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THE
KINGDOM OF GOD IS WITHIN YOU
CHRISTIANITY NOT AS A MYSTIC
RELIGION
BUT AS A NEW THEORY OF LIFE
by Count Leo Tolstoy
Chapters:
Preface
1
2
3 4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
CHAPTER 9
The position of the Christian peoples in our days
has remained just as cruel as it was in the times of paganism. In many respects,
especially in the oppression of the masses, it has become even more cruel than
it was in the days of paganism.
But between the condition of men in ancient times
and their condition in our days there is just the difference that we see in the
world of vegetation between the last days of autumn and the first days of
spring. In the autumn the external lifelessness in nature corresponds with its
inward condition of death, while in the spring the external lifelessness is in
sharp contrast with the internal state of reviving and passing into new forms of
life.
In the same way the similarity between the
ancient heathen life and the life of to-day is merely external: the inward
condition of men in the times of heathenism was absolutely different from their
inward condition at the present time.
Then the outward condition of cruelty and of
slavery was in complete harmony with the inner conscience of men, and every step
in advance intensified this harmony; now the outward condition of cruelty and of
slavery is completely contradictory to the Christian consciousness of men, and
every step in advance only intensifies this contradiction.
Humanity is passing through seemingly
unnecessary, fruitless agonies. It is passing through something like the throes
of birth. Everything is ready for the new life, but still the new life does not
come.
There seems no way out of the position. And there
would be none, except that a man (and thereby all men) is gifted with the power
of forming a different, higher theory of life, which at once frees him from all
the bonds by which he seems indissolubly fettered.
And such a theory is the Christian view of life
made known to mankind eighteen hundred years ago.
A man need only make this theory of life his own,
for the fetters which seemed so indissolubly forged upon him to drop off of
themselves, and for him to feel himself absolutely free, just as a bird would
feel itself free in a fenced-in place directly it tools to its wings.
People talk about the liberty of the Christian
Church, about giving or not giving freedom to Christians. Underlying all these
ideas and expressions there is some strange misconception. Freedom cannot be
bestowed on or taken from a Christian or Christians. Freedom is an inalienable
possession of the Christian.
If we talk of bestowing freedom on Christians or
withholding it from them, we are obviously talking not of real Christians but of
people who only call themselves Christians. A Christian cannot fail to be free,
because the attainment of the aim he sets before himself cannot be prevented or
even hindered by anyone or anything.
Let a man only understand his life as
Christianity teaches him to understand it, let him understand, that is, that his
life belongs not to him--not to his own individuality, nor to his family, nor to
the state--but to him who has sent him into the world, and let him once
understand that he must therefore fulfill not the law of his own individuality,
nor his family, nor of the state, but the infinite law of him from whom he has
come; and he will not only feel himself absolutely free from every human power,
but will even cease to regard such power as at all able to hamper anyone.
Let a man but realize that the aim of his life is
the fulfillment of God's law, and that law will replace all other laws for him,
and he will give it his sole allegiance, so that by that very allegiance every
human law will lose all binding and controlling power in his eyes.
The Christian is independent of every human
authority by the fact that he regards the divine law of love, implanted in the
soul of every man, and brought before his consciousness by Christ, as the sole
guide of his life and other men's also.
The Christian may be subjected to external
violence, he may be deprived of bodily freedom, he may be in bondage to his
passions (he who commits sin is the slave of sin), but he cannot be in bondage
in the sense of being forced by any danger or by any threat of external harm to
perform an act which is against his conscience.
He cannot be compelled to do this, because the
deprivations and sufferings which form such a powerful weapon against men of the
state conception of life, have not the least power to compel him.
Deprivations and sufferings take from them the
happiness for which they live; but far from disturbing the happiness of the
Christian, which consists in the consciousness of fulfilling the will of God,
they may even intensify it, when they are inflicted on him for fulfilling his
will.
And therefore the Christian, who is subject only
to the inner divine law, not only cannot carry out the enactments of the
external law, when they are not in agreement with the divine law of love which
he acknowledges (as is usually the case with state obligations), he cannot even
recognize the duty of obedience to anyone or anything whatever, he cannot
recognize the duty of what is called allegiance.
