it even more than your
bodies.
Let us mortify our
curiosity
For
example, in respect to curiosity. What a
deal of time is lost, to say nothing else,
in this day by curiosity, about things which
in no ways concern us. I am not speaking
against interest in the news of the day
altogether, for the course of the world must
ever be interesting to a Christian from its
bearing upon the fortunes of the church, but
I speak of vain curiosity, love of scandal,
love of idle tales, curious prying into the
private history of people, curiosity about
trials and offences, and personal matters,
nay often what is much worse than this,
curiosity into sin. What strange diseased
curiosity is sometimes felt about the
history of murders, and of the malefactors
themselves! Worse still, it is shocking to
say, but there is so much evil curiosity to
know about deeds of darkness, of which the
Apostle [Paul] says that it is shameful to
speak. Many a person, who has no intention
of doing the like, from an evil curiosity
reads what he ought not to read. This is in
one shape or other very much the sin of
boys, and they suffer for it. The knowledge
of what is evil is the first step in their
case to the commission of it. Hence this is
the way in which we are called upon, with
this Lent we now begin, to mortify
ourselves. Let us mortify our curiosity.
Let us mortify our
excessive desire for knowledge
Again, the
desire of knowledge is in itself
praiseworthy, but it may be excessive, it
may take us from higher things, it may take
up too much of our time – it is a vanity.
The Preacher makes the distinction between
profitable and unprofitable learning when he
says, "The words of the wise are like goads
and nails." They excite and stimulate us and
are fixed in our memories. "But further than
this, my son, inquire not. Of making many
books there is no end, and much study" (that
is, poring over secular subjects,) "is
affliction of the flesh. Let us one and all
have an end of the discourse: fear God and
keep his commandments, for this is the whole
of man." Knowledge is very well in its
place, but it is like flowers without fruit.
We cannot feed on knowledge, we cannot
thrive on knowledge. Just as the leaves of
the grove are very beautiful but would make
a bad meal, so we shall ever be hungry and
never be satisfied if we think to take
knowledge for our food. Knowledge is no
food. Religion is our only food. Here then
is another mortification. Mortify your
desire of knowledge. Do not go into excess
in seeking after truths which are not
religious.
Let us mortify our
reason
Again,
mortify your reason. In order to try you,
God puts before you things which are
difficult to believe. St. Thomas's faith was
tried; so is yours. He said "My Lord and my
God." You say so too. Bring your proud
intellect into subjection. Believe what you
cannot see, what you cannot understand, what
you cannot explain, what you cannot prove,
when God says it.
Let us bring our will
into subjection
Lastly,
bring your will into subjection. We all like
our own will – let us consult the will of
others. Numbers of persons are obliged to do
this. Servants are obliged to do the will of
their masters, workmen of their employers,
children of their parents, husbands of their
wives. Well, in these cases let your will go
with that of those who have a right to
command you. Don't rebel against it.
Sanctify what is after all a necessary act.
Make it in a certain sense your own,
sanctify it, and get merit from it. And
again when you are your own master, be on
your guard against going too much by your
own opinion. Take some wise counsellor or
director, and obey him. There are persons
who cry out against such obedience, and call
it a number of bad names. They are the very
persons who need it. It would do them much
good. They say that men are made mere
machines, and lose the dignity of human
nature by going by the word of another. And
I should like to know what they become by
going by their own will. ...For one person
who has been hurt by following the direction
of another, a hundred persons have been
ruined by going by their own will. This is
another subject. But this is enough. May
almighty God enable you.
John
Henry Newman, 1801-1890, was an
influential writer and major figure from
the Church of England in the Oxford
Movement. In 1845 he became a Catholic
priest and was made a Cardinal late in
life in 1879.
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