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Showing
how the education which men generally receive in their
youth makes the doctrines of humility difficult to be
practised. The spirit of a better education represented
in the character of Paternus.
ANOTHER
difficulty in the practice of humility arises from our
education. We are all of us, for the most part, corruptly
educated, and then committed to take our course in a
corrupt world; so that it is no wonder if examples of
great piety are so seldom seen.
Great
part of the world are undone by being born and bred in
families that have no religion: where they are made
vicious and irregular, by being like those with whom they
first lived.
But this
is not the thing I now mean; the education that I here
intend, is such as children generally receive from
virtuous and sober parents, and learned tutors and
governors.
Had we
continued perfect, as God created the first man, perhaps
the perfection of our nature had been a sufficient
self-instruction for every one. But as sickness and
diseases have created the necessity of medicines and
physicians, so the change and disorder of our rational
nature have introduced the necessity of education and
tutors.
And as
the only end of the physician is to restore nature to its
own state, so the only end of education is to restore our
rational nature to its proper state. Education, therefore,
is to be considered as a reason borrowed at second-hand,
which is, as far as it can, to supply the loss of original
perfection. And as physic may justly be called the art of
restoring health, so education should be considered in no
other light, than as the art of recovering to man the use
of his reason.
Now as
the instruction of every art or science is founded upon
the discoveries, the wisdom, experience, and maxims, of
the several great men that have laboured in it; so human
wisdom, or right use of our reason, which young people
should be called to by their education, is nothing else
but the best experience, and finest reasonings, of men
that have devoted themselves to the study of wisdom, and
the improvement of human nature.
All,
therefore, that great saints, and dying men, when the
fullest of light and conviction, and after the highest
improvement of their reason, all that they have said of
the necessity of piety, of the excellency of virtue, of
their duty to God, of the emptiness of riches, of the
vanity of the world; all the sentences, judgments,
reasonings, and maxims, of the wisest of philosophers,
when in their highest state of wisdom, should constitute
the common lessons of instruction for youthful minds.
This is
the only way to make the young and ignorant part of the
world the better for the wisdom and knowledge of the wise
and ancient.
An
education which is not wholly intent upon this, is as much
beside the point, as an art of physic that had little or
no regard to the restoration of health.
The
youths that attended upon Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato, and
Epictetus, were thus educated. Their everyday lessons and
instructions were so many lectures upon the nature of man,
his true end and the right use of his faculties; upon the
immortality of the soul, its relation to God, the beauty
of virtue, and its agreeableness to the Divine Nature;
upon the dignity of reason, the necessity of temperance,
fortitude, and generosity, and the shame and folly of
indulging our passions.
Now as
Christianity has, as it were, new created the moral and
religious world, and set everything that is reasonable,
wise, holy, and desirable, in its true point of light; so
one would expect, that the education of youth should be as
much bettered and amended by Christianity, as the faith
and doctrines of religion are amended by it.
As it has
introduced such a new state of things, and so fully
informed us of the nature of man, the ends of his
creation, the state of his condition; as it has fixed all
our goods and evils, taught us the means of purifying our
souls, pleasing God, and becoming eternally happy; one
might naturally suppose, that every Christian country
abounded with schools for the teaching, not only a few
questions and answers of a Catechism, but for the forming,
training, and practising youth in such an outward course
of life, as the highest precepts, the strictest rules, and
the sublimest doctrines of Christianity require.
An
education under Pythagoras, or Socrates, had no other end,
but to teach you to think, judge, act, and follow such
rules of life as Pythagoras and Socrates used.
And is it
not as reasonable to suppose, that a Christian education
should have no other end, but to teach youth how to think,
and judge, and act, and live, according to the strictest
laws of Christianity?
At least,
one would suppose, that, in all Christian schools, the
teaching youth to begin their lives in the spirit of
Christianity, in such severity of behaviour, such
abstinence, sobriety, humility, and devotion, as
Christianity requires, should not only be more, but a
hundred times more regarded, than any, or all things else.