For a Christian the oath of allegiance to any
government whatever --the very act which is regarded as the foundation of the
existence of a state--is a direct renunciation of Christianity. For the man who
promises unconditional obedience in the future to laws, made or to be made, by
that very promise is in the most, positive manner renouncing Christianity, which
means obeying in every circumstance of life only the divine law of love he
recognizes within him.
Under the pagan conception of life it was
possible to carry out the will of the temporal authorities, without infringing
the law of God expressed in circumcisions, Sabbaths, fixed times of prayer,
abstention from certain kinds of food, and so on. The one law was not opposed to
the other. But that is just the distinction between the Christian religion and
heathen religion. Christianity does not require of a man certain definite
negative acts, but puts him in a new, different relation to men, from which may
result the most diverse acts, which cannot be defined beforehand. And therefore
the Christian not only cannot promise to obey the will of any other man, without
knowing what will be required by that will; he not only cannot obey the changing
laws of than, but he cannot even promise to do anything definite at a certain
time, or to abstain from doing anything for a certain time. For he cannot know
what at any time will be required of him by that Christian law of love,
obedience to which constitutes the meaning of life for him. The Christian, in
promising unconditional fulfillment of the laws of men in the future, would show
plainly by that promise that the inner law of God does not constitute for him
the sole law of his life.
For a Christian to promise obedience to men, or
the laws of men, is just as though a workman bound to one employer should also
promise to carry out every order that might be given him by outsiders. One
cannot serve two masters.
The Christian is independent of human authority,
because he acknowledges God's authority alone. His law, revealed by Christ, he
recognizes in himself, and voluntarily obeys it.
And this independence is gained, not by means of
strife, not by the destruction of existing forms,of life, but only by a change
in the interpretation of life. This independence results first from the
Christian recognizing the law of love, revealed to him by his teacher, as
perfectly sufficient for all human relations, and therefore he regards every use
of force as unnecessary and unlawful; and secondly, from the fact that those
deprivations and sufferings, or threats of deprivations and sufferings (which
reduce the man of the social conception of life to the necessity of obeying) to
the Christian from his different conception of life, present themselves merely
as the inevitable conditions of existence. And these conditions, without
striving against them by force, he patiently endures, like sickness, hunger, and
every other hardship, but they cannot serve him as a guide for his actions. The
only guide for the Christian's actions is to be found in the divine principle
living within him, which cannot be checked or governed by anything.
The Christian acts according to the words of the
prophecy applied to his teacher: "He shall not strive, nor cry; neither
shall any man hear his voice in the streets. A bruised reed shall he not break,
and smoking flax shall he not quench, till he send forth judgment unto
victory." (Matt. xii. 19, 20.)
The Christian will not dispute with anyone, nor
attack anyone, nor use violence against anyone. On the contrary, he will bear
violence without opposing it. But by this very attitude to violence, he will not
only himself be free, but will free the whole world from all external power.
"Ye shall know the truth, and the truth
shall make you free." If there were any doubt of Christianity being the
truth, the perfect liberty, that nothing can curtail, which a man experiences
directly he makes the Christian theory of life his own, would be an unmistakable
proof of its truth.
Men in their present condition are like a swarm
of bees hanging in a cluster to a branch. The position of the bees on the branch
is temporary, and must inevitably be changed. They must start off and find
themselves a habitation. Each of the bees knows this, and desires to change her
own and the others' position, but no one of them can do it till the rest of them
do it. They cannot all start off at once, because one hangs on to another and
hinders her from separating from the swarm, and therefore they all continue to
hang there. It would seem that the bees could never escape from their position,
just as it seems that worldly men, caught in the toils of the state conception
of life, can never escape. And there would be no escape for the bees, if each of
them were not a living, separate creature, endowed with wings of its own.
Similarly there would be no escape for men, if each were not a living being
endowed with the faculty of entering into the Christian conception of life.
If every bee who could fly, did not try to fly,
the others, too, would never be stirred, and the swarm would never change its
position. And if the man who has mastered the Christian conception of life would
not, without waiting for other people, begin to live in accordance with this
conception, mankind would never change its position. But only let one bee spread
her wings, start off, and fly away, and after her another, and another, and the
clinging, inert cluster would become a freely flying swarm of bees. Just in the
same way, only let one man look at life as Christianity teaches him to look at
it, and after him let another and another do the same, and the enchanted circle
of existence in the state conception of life, from which there seemed no escape,
will be broken through.
