NOW THAT THE WAR IS OVER
"Choose you this
day" (Joshua 24:15).
Israel
faced a crisis. A choice had to be made. The prophet cried out for immediate
decision. "Choose you this day," he exhorted.
History does repeat itself. Centuries have passed since Israel
was confronted by the crisis
of the text but humanity again faces the necessity of a
decision, and I fear a quick decision, for God and right.
America
is at the crossroads. This expression is trite and overworked. It is used for
every
trivial experience. But the fact is -- the United
States of America will either make a
definite, clear-cut decision to return to the principles which have made our nation
great or continue to drop to lower levels of debauchery, sin, and corruption.
And -- what is true of the United States
is also true of the world. With war ended and peace at hand, two roads bid for
postwar travel. Shall it be up or down?
We have to a great extent forgotten God. Church attendance
is at an all-time low. Most
churches have dispensed with Sunday evening services.
Prayer-meetings are almost extinct, and genuine revivals are mostly
reminiscences of former days. While these deplorable conditions exist, gambling
is at an all-time high. It became "big-business" in 1944 with a total
of over $1,000,000,000.00 gambled. We spent over $7,000,000,000.00 for
alcoholic beverages last year, which is an average of $54.00 per capita for every
man, woman, and child in America.
In 1942, 135,000,000 gallons of distilled liquors were
consumed; in 1943 this was
increased to 143,000,000 gallons; and in 1944 it was
increased to 165,000,000 gallons. In 1939, 54,000,000 barrels of beer were
sold. This was raised to 65,000,000 in 1943 and reached a new high of
80,000,000 barrels in 1944. Divorce is increasing at an alarming rate. Rape,
murder, suicide, and burglary are increasing.
Juvenile delinquency is the Number One problem of our
criminologists, public officials,
and educators. Governor Dewey said recently in the columns
of the Saturday Evening Post, "Juvenile delinquency today means a crime
wave tomorrow." When these children become young men and women they will
become criminals unless a turning point comes in the meantime. Behind every
delinquent juvenile is a delinquent parent.
Carelessness, selfishness, and irreligion are contributing
to the moral toboggan slide of
today. America
will either decide to return to the faith of our Pilgrim and Puritan fathers,
to the moral standards of the Bible and the vital religion of Christ; or slide
headlong in the slough of moral corruption, sinful putrefaction, physical
breakdown and mental disillusionment. As many more of our soldiers return what
will they find? a half-drunken, gambling, God-forgetting nation? I am not a
pessimist -- but unless something happens I am afraid that is the answer.
As our fighting men continue to return what will they
contribute to the situation? Will the
ruthlessness of war with its blood, cruelty, and inhuman
deprivations tend to make them less cultured, less careful, and less Christian?
If they find upon their return that the civilian population is going rampant in
reckless moral abandonment, will not their experiences tend to accentuate
present distressing conditions? But, if our returning veterans find our country
in a wave of spiritual revival and moral renaissance, will they not feel that
the fight they made was worth while, and the result be that they will throw
themselves into a movement back to fundamental truths and wholesome moral
conduct?
We face the decision. The crisis is upon us. What of our
children? What of our nation? The choice is ours. "Choose you this
day."
Our present crisis is not the work of Hitler. He did not
precipitate it. Dr. E. Stanley Jones
is right when he says, "Hitler is a symptom -- not the
disease." World War II is only a by-product of the real war -- the war
between right and wrong, righteousness and unrighteousness, good and evil, God
and Satan. Periodically an eruption breaks forth in spite of our crust of
civilization, education, and culture.
Twenty-five years ago we had a conflagration -- World War I.
We set up two slogans. (1)
"Let's make the world safe for Democracy," and (2)
"Let's have one big war to end all war." The bands played, patriotism
burned high, Liberty Bonds were told by the billions, high schools and colleges
were depopulated of the finest of our youth, 10,000,000 were killed and
30,000,000 wounded. The Kaiser was the personification of the Evil One. We won
that war. Peace and calm came. We set up the League of Nations
and the World Court.