For our
education should imitate our guardian Angels; suggest
nothing to our minds but what is wise and holy; help us to
discover and subdue every vain passion of our hearts, and
every false judgment of our minds.
And it is
as sober and as reasonable to expect and require all this
benefit of a Christian education, as to require that
physic should strengthen all that is right in our nature,
and remove that which is sickly and diseased.
But,
alas, our modern education is not of this kind.
The first
temper that we try to awaken in children, is pride; as
dangerous a passion as that of lust. We stir them up to
vain thoughts of themselves, and do everything we can to
puff up their minds with a sense of their own abilities.
Whatever
way of life we intend them for, we apply to the fire and
vanity of their minds, and exhort them to everything from
corrupt motives. We stir them up to action from principles
of strife and ambition, from glory, envy, and a desire of
distinction, that they may excel others, and shine in the
eyes of the world.
We repeat
and inculcate these motives upon them, till they think it
a part of their duty to be proud, envious, and
vain-glorious of their own accomplishments.
And when
we have taught them to scorn to be outdone by any, to bear
no rival, to thirst after every instance of applause, to
be content with nothing but the highest distinctions, then
we begin to take comfort in them, and promise the world
some mighty things from youths of such a glorious spirit.
If
children are intended for holy orders, we set before them
some eminent orator, whose fine preaching has made him the
admiration of the age, and carried him through all the
dignities and preferments of the Church.
We
encourage them to have these honours in their eye, and to
expect the reward of their studies from them.
If the
youth is intended for a trade, we bid him look at all the
rich men of the same trade, and consider how many now are
carried about in their stately coaches, who began in the
same low degree as he now does. We awaken his ambition,
and endeavour to give his mind a right turn, by often
telling him how very rich such and such a tradesman died.
If he is
to be a lawyer, then we set great counsellors, lords,
judges, and chancellors, before his eyes. We tell him what
great fees, and great applause, attend fine pleading. We
exhort him to take fire at these things, to raise a spirit
of emulation in himself, and to be content with nothing
less than the highest honours of the long robe.
That this
is the nature of our best education, is too plain to need
any proof; and I believe there are few parents, but would
be glad to see these instructions daily given to their
children.
And after
all this, we complain of the effects of pride; we wonder
to see grown men actuated and governed by ambition, envy,
scorn, and a desire of glory; not considering that they
were all the time of their youth called upon to all their
action and industry, upon the same principles.
You teach
a child to scorn to be outdone, to thirst for distinction
and applause; and is it any wonder that he continues to
act all his life in the same manner?
Now if a
youth is ever to be so far a Christian, as to govern his
heart by the doctrines of humility, I would fain know at
what time he is to begin it: or, if he is ever to begin it
at all, why we train him up in tempers quite contrary to
it?
How dry
and poor must the doctrine of humility sound to a youth,
that has been spurred up to all his industry by ambition,
envy, emulation, and a desire of glory and distinction!
And if he is not to act by these principles when he is a
man, why do we call him to act by them in his youth?
Envy is
acknowledged by all people to be the most ungenerous,
base, and wicked passion that can enter into the heart of
man.
And is
this a temper to be instilled, nourished, and established,
in the minds of young people?
I know it
is said, that it is not envy, but emulation, that is
intended to be awakened in the minds of young men.
But this
is vainly said. For when children are taught to bear no
rival, and to scorn to be outdone by any of their age,
they are plainly and directly taught to be envious. For it
is impossible for any one to have this scorn of being
outdone, and this contention with rivals, without burning
with envy against all those that seem to excel him, or get
any distinction from him. So that what children are taught
is rank envy, and only covered with a name of a less
odious sound.
Secondly,
If envy is thus confessedly bad, and it be only emulation
that is endeavoured to be awakened in children, surely
there ought to be great care taken, that children may know
the one from the other:-- that they may abominate the one
as a great crime, whilst they give the other admission
into their minds.