But men think that to set all men free by this
means is too slow a process, that they must find some other means by which they
could set all men free at once. It is just as though the bees who want to start
and fly away should consider it too long a process to wait for all the swarm to
start one by one; and should think they ought to find some means by which it
would not be necessary for every separate bee to spread her wings and fly off,
but by which the whole swarm could fly at once where it wanted to. But that is
not possible; till a first, a second, a third, a hundredth bee spreads her wings
and flies off of her own accord, the swarm will not fly off and will not begin
its new life. Till every individual man makes the Christian conception of life
his own, and begins to live in accord with it, there can be no solution of the
problem of human life, and no establishment of a new form of life.
One of the most striking phenomena of our times
is precisely this advocacy of slavery, which is promulgated among the masses,
not by governments, in whom it is inevitable, but by men who, in advocating
socialistic theories, regard themselves as the champions of freedom.
These people advance the opinion that the
amelioration of life, the bringing of the facts of life into harmony with the
conscience, will come, not as the result of the personal efforts of individual
men, but of itself as the result of a certain possible reconstruction of society
effected in some way or other. The idea is promulgated that men ought not to
walk on their own legs where they want and ought to go, but that a kind of floor
under their feet will be moved somehow, so that on it they can reach where they
ought to go without moving their own legs. And, therefore, all their efforts
ought to be directed, not to going so far as their strength allows in the
direction they ought to go, but to standing still and constructing such a floor.
In the sphere of political economy a theory is
propounded which amounts to saying that the worse things are the better they
are; that the greater the accumulation of capital, and therefore the oppression
of the workman, the nearer the day of emancipation, and, therefore, every
personal effort on the part of a man to free himself from the oppression of
capital is useless. In the sphere of government it is maintained that the
greater the power of the government, which, according to this theory, ought to
intervene in every department of private life in which it has not yet
intervened, the better it will be, and that therefore we ought to invoke the
interference of government in private life. In politics and international
questions it is maintained that the improvement of the means of destruction, the
multiplication of armaments, will lead to the necessity of making war by means
of congresses, arbitration, and so on. And, marvelous to say, so great is the
dullness of men, that they believe in these theories, in spite of the fact that
the whole course of life, every step they take, shows how unworthy they are of
belief.
The people are suffering from oppression, and to
deliver them from this oppression they are advised to frame general measures for
the improvement of their position, which measures are to be intrusted to the
authorities, and themselves to continue to yield obedience to the authorities.
And obviously all that results from this is only greater power in the hands of
the authorities, and greater oppression resulting from it.
Not one of the errors of men carries them so far
away from the aim toward which they are struggling as this very one. They do all
kinds of different things for the attainment of their aim, but not the one
simple obvious thing which is within reach of everyone. They devise the subtlest
means for changing the position which is irksome to them, but not that simplest
means, that everyone should refrain from doing what leads to that position.
I have been told a story of a gallant police
officer, who came to a village where the peasants were in insurrection and the
military had been called out, and he undertook to pacify the insurrection in the
spirit of Nicholas I., by his personal influence alone. He ordered some loads of
rods to be brought, and collecting all the peasants together into a barn, he
went in with them, locking the door after him. To begin with, he so terrified
the peasants by his loud threats that, reduced to submission by him, they set to
work to flog one another at his command. And so they flogged one another until a
simpleton was found who would not allow himself to be flogged, and shouted to
his companions not to flog one another. Only then the fogging ceased, and the
police officer made his escape. Well, this simpleton's advice would never be
followed by men of the state conception of life, who continue to flog one
another, and teach people that this very act of self-castigation is the last
word of human wisdom.
Indeed, can one imagine a more striking instance
of men flogging themselves than the submissiveness with which men of our times
will perform the very duties required of them to keep them in slavery,
especially the duty of military service? We see people enslaving themselves,
suffering from this slavery, and believing that it must be so, that it does not
matter, and will not hinder the emancipation of men, which is being prepared
somewhere, somehow, in spite of the ever-increasing growth of slavery.
