CHRISTIANITY AND WAR

‘There was war in heaven.’

Revelation 12:7

And if in heaven, where the Lord Almighty works His plans of goodness and love, then, without surprise, on earth, with its fallen passions and selfish, unholy ambitions.

I. But what has the gospel of Christ to say to the whole question?—How does Christianity speak with regard to the right and wrong of war? Certainly there is an answer. The spirit of Christianity, the ethics of the gospel, the teaching of the Lord Jesus Christ are opposed, absolutely, to the spirit of war in itself. In old days, in the times before Christ, war nearly always, on one side or the other, and not infrequently on both, represented the savage instincts and rude elements of human character and infirmity. And war was lightly entered upon, even within our own history, in a spirit of pride and cruelty, hate and revenge. And war, as hate, is wrong, absolutely. And only gradually, as the spirit of Christianity is better loved and understood, are the evil springs of war abandoned and its selfish cruelties put away. And at least we must admit that in these days the brighter the light of Christianity is, in any nation, the more wonderfully are all these features changed even in the very conduct of war itself.

II. We, a great Christian empire, have frequently had thrown upon our hands the unwilling, painful task of rising up to defend by force our dependent peoples from evils under which they cried. Our very Christianity calls us to the terrible conflict of war sometimes. And if war were always and inevitably wrong, then the greatest empire in the world ought to exist without an army and without a fleet. And the most peace-loving Christian man could not contemplate that, with the world as it is, as a sane or even a possible situation.

III. Again, war is God’s scourge for many things that are more deadly wrong than war.—In a fallen and struggling world the Almighty uses war as a drastic remedy for many a slow and cankering poison. He makes ‘even the wrath of man to praise Him, and the remainder of wrath He will restrain.’ War has its terrible mercies and its grim healing. We can look back on our own civil wars and learn that. We can read it in the lurid glare of the French Revolution. We can unearth it in many an ancient story of a decaying nation and a corrupt people. A new race of unselfish and devoted men, of pure and noble women, of high and worthy ideals, can come in only by war sometimes, and in a baptism of grief and blood.

—Rev. Dr. E. Hicks.

ST.

Continues after advertising
Continues after advertising