But if
this were to be attempted, the fineness of the distinction
betwixt envy and emulation would show that it was easier
to divide them in words, than to separate them in action.
For
emulation, when it is defined in its best manner, is
nothing else but a refinement upon envy, or rather the
most plausible part of that black and venomous passion.
And
though it is easy to separate them in the notion, yet the
most acute philosopher, that understands the art of
distinguishing ever so well, if he gives himself up to
emulation, will certainly find himself deep in envy.
For envy
is not an original temper, but the natural, necessary, and
unavoidable effect of emulation, or a desire of glory.
So that
he who establishes the one in the minds of people,
necessarily fixes the other there. And there is no other
possible way of destroying envy, but by destroying
emulation, or a desire of glory. For the one always rises
and falls in proportion to the other.
I know it
is said in defence of this method of education, that
ambition, and a desire of glory, are necessary to excite
young people to industry; and that if we were to press
upon them the doctrines of humility, we should deject
their minds, and sink them into dulness and idleness.
But those
people who say this, do not consider, that this reason, if
it has any strength, is full as strong against pressing
the doctrines of humility upon grown men, lest we should
deject their minds, and sink them into dulness and
idleness.
For who
does not see, that middle-aged men want as much the
assistance of pride, ambition, and vainglory, to spur them
up to action and industry, as children do? And it is very
certain, that the precepts of humility are more contrary
to the designs of such men, and more grievous to their
minds when they are pressed upon them, than they are to
the minds of young persons.
This
reason, therefore, that is given, why children should not
be trained up in the principles of true humility, is as
good a reason why the same humility should never be
required of grown men.
Thirdly,
Let those people who think that children would be spoiled,
if they were not thus educated, consider this:--
Could
they think, that, if any children had been educated by our
Blessed Lord, or His Holy Apostles, their minds would have
been sunk into dulness and idleness?
Or could
they think, that such children would not have been trained
up in the profoundest principles of a strict and true
humility? Can they say that our Blessed Lord, who was the
meekest and humblest Man that ever was on earth, was
hindered by His humility from being the greatest example
of worthy and glorious actions, that ever were done by
man?
Can they
say that His Apostles, who lived in the humble spirit of
their Master, did therefore cease to be laborious and
active instruments of doing good to all the world?
A few
such reflections as these are sufficient to expose all the
poor pretences for an education in pride and ambition.
Paternus[34]
lived about two hundred years ago; he had but one son,
whom he educated himself in his own house. As they were
sitting together in the garden, when the child was ten
years old, Paternus thus began to him:
The
little time that you have been in the world, my child, you
have spent wholly with me; and my love and tenderness to
you has made you look upon me as your only friend and
benefactor, and the cause of all the comfort and pleasure
that you enjoy; your heart, I know, would be ready to
break with grief, if you thought this was the last day
that I should live with you.
But, my
child, though you now think yourself mighty happy, because
you have hold of my hand, you are now in the hands, and
under the tender care of a much greater Father and Friend
than I am, whose love to you is far greater than mine, and
from whom you receive such blessings as no mortal can
give.
That God
whom you have seen me daily worship, whom I daily call
upon to bless both you and me, and all mankind, whose
wondrous acts are recorded in those Scriptures which you
constantly read; that God who created the heavens and the
earth, who brought a flood upon the whole world, who saved
Noah in the ark, who was the God of Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob, whom Job blessed and praised in the greatest
afflictions, who delivered the Israelites out of the hands
of the Egyptians, who was the Protector of righteous
Joseph, Moses, Joshua, and holy Daniel, who sent so many
Prophets into the world, who sent His Son Jesus Christ to
redeem mankind; this God, who has done all these great
things, who has created so many millions of men who lived
and died before you were born, with whom the spirits of
good men that are departed this life now live, whom
infinite numbers of Angels now worship in Heaven; this
great God, who is the Creator of worlds, of Angels, and
men, is your loving Father and Friend, your good Creator
and Nourisher, from whom, and not from me, you received
your being ten years ago, at the time that I planted that
little tender elm which you there see.