In fact, take any man of the present time
whatever (I don't mean a true Christian, but an average man of the present day),
educated or uneducated, believing or unbelieving, rich or poor, married or
unmarried. Such a man lives working at his work, or enjoying his amusements,
spending the fruits of his labors on himself or on those near to him, and, like
everyone, hating every kind of restriction and deprivation, dissension and
suffering. Such a man is going his way peaceably, when suddenly people come and
say to him: First, promise and swear to us that you will slavishly obey us in
everything we dictate to you, and will consider absolutely good and
authoritative everything we plan, decide, and call law. Secondly, hand over a
part of the fruits of your labors for us to dispose of--we will use the money to
keep you in slavery, and to hinder you from forcibly opposing our orders.
Thirdly, elect others, or be yourself elected, to take a pretended share in the
government, knowing all the while that the government will proceed quite without
regard to the foolish speeches you, and those like you, may utter, and knowing
that its proceedings will be according to our will, the will of those who have
the army in their hands. Fourthly, come at a certain time to the law courts and
take your share in those senseless cruelties which we perpetrate on sinners, and
those whom we have corrupted, in the shape of penal servitude, exile, solitary
confinement, and death. And fifthly and lastly, more than all this, in spite of
the fact that you maybe on the friendliest terms with people of other nations,
be ready, directly we order you to do so, to regard those whom we indicate to
you as your enemies; and be ready to assist, either in person or by proxy, in
devastation, plunder, and murder of their men, women, children, and aged
alike--possibly your own kinsmen or relations-- if that is necessary to us.
One would expect that every man of the present
day who has a grain of sense left, might reply to such requirements, "But
why should I do all this?" One would think every right-minded man must say
in amazement: "Why should I promise to yield obedience to everything that
has been decreed first by Salisbury, then by Gladstone; one day by Boulanger,
and another by Parliament; one day by Peter III., the next by Catherine, and the
day after by Pougachef; one day by a mad king of Bavaria, another by William?
Why should I promise to obey them, knowing them to be wicked or foolish people,
or else not knowing them at all? Why am I to hand over the fruits of my labors
to them in the shape of taxes, knowing that the money will be spent on the
support of officials, prisons, churches, armies, on things that are harmful, and
on my own enslavement? Why should I punish myself? Why should I go wasting my
time and hoodwinking myself, giving to miscreant evildoers a semblance of
legality, by taking part in elections, and pretending that I am taking part in
the government, when I know very well that the real control of the government is
in the hands of those who have got hold of the army? Why should I go to the law
courts to take part in the trial and punishment of men because they have sinned,
knowing, if I am a Christian, that the law of vengeance is replaced by the law
of love, and, if I am an educated man, that punishments do not reform, but only
deprave those on whom they are inflicted? And why, most of all, am I to consider
as enemies the people of a neighboring nation, with whom I have hitherto lived
and with whom I wish to live in love and harmony, and to kill and rob them, or
to bring them to misery, simply in order that the keys of the temple at
Jerusalem may be in the hands of one archbishop and not another, that one German
and not another may be prince in Bulgaria, or that the English rather than the
American merchants may capture seals?
And why, most of all, should I take part in
person or hire others to murder my own brothers and kinsmen? Why should I flog
myself? It is altogether unnecessary for me; it is hurtful to me, and from every
point of view it is immoral, base, and vile. So why should I do this? If you
tell me that if I do it not I shall receive some injury from someone, then, in
the first place, I cannot anticipate from anyone an injury so great as the
injury you bring on me if I obey you; and secondly, it is perfectly clear to me
that if we our own selves do not flog ourselves, no one will flog us.
As for the government--that means the tzars,
ministers, and officials with pens in their hands, who cannot force us into
doing anything, as that officer of police compelled the peasants; the men who
will drag us to the law court, to prison, and to execution, are not tzars or
officials with pens in their hands, but the very people who are in the same
position as we are. And it is just as unprofitable and harmful and unpleasant to
them to be flogged as to me, and therefore there is every likelihood that if I
open their eyes they not only would not treat me with violence, but would do
just as I am doing.
