第 28 节
作者:博搏      更新:2022-04-08 21:02      字数:9322
  of the war。  I came back from my visit to the Somme battlefields
  to find the sylvan peace of Essex invaded by a number of ladies
  in blue dresses adorned with large white crosses; who; regardless
  of the present shortage of nurses; were visiting every home in
  the place on some mission of invitation whose details remained
  obscure。  So far as I was able to elucidate this project; it was
  in the nature of a magic incantation; a satisfactory end of the
  war was to be brought about by convergent prayer and religious
  assiduities。  The mission was shy of dealing with me personally;
  although as a lapsed communicant I should have thought myself a
  particularly hopeful field for Anglican effort; and it came to my
  wife and myself merely for our permission and countenance in an
  appeal to our domestic servants。  My wife consulted the
  household; it seemed very anxious to escape from that appeal; and
  as I respect Christianity sufficiently to detest the
  identification of its services with magic processes; the mission
  retiredcivilly repulsed。  But the incident aroused an uneasy
  curiosity in my mind with regard to the general trend of Anglican
  teaching and Anglican activities at the present time。  The trend
  of my enquiries is to discover the church much more incoherent
  and much less religiousin any decent sense of the wordthan I
  had supposed it to be。
  Organisation is the life of material and the death of mental and
  spiritual processes。  There could be no more melancholy
  exemplification of this than the spectacle of the Anglican and
  Catholic churches at the present time; one using the tragic
  stresses of war mainly for pew…rent touting; and the other
  paralysed by its Austrian and South German political connections
  from any clear utterance upon the moral issues of the war。
  Through the opening phases of the war the Established Church of
  England was inconspicuous; this is no longer the case; but it may
  be doubted whether the change is altogether to its advantage。  To
  me this is a very great disappointment。  I have always had a very
  high opinion of the intellectual values of the leading divines of
  both the Anglican and Catholic communions。  The self…styled
  Intelligentsia of Great Britain is all too prone to sneer at
  their equipment; but I do not see how any impartial person can
  deny that Father Bernard Vaughn is in mental energy; vigour of
  expression; richness of thought and variety of information fully
  the equal of such an influential lay publicist as Mr。 Horatio
  Bottomley。  One might search for a long time among prominent
  laymen to find the equal of the Bishop of London。  Nevertheless
  it is impossible to conceal the impression of tawdriness that
  this latter gentleman's work as head of the National Mission has
  left upon my mind。  Attired in khaki he has recently been
  preaching in the open air to the people of London upon Tower
  Hill; Piccadilly; and other conspicuous places。  Obsessed as I am
  by the humanities; and impressed as I have always been by the
  inferiority of material to moral facts; I would willingly have
  exchanged the sight of two burning Zeppelins for this spectacle
  of ecclesiastical fervour。  But as it is; I am obliged to trust
  to newspaper reports and the descriptions of hearers and eye…
  witnesses。  They leave to me but little doubt of the regrettable
  superficiality of the bishop's utterances。
  We have a multitude of people chastened by losses; ennobled by a
  common effort; needing support in that effort; perplexed by the
  reality of evil and cruelty; questioning and seeking after God。
  What does the National Mission offer?  On Tower Hill the bishop
  seems to have been chiefly busy with a wrangling demonstration
  that ten thousand a year is none too big a salary for a man
  subject to such demands and expenses as his see involves。  So far
  from making anything out of his see he was; he declared; two
  thousand a year to the bad。  Some day; when the church has
  studied efficiency; I suppose that bishops will have the leisure
  to learn something about the general state of opinion and
  education in their dioceses。  The Bishop of London was evidently
  unaware of the almost automatic response of the sharp socialists
  among his hearers。  Their first enquiry would be to learn how he
  came by that mysterious extra two thousand a year with which he
  supplemented his stipend。  How did he earn /that?/ And if he
  didn't earn it…!  And secondly; they would probably have
  pointed out to him that his standard of housing; clothing; diet
  and entertaining was probably a little higher than theirs。  It is