I myself
am not half the age of this shady oak, under which we sit;
many of our fathers have sat under its boughs, we have all
of us called it ours in our turn, though it stands, and
drops its masters, as it drops its leaves.
You see,
my son, this wide and large firmament over our heads,
where the sun and moon, and all the stars appear in their
turns. If you were to be carried up to any of these bodies
at this vast distance from us, you would still discover
others as much above you, as the stars that you see here
are above the earth. Were you to go up or down, east or
west, north or south, you would find the same height
without any top, and the same depth without any bottom.
And yet,
my child, so great is God, that all these bodies added
together are but as a grain of sand in His sight. And yet
you are as much the care of this great God and Father of
all worlds and all spirits, as if He had no son but you,
or there was no creature for Him to love and protect but
you alone. He numbers the hairs of your head, watches over
you, sleeping and waking, and has preserved you from a
thousand dangers, which neither you, nor I, know anything
of.
How poor
my power is, and how little I am able to do for you, you
have often seen. Your late sickness has shown you how
little I could do for you in that state; and the frequent
pains of your head are plain proofs that I have no power
to remove them.
I can
bring you food and medicines, but have no power to turn
them into your relief and nourishment. It is God alone
that can do this for you.
Therefore,
my child, fear, and worship, and love God. Your eyes,
indeed, cannot yet see Him. But all things that you see
are so many marks of His power and presence, and He is
nearer to you than anything that you can see.
Take Him
for your Lord, and Father, and Friend, look up unto Him as
the fountain and cause of all the good that you have
received through my hands; and reverence me only as the
bearer and minister of God's good things unto you. And He
that blessed my father before I was born, will bless you
when I am dead.
Your
youth and little mind is only yet acquainted with my
family, and therefore you think there is no happiness out
of it.
But, my
child, you belong to a greater family than mine; you are a
young member of the family of this Almighty Father of all
nations, who has created infinite orders of Angels, and
numberless generations of men, to be fellow-members of one
and the same society in Heaven.
You do
well to reverence and obey my authority because God has
given me power over you, to bring you up in His fear, and
to do for you as the holy fathers recorded in Scripture
did for their children, who are now in rest and peace with
God.
I shall
in a short time die, and leave you to God and yourself;
and, if God forgiveth my sins, I shall go to His Son Jesus
Christ, and live amongst patriarchs and prophets, saints
and martyrs, where I shall pray for you, and hope for your
safe arrival at the same place.
Therefore,
my child, meditate on these great things; and your soul
will soon grow great and noble by so meditating upon them.
Let your
thoughts often leave these gardens, these fields and
farms, to contemplate God and Heaven, to consider upon[35]
the Angels, and the spirits of good men living in light
and glory.
As you
have been used to look to me in all your actions, and have
been afraid to do anything, unless you first knew my will,
so let it now be a rule of your life, to look up to God in
all your actions, to do everything in His fear, and to
abstain from everything that is not according to His will.
Bear Him
always in your mind, teach your thoughts to reverence Him
in every place, for there is no place where He is not.
God
keepeth a book of life, wherein all the actions of all men
are written; your name is there, my child; and when you
die, this book will be laid open before men and Angels,
and, according as your actions are there found, you will
either be received to the happiness of those holy men who
have died before you, or be turned away amongst wicked
spirits, that are never to see God any more.
Never
forget this book, my son, for it is written, it must be
opened, you must see it, and you must be tried by it.
Strive, therefore, to fill it with your good deeds, that
the handwriting of God may not appear against you.