Thirdly, even if it should come to pass that I
had to suffer for it, even then it would be better for me to be exiled or sent
to prison for standing up for common sense and right--which, if not to-day, at
least within a very short time, must be triumphant-- than to suffer for folly
and wrong which must come to an end directly. And therefore, even in that case,
it is better to run the risk of their banishing me, shutting me up in prison, or
executing me, than of my living all my life in bondage, through my own fault, to
wicked men. Better is this than the possibility of being destroyed by victorious
enemies, and being stupidly tortured and killed by them, in fighting for a
cannon, or a piece of land of no use to anyone, or for a senseless rag called a
banner.
I don't want to flog myself and I won't do it. I
have no reason to do it. Do it yourselves, if you want it done; but I won't do
it.
One would have thought that not religious or
moral feeling alone, but the simplest common sense and foresight should impel
every man of the present day to answer and to act in that way. But not so. Men
of the state conception of life are of the opinion that to act in that way is
not necessary, and is even prejudicial to the attainment of their object, the
emancipation of men from slavery. They hold that we must continue, like the
police officer's peasants, to flog one another, consoling ourselves with the
reflection that we are talking away in the assemblies and meetings, founding
trades unions, marching through the streets on the 1st of May, getting up
conspiracies, and stealthily teasing the government that is flogging us, and
that through all this it will be brought to pass that, by enslaving ourselves in
closer and closer bondage, we shall very soon be free.
Nothing hinders the emancipation of men from
slavery so much as this amazing error. Instead of every man directing his
energies to freeing himself, to transforming his conception of life, people seek
for an external united method of gaining freedom, and continue to rivet their
chains faster and faster.
It is much as if men were to maintain that to
make up a fire there was no need to kindle any of the coals, but that all that
was necessary was to arrange the coals in a certain order. Yet the fact that the
freedom of all men will be brought about only through the freedom of individual
persons, becomes more and more clear as time goes on. The freedom of individual
men, in the name of the Christian conception of life, from state domination,
which was formerly an exceptional and unnoticed phenomenon, has of late acquired
threatening significance for state authorities.
If in a former age, in the Roman times, it
happened that a Christian confessed his religion and refused to take part in
sacrifices, and to worship the emperors or the gods; or in the Middle Ages a
Christian refused to worship images, or to acknowledge the authority of the
Pope--these cases were in the first place a matter of chance. A man might be
placed under the necessity of confessing his faith, or he might live all his
life without being placed under this necessity. But now all men, without
exception, are subjected to this trial of their faith. Every man of the present
day is under the necessity of taking part in the cruelties of pagan life, or of
refusing all participation in them. And secondly, in those days cases of refusal
to worship the gods or the images or the Pope were not incidents that had any
material bearing on the state. Whether men worshiped or did not worship the gods
or the images or the Pope, the state remained just as powerful. But now cases of
refusing to comply with the unchristian demands of the government are striking
at the very root of state authority, because the whole authority of the state is
based on the compliance with these unchristian demands.
The sovereign powers of the world have in the
course of time been brought into a position in which, for their own
preservation, they must require from all men actions which cannot be performed
by men who profess true Christianity.
And therefore in our days every profession of
true Christianity, by any individual man, strikes at the most essential power of
the state, and inevitably leads the way for the emancipation of all.
What importance, one might think, can one attach
to such an incident as some dozens of crazy fellows, as people will call them,
refusing to take the oath of allegiance to the government, refusing to pay
taxes, to take part in law proceedings or in military service?
These people are punished and exiled to a
distance, and life goes on in its old way. One might think there was no
importance in such incidents; but yet, it is just those incidents, more than
anything else, that will undermine the power of the state and prepare the way
for the freedom of men. These are the individual bees, who are beginning to
separate from the swarm, and are flying near it, waiting till the whole swarm
can no longer be prevented from starting off after them. And the governments
know this, and fear such incidents more than all the socialists, communists, and
anarchists, and their plots and dynamite bombs.
A new reign is beginning. According to the
universal rule and established order it is required that all the subjects should
take the oath of allegiance to the new government. There is a general decree to
that effect, and all are summoned to the council-houses to take the oath. All at
once one man in Perm, another in Tula, a third in Moscow, and a fourth in
Kalouga declare that they will not take the oath, and though there is no
communication between them, they all explain their refusal on the same
grounds--namely, that swearing is forbidden by the law of Christ, and that even
if swearing had not been forbidden, they could not, in the spirit of the law of
Christ, promise to perform the evil actions required of them in the oath, such
as informing against all such as may act against the interests of the
government, or defending their government with firearms or attacking its
enemies. They are brought before rural police officers, district police
captains, priests, and governors. They are admonished, questioned, threatened,
and punished; but they adhere to their resolution, and do not take the oath. And
among the millions of those who did take the oath, those dozens go on living who
did not take the oath. And they are questioned:
"What, didn't you take the oath?"