  really no proof of virtuous purity that a man's expenditure
  exceeds his income。  And finally some other of his hearers were
  left unsatisfied by his silence with regard to the current
  proposal to pool all clerical stipends for the common purposes of
  the church。  It is a reasonable proposal; and if bishops must
  dispute about stipends instead of preaching the kingdom of God;
  then they are bound to face it。  The sooner they do so; the more
  graceful will the act be。  From these personal apologetics the
  bishop took up the question of the exemption; at the request of
  the bishops; of the clergy from military service。  It is one of
  our contrasts with French conditionsand it is all to the
  disadvantage of the British churches。
  In his Piccadilly contribution to the National Mission of
  Repentance and Hope the bishop did not talk politics but sex。  He
  gave his hearers the sort of stuff that is handed out so freely
  by the Cinema Theatres; White Slave Traffic talk; denunciations
  of 〃Night Hawks〃whatever 〃Night Hawks〃 may beand so on。  One
  this or another occasion the bishophe boasts that he himself is
  a healthy bachelorlavished his eloquence upon the Fall in the
  Birth Rate; and the duty of all married people; from paupers
  upward; to have children persistently。  Now sex; like diet; is a
  department of conduct and a very important department; but /it
  isn't religion!/ The world is distressed by international
  disorder; by the monstrous tragedy of war; these little hot talks
  about indulgence and begetting have about as much to do with the
  vast issues that concern us as; let us say; a discussion of the
  wickedness of eating very new and indigestible bread。  It is
  talking round and about the essential issue。  It is fogging the
  essential issue; which is the forgotten and neglected kingship of
  God。  The sin that is stirring the souls of men is the sin of
  this war。  It is the sin of national egotism and the devotion of
  men to loyalties; ambitions; sects; churches; feuds; aggressions;
  and divisions that are an outrage upon God's universal
  kingdom。
  2
  The common clergy of France; sharing the military obligations and
  the food and privations of their fellow parishioners; contrast
  very vividly with the home…staying types of the ministries of the
  various British churches。  I met and talked to several。  Near
  Frise there were some barge gunboatsthey have since taken their
  place in the fighting; but then they were a surpriseand the men
  had been very anxious to have their craft visited and seen。  The
  priest who came after our party to see if he could still arrange
  that; had been decorated for gallantry。  Of course the English
  too have their gallant chaplains; but they are men of the officer
  caste; they are just young officers with peculiar collars; not
  men among men; as are the French priests。
  There can be no doubt that the behaviour of the French priests in
  this war has enormously diminished anti…clerical bitterness in
  France。  There can be no doubt that France is far more a
  religious country than it was before the war。  But if you ask
  whether that means any return to the church; any reinstatement of
  the church; the answer is a doubtful one。  Religion and the
  simple priest are stronger in France to…day; the church; I think;
  is weaker。
  I trench on no theological discussion when I record the
  unfavourable impression made upon all western Europe by the
  failure of the Holy Father to pronounce definitely upon the
  rights and wrongs of the war。  The church has abrogated its right
  of moral judgement。  Such at least seemed to be the opinion of
  the Frenchmen with whom I discussed a remarkable interview with
  Cardinal Gasparri that I found one morning in /Le Journal。/
  It was not the sort of interview to win the hearts of men who
  were ready to give their lives to set right what they believe to
  be the greatest outrage that has ever been inflicted upon
  Christendom; that is to say the forty…three years of military
  preparation and of diplomacy by threats that culminated in the
  ultimatum to Serbia; the invasion of Belgium and the murder of
  the Vise villagers。  It was adorned with a large portrait
  of 〃Benoit XV。;〃 looking grave and discouraging over his
  spectacles; and the headlines insisted it was 〃/La
  Pensee du Pape。/〃 Cross…heads sufficiently indicated
  the general tone。  One read:
  /〃Le Saint Siege impartial。。。
  Au…dessus de la bataille。。。。〃/
  The good Cardinal would have made a good lawyer。  He had as
  little to say about God and the general righteousness of things
  as the Bishop of London。  But he got in some smug reminders of
  the severance of diplomatic relations with the Vatican