God, my
child, is all love, and wisdom, and goodness; and
everything that He has made, and every action that He
does, is the effect of them all. Therefore you cannot
please God, but so far as you strive to walk in love,
wisdom, and goodness. As all wisdom, love, and goodness,
proceed from God, so nothing but love, wisdom, and
goodness, can lead to God.
When you
love that which God loves, you act with Him, you join
yourself to Him; and when you love what He dislikes, then
you oppose Him, and separate yourself from Him. This is
the true and the right way: think what God loves, and do
you love it with all your heart.
First of
all, my child, worship and adore God, think of Him
magnificently, speak of Him reverently, magnify His
providence, adore His power, frequent His service, and
pray unto Him frequently and constantly.
Next to
this, love your neighbour, which is all mankind, with such
tenderness and affection as you love yourself. Think how
God loves all mankind, how merciful He is to them, how
tender He is of them, how carefully He preserves them; and
then strive to love the world, as God loves it.
God would
have all men to be happy; therefore do you will and desire
the same. All men are great instances of Divine Love;
therefore let all men be instances of your love.
But above
all, my son, mark this; never do anything through strife,
or envy, or emulation, or vain-glory. Never do anything in
order to excel other people, but in order to please God,
and because it is His will that you should do everything
in the best manner that you can.
For if it
is once a pleasure to you to excel other people, it will
by degrees be a pleasure to you to see other people not so
good as yourself.
Banish
therefore every thought of self-pride, and
self-distinction, and accustom yourself to rejoice in all
the excellencies and perfections of your fellow-creatures,
and be as glad to see any of their good actions as your
own.
For as
God is as well pleased with their well-doings, as with
yours; so you ought to desire, that everything that is
wise, and holy, and good, may be performed in as high a
manner by other people, as by yourself.
Let this
therefore be your only motive and spur to all good
actions, honest industry, and business, to do everything
in as perfect and excellent a manner as you can, for this
only reason, because it is pleasing to God, who desires
your perfection, and writes all your actions in a book.
When I am dead, my son, you will be master of all my
estate, which will be a great deal more than the
necessities of one family require. Therefore, as you are
to be charitable to the souls of men, and wish them the
same happiness with you in Heaven, so be charitable to
their bodies, and endeavour to make them as happy as you
upon earth.
As God
has created all things for the common good of all men, so
let that part of them which has fallen to your share be
employed, as God would have all employed, for the common
good of all.
Do good,
my son, first of all to those that most deserve it; but
remember to do good to all. The greatest sinners receive
daily instances of God's goodness towards them; He
nourishes and preserves them, that they may repent, and
return to Him: do you therefore imitate God, and think no
one too bad to receive your relief and kindness, when you
see that he wants it.
I am
teaching you Latin and Greek, not that you should desire
to be a great critic, a fine poet, or an eloquent orator;
I would not have your heart feel any of these desires; for
the desire of these accomplishments is a vanity of the
mind, and the masters of them are generally vain men. For
the desire of anything that is not a real good, lessens
the application of the mind after that which is so.
But I
teach you these languages, that at proper times you may
look into the history of past ages, and learn the methods
of God's providence over the world: that, reading the
writings of the ancient Sages, you may see how wisdom and
virtue have been the praise of great men of all ages, and
fortify your mind by their wise sayings.
Let truth
and plainness therefore be the only ornament of your
language, and study nothing but how to think of all things
as they deserve, to choose everything that is best, to
live according to reason and order, and to act in every
part of your life in conformity to the will of God.
Study how
to fill your heart full of the love of God, and the love
of your neighbour, and then be content to be no deeper a
scholar, no finer a gentleman, than these tempers will
make you. As true religion is nothing else but simple
nature governed by right reason, so it loves and requires
great plainness and simplicity of life. Therefore avoid
all superfluous shows of finery and equipage, and let your
house be plainly furnished with moderate conveniences. Do
not consider what your estate can afford, but what right
reason requires.