Countless sermons were preached on World Peace. All seemed serene and
complacent. And yet -- in less than 25 years we witnessed a worse eruption than
before.
Have you ever visited Yellowstone
National Park and seen Old
Faithful geyser erupt? All
appears calm -- you watch with expectancy. Soon you hear a
rumbling, gurgling sound -- and then -- boiling water and steam shoots up into
the air hundreds of feet, plays a few seconds and slowly dies down. The noisy,
gurgling tempest passes. All is quiet and peaceful. But, fifty-three minutes
later it all happens again. Why? Because down beneath the quiet surface is a
sea of hot substance awaiting the right condition to erupt.
So it is with our world. A geyser every twenty-five years
more or less. Our education,
culture, civilization, and social service beautifully
landscape the environmental surface. We delude ourselves into quiet complacency
dreaming that all is well, until a Kaiser or a Hitler appears creating the
right formula for a hot, carnal, sinful putrefaction to erupt in war. We fight
-- and win -- and then proceed to clean up the landscape and beautify it. We
create the San Francisco Charter. We try to control humanity effectively. We
treat symptoms and effects. We don't attempt to deal with diseases and causes.
Why don't we learn that the heart must be treated? Herein
lies the task of the Church; not a salve to mollify the outward, but a serum to
change the inward; not an organization, but an organic purging; not a system,
but a Saviour; not an ointment, but a sin-killing remedy; not an environmental
change, but an inward transformation; not an external re-organization; but an
internal regeneration; not so much a clean environment as a clean heart; not so
much a just society as a just person. Let us not delude ourselves by thinking
that an orderly hospital room with clean sheets and an efficient nurse can rid
a patient of smallpox. We need a medicine that can cope with the disease. So
with society. It is evil people that make an evil society. Let's get good
people and then we'll have a good society governed by good administrators.
Our need is not so much more education, better laws, or
increased culture. What we need
is a concentrated, powerful, spiritual-moral
penicillin-sulfanilimide-radium treatment that will transform men. Is there
such? There is. Christ's coming was the answer. His power can result in newborn
men -- new creatures. Old desires, old habits can pass away and "Behold,
all things can become new."
The stage is set for a revival. Campbell, Cartwright,
Leavell, Sweet, Muncy, Jones, and
others have written books recently proclaiming the
possibility of it. Will we actualize it?
Our greatest need in America
is
Not for better
legislation, but for better legislators --
Not for better business,
but for better businessmen --
Not for better banking,
but for better bankers --
Not for better farming,
but for better farmers --
Not for better teaching,
but for better teachers --
Not for better
jurisprudence, but for better judges --
Not for better laws, but
for better lawyers --
Not for better
preaching, but for better preachers --
Not for better art, but
for better artists --
Not for better music,
but for better musicians --
Moral and spiritual value is the result of personal choice.
To live right I must choose right. To be good I must choose goodness and repel
evil. To be spiritual I must choose the spiritual.
But you say, "I do choose right and truth and goodness.
But I find that I am bound by sinful habits; I find within myself unholy
desires, and ungovernable temper, evil tendencies which my mental choices do
not overcome. I choose right but I can't do right. I am in a distressing
dilemma." St. Paul faced the
same. He cried out, "When I would do good, evil is present with me ... the
good that I would I do not: but the evil which I would not that I do ... who
shall deliver me?" Thank God, he found the answer. He found personal
victory. When you choose, God acts. In our own strength it is futile. It is a
losing battle. But there is a dynamic, energizing, regenerating power at our
disposal when we choose God.
We as individuals must choose. If ten millions of church
members would sincerely and
personally re-consecrate and re-dedicate themselves to a
genuine revival of vital,
soul-transforming religion our nation could be swung back to
God and saved from apostasy, crime, debauchery, and sin.
Will you let the movement start this moment in your own
life? Will you this very minute
choose Christ? If you will, you will be the recipient of a
power to change your innermost life. You can become a new creature in Christ.
He can become a reality in your life. A new day can dawn. Life will take on new
color and meaning. Life can be radiant and purposeful.
"Choose you
this day."