"No, I didn't take the oath."
"And what happened--nothing?"
"Nothing."
The subjects of a state are all bound to pay
taxes. And everyone pays taxes, till suddenly one man in Kharkov, another in
Tver, and a third in Samara refuse to pay taxes--all, as though in collusion,
saying the same thing. One says he will only pay when they tell him what object
the money taken from him will be spent on. "If it is for good deeds,"
he says, "he will give it of his own accord, and more even than is required
of him. If for evil deeds, then he will give nothing voluntarily, because by the
law of Christ, whose follower he is, he cannot take part in evil deeds."
The others, too, say the same in other words, and will not voluntarily pay the
taxes.
Those who have anything to be taken have their
property taken from them by force; as for those who have nothing, they are left
alone.
"What, didn't you pay the tax?"
"No, I didn't pay it."
"And what happened-nothing?"
"Nothing." There is the institution of
passports. Everyone moving from his place of residence is bound to carry one,
and to pay a duty on it. Suddenly people are to be found in various places
declaring that to carry a passport is not necessary, that one ought not to
recognize one's dependence on a state which exists by means of force; and these
people do not carry passports, or pay the duty on them. And again, it's
impossible to force those people by any means to do what is required. They send
them to jail, and let them out again, and these people live without passports.
All peasants are bound to fill certain police
offices--that of village constable, and of watchman, and so on. Suddenly in
Kharkov a peasant refuses to perform this duty, justifying his refusal on the
ground that by the law of Christ, of which he is a follower, he cannot put any
man in fetters, lock him up, or drag him from place to place. The same
declaration is made by a peasant in Tver, another in Tambov. These peasants are
abused, beaten, shut up in prison, but they stick to their resolution and don't
fill these offices against their convictions. And at last they cease to appoint
them as constables. And again nothing happens.
All citizens are obliged to take a share in law
proceedings in the character of jurymen. Suddenly the most different people--
mechanics, professors, tradesmen, peasants, servants, as though by agreement
refuse to fill this office, and not on the grounds allowed as sufficient by law,
but because any process at law is, according to their views, unchristian. They
fine these people, trying not to let them have an opportunity of explaining
their motives in public, and replace them by others. And again nothing can be
done.
All young men of twenty-one years of age are
obliged to draw lots for service in the army. All at once one young man in
Moscow, another in Tver, a third in Kharkov, and a fourth in Kiev present
themselves before the authorities, and, as though by previous agreement, declare
that they will not take the oath, they will not serve because they are
Christians. I will give the details of one of the first cases, since they have
become more frequent, which I happen to know about [footnote: All the details of
this case, as well as those preceding it, are authentic]. The same treatment has
been repeated in every other case. A young man of fair education refuses in the
Moscow Townhall to take the oath. No attention is paid to what he says, and it
is requested that he should pronounce the words of the oath like the rest. He
declines, quoting a particular passage of the Gospel in which swearing is
forbidden. No attention is paid to his arguments, and he is again requested to
comply with the order, but he does not comply with it. Then it is supposed that
he is a sectary and therefore does not understand Christianity in the right
sense, that is to say, not in the sense in which the priests in the pay of the
government understand it. And the young man is conducted under escort to the
priests, that they may bring him to reason. The priests begin to reason with
him, but their efforts in Christ's name to persuade him to renounce Christ
obviously have no influence on him; he is pronounced incorrigible and sent back
again to the army. He persists in not taking the oath and openly refuses to
perform any military duties. It is a case that has not been provided for by the
laws. To overlook such a refusal to comply with the demands of the authorities
is out of the question, but to put such a case on a par with simple breach of
discipline is also out of the question.
