Article written by Mr. MACKINNON for the Church Union 7ournal, only a week
or two before his last illness (see p. 137).
THE FLOWING TIDE
"The flowing tide is with us." There is no movement of our day in
connection with which these words can be more legitimately used than in
connection with the movement which aims at the union of the Scottish
Churches. One cannot predict what the outcome of the negotiations now in
progress may be, but the feeling has grown into a certainty in the minds
of the people of Scotland that union cannot now be very long delayed; and
there are elements in our Scottish religious life which justify that
certainty. To all of these elements public attention has already been
called, I have no doubt, in the pages of the Union Journal; but they are
so clamant in their demand for consideration that it is the duty of every
one who desires union, to do what he can to keep them before the mind of
the nation. That is why I venture to refer to some of them in this paper.
SPIRITUAL AFFINITY OF THE CHURCHES
The first which I shall mention is the spiritual affinity of the Churches
chiefly concerned. It is unnecessary to state of what this affinity
consists. All that one is called upon to do is to emphasize the fact that
it is there, and is growing. Not to speak of the interchange of pulpit
courtesies, now so common, nor of the numerous instances of co-operation
between ministers and between congregations of which one so often hears
and reads, there is the significant fact that when members of either
Church migrate from one parish to another, while
anxious in the great majority of cases to establish for themselves a
church connection in the locality to which they go to reside, they are not
nearly so particular as they used to be as to which of the Presbyterian
Churches they become members of, there. Dis- junction certificates from
the United Free Church find their way into the hands of ministers of the
Church of Scotland, and Church of Scotland certificates find their way
into the hands of ministers of the United Free Church. Time was when such
passing from the one Church to the other was a thing not to be thought of.
But we meet with it now in every part of the country. The point in which
members of our Churches are most deeply interested, on the occasion of a
change in their place of residence, is not so much the denomination of the
congregation with which they become associated, but the suitableness to
individual taste of the church services they attend, and the acceptability
in their view as preacher and pastor of the minister whose flock they
join. Some would probably ascribe this feature of present-day Church life
amongst us to indifference, but such a construction of it would not be
fair. It rather suggests that to-day the religious experience of the
membership of the one Church approximates more closely to that of the
membership of the other than it ever did before. Indeed it is no
exaggeration to say that the two Churches are now nearer each other in
spirit and life than different sections of Scottish Presbyterianism were
when as yet they were organically one. So that to cross from one Church to
the other has become easy. The Scottish people feel equally at home in
both Churches, so that the amalgamation which union is calculated to
effect is a thing not only for which members of both are prepared, but
which they have in aspiration and action begun to insist upon.
NECESSITY OF A UNITED FRONT
Again, there is the consideration that whereas formerly
each Church regarded the other as its natural rival, if not, indeed, its
enemy, there is now a widespread conviction that the primary business of
the Churches is to present a united front to the forces opposed to both.
Each is eady to rejoice in any success which may attend the other in the
war against evil which both are waging. We have travelled a thousand miles
beyond the point at which one pulpit fulminated against the shortcomings,
and envied the prosperity of its neighbour of the other Church, and at
which, in this respect as in most others, the pew emulated the pulpit in
words of uncharitableness and bitterness. What now impresses above all
else is the Divine call which has come to the Churches to do battle as one
great army against the selfishness and impurity and godlessness which to
our sorrow are still so rampant around us. In combating these foes of God
and of humanity it is felt more deeply than previously that union is
strength—that one great united Church is bound to put forth more power and
exert more influence than two less great Churches, however diligent, are
able to do. Whenever a large public meeting is held to denounce some evil
or champion some movement making for righteousness, ministers of the two
Churches stand and speak shoulder to shoulder, and even the General
Assemblies have conferred together on questions affecting the common weal.
There are few but have come to the conclusion that Churches which can so
constantly take up a position like this on matters in which both are
interested, although these may be outside the spheres of their
administration, ought no longer to stand apart in relation to internal
matters, especially seeing they are already one in all essentials of
doctrine, government, worship, and discipline. The fact is that we have
begun to feel ashamed that we should waste our energies either in
defending our own denominational interest or attacking the denominational
interests of our neighbours, when so much land yet remains to be possessed
for the kingdom of heaven and the cause of righteousness. We have begun to
be scandalized at circumstances which necessitate the duplication of
agencies and organizations and activities in a way that prevents us from
making the best of our opportunities and discharging our responsibilities
as trustees of the heritage of Christ in this land. We feel certain that
the power which union would set free through the discontinuance of this
duplication would go far to carry positions which the common enemy of
both. Churches occupies at present without challenge. The Christian
conscience of our country rebels against the fruitless expenditure in men
and means which the existing state of affairs entails upon us. It demands
with emphasis that this expenditure should cease and that the Church of
Christ in this realm should be allowed to put forth all its strength in
extending the boundaries of Christ's kingdom both at home and abroad. That
is why so many of our fellow-countrymen in both our great Churches have
grown sick of the ambition and craving for denominational advantage
hitherto so prominent in ecclesiastical procedure. And it is also the
reason why they are resolved that our divisions, to which they correctly
ascribe the slowness of our progress in the fulfilment of our mission,
should, as soon as possible, come to an end.
DISTINCTIVE CONTRIBUTIONS
Further, while it is true that the two Churches whose
union we have at present in view have now more in common in the matter of
religious affinity than at any previous stage in their history, it is
recognized, especially by the laity, that each Church has its own
distinctive contribution to make to religious thought and sentiment and
activity. And it is felt that these contributions would benefit the
country more widely and more thoroughly if the Churches were one instead
of two. There is no desire that any type or school should perish. On the
contrary, the hope is that whatever is true and lovely and of good report
should not be confined in its serviceableness to a section, but should
permeate and elevate the whole Christian life of Scotland. The United Free
Church can give us of the Church of Scotland much that will benefit us
here, and we of the Church of Scotland can bring an accession of edifying
elements to the United Free Church. It is needless to go into detail, but
I cannot refrain from calling attention to the excellent combination of
the endowment and voluntary methods of providing Christian ordinances
which would attend the consummation of a union. And what splendid
equipment would be secured for the ministry of a united Church by the
merging one with another of the theological colleges of the respective
Churches; and, through a ministry so equipped, what additional
confirmation in faith and usefulness in service would come to the rank and
file of the membership. For these and other improvements that would result
from union the rank and file are longing. That longing receives articulate
expression whenever and wherever Church union becomes a subject of
conversation. There is a marvellous unanimity on the subject, and the
laity of Scotland will not be satisfied until mere ecclesiastics bury
their hatchets and the benefits of union are within the reach of all.
This brief paper by no means deals with all the
elements that make for union. But those that I have specified are an
appeal to the Churches to concentrate increasingly upon the attainment of
this grand object. Mr. Augustine Birrell, in addressing a religious
gathering of men in London some time ago, exhorted his audience not to be
distressed overmuch about the things regarding which they were in doubt,
but to lean with all their strength on the things of which they were sure.
If Presbyterian Scotland is prepared not to be too much distressed (I mean
in union negotiations) regarding the things as to which there is
disagreement, and to lean with all its strength on the things as to which
there is agreement, it will not be long before the former will settle
themselves, and there will be in Scotland a Church greater and nobler than
any known to our ancestors---united, national, free. powerful.
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