Let your
dress be sober, clean, and modest, not to set out the
beauty of your person, but to declare the sobriety of your
mind, that your outward garb may resemble the inward
plainness and simplicity of your heart. For it is highly
reasonable that you should be one man, all of a piece, and
appear outwardly such as you are inwardly.
As to
your meat and drink, in them observe the highest rules of
Christian temperance and sobriety; consider your body only
as the servant and minister of your soul; and only so
nourish it, as it may best perform an humble and obedient
service to it.
But, my
son, observe this as a most principal thing, which I shall
remember you of as long as I live with you:--
Hate and
despise all human glory, for it is nothing else but human
folly. It is the greatest snare, and the greatest
betrayer, that you can possibly admit into your heart.
Love
humility in all its instances; practise it in all its
parts, for it is the noblest state of the soul of man; it
will set your heart and affections right towards God, and
fill you with every temper that is tender and affectionate
towards men.
Let every
day, therefore, be a day of humility; condescend to all
the weaknesses and infirmities of your fellow-creatures,
cover their frailties, love their excellencies, encourage
their virtues, relieve their wants, rejoice in their
prosperities, compassionate their distress, receive their
friendship, overlook their unkindness, forgive their
malice, be a servant of servants, and condescend to do the
lowest offices to the lowest of mankind.
Aspire
after nothing but your own purity and perfection, and have
no ambition, but to do everything in so reasonable and
religious a manner, that you may be glad that God is
everywhere present, and sees and observes all your
actions. The greatest trial of humility is an humble
behaviour towards your equals in age, estate, and
condition of life. Therefore be careful of all the motions
of your heart towards these people. Let all your behaviour
towards them be governed by unfeigned love. Have no desire
to put any of your equals below you, nor any anger at
those that would put themselves above you. If they are
proud, they are ill of a very bad distemper; let them,
therefore, have your tender pity; and perhaps your
meekness may prove an occasion of their cure. But if your
humility should do them no good, it will, however, be the
greatest good that you can do to yourself.
Remember
that there is but one man in the world, with whom you are
to have perpetual contention, and be always striving to
exceed him, and that is yourself.
The time
of practising these precepts, my child, will soon be over
with you, the world will soon slip through your hands, or
rather you will soon slip through it; it seems but the
other day since I received these same instructions from my
dear father, that I am now leaving with you. And the God
that gave me ears to hear, and a heart to receive, what my
father said unto me, will, I hope, give you grace to love
and follow the same instructions.
Thus did
Paternus educate his son.[36]
Can any
one now think that such an education as this would weaken
and deject the minds of young people, and deprive the
world of any worthy and reasonable labours?
It is so
far from that, that there is nothing so likely to ennoble
and exalt the mind, and prepare it for the most heroical
exercise of all virtues.
For who
will say, that a love of God, a desire of pleasing Him, a
love of our neighbour, a love of truth of reason, and
virtue, a contemplation of eternity, and the rewards of
piety, are not stronger motives to great and good actions,
than a little uncertain popular praise?
On the
other hand, there is nothing in reality that more weakens
the mind, and reduces it to meanness and slavery, nothing
that makes it less master of its own actions, or less
capable of following reason, than a love of praise and
honour.
For, as
praise and honour are often given to things and persons,
where they are not due, as that is generally most praised
and honoured, that most gratifies the humours, fashions,
and vicious tempers of the world; so he that acts upon the
desire of praise and applause, must part with every other
principle; he must say black is white, put bitter for
sweet, and sweet for bitter, and do the meanest, basest
things, in order to be applauded.
For in a
corrupt world, as this is, worthy actions are only to be
supported by their own worth, where, instead of being
praised and honoured, they are most often reproached and
persecuted.
So that
to educate children upon a motive of emulation, or a
desire of glory, in a world where glory itself is false,
and most commonly given wrongly, is to destroy the natural
integrity and fortitude of their minds, and give them a
bias, which will oftener carry them to base and mean, than
to great and worthy actions.
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