After deliberation among themselves, the military
authorities decide to get rid of the troublesome young man, to consider him as a
revolutionist, and they dispatch him under escort to the committee of the secret
police. The police authorities and gendarmes cross-question him, but nothing
that he says can be brought under the head of any of the misdemeanors which come
under their jurisdiction. And there is no possibility of accusing him either of
revolutionary acts or revolutionary plotting, since he declares that he does not
wish to attack anything, but, on the contrary, is opposed to any use of force,
and, far from plotting in secret, he seeks every opportunity of saying and doing
all that he says and does in the most open manner. And the gendarmes, though
they are bound by no hard-and-fast rules, still find no ground for a criminal
charge in the young man, and, like the clergy, they send him back to the army.
Again the authorities deliberate together, and decide to accept him though he
has not taken the oath, and to enrol him among the soldiers. They put him into
the uniform, enrol him, and send him under guard to the place where the army is
quartered. There the chief officer of the division which he enters again expects
the young man to perform his military duties, and again he refuses to obey, and
in the presence of other soldiers explains the reason of his refusal, saying
that he as a Christian cannot voluntarily prepare himself to commit murder,
which is forbidden by the law of Moses.
This incident occurs in a provincial town. The
case awakens the interest, and even the sympathy, not only of outsiders, but
even of the officers. And the chief officers consequently do not decide to
punish this refusal of obedience with disciplinary measures. To save
appearances, though, they shut the young man up in prison, and write to the
highest military authorities to inquire what they are to do. To refuse to serve
in the army, in which the Tzar himself serves, and which enjoys the blessing of
the Church, seems insanity from the official point of view. Consequently they
write from Petersburg that, since the young man must be out of his mind, they
must not use any severe treatment with him, but must send him to a lunatic
asylum, that his mental condition may be inquired into and be scientifically
treated. They send him to the asylum in the hope that he will remain there, like
another young man, who refused ten years ago at Tver to serve in the army, and
who was tortured in the asylum till he submitted. But even this step does not
rid the military authorities of the inconvenient man. The doctors examine him,
interest themselves warmly in his case, and naturally finding in him no symptoms
of mental disease, send him back to the army. There they receive him, and making
believe to have forgotten his refusal, and his motives for it, they again
request him to go to drill, and again in the presence of the other soldiers he
refuses and explains the reason of his refusal. The affair continues to attract
more and more attention, both among the soldiers and the inhabitants of the
town. Again they write to Petersburg, and thence comes the decree to transfer
the young man to some division of the army stationed on the frontier, in some
place where the army is under martial law, where he can be shot for refusing to
obey, and where the matter can proceed without attracting observation, seeing
that there are few Russians and Christians in such a distant part, but the
majority are foreigners and Mohammedans. This is accordingly done. They transfer
him to a division stationed on the Zacaspian border, and in company with
convicts send him to a chief officer who is notorious for his harshness and
severity.
All this time, through all these changes from
place to place, the young man is roughly treated, kept in cold, hunger, and
filth, and life is made burdensome to him generally. But all these sufferings do
not compel him to change his resolution. On the Zacaspian border, where he is
again requested to go on guard fully armed, he again declines to obey. He does
not refuse to go and stand near the haystacks where they place him, but refuses
to take his arms, declaring that he will not use violence in any case against
anyone. All this takes place in the presence of the other soldiers. To let such
a refusal pass unpunished is impossible, and the young man is put on his trial
for breach of discipline. The trial takes place, and he is sentenced to
confinement in the military prison for two years. He is again transferred, in
company with convicts, by étape, to Caucasus, and there he is shut up in prison
and falls under the irresponsible power of the jailer. There he is persecuted
for a year and a half, but he does not for all that alter his decision not to
bear arms, and he explains why he will not do this to everyone with whom he is
brought in contact. At the end of the second year they set him free, before the
end of his term of imprisonment, reckoning it contrary to law to keep him in
prison after his time of military service was over, and only too glad to get rid
of him as soon as possible.
Other men in various parts of Russia behave, as
though by agreement, precisely in the same way as this young man, and in all
these cases the government has adopted the same timorous, undecided, and
secretive course of action. Some of these men are sent to the lunatic asylum,
some are enrolled as clerks and transferred to Siberia, some are sent to work in
the forests, some are sent to prison, some are fined. And at this very time some
men of this kind are in prison, not charged with their real offense--that is,
denying the lawfulness of the action of the government, but for non-fulfillment
of special obligations imposed by government. Thus an officer of reserve, who
did not report his change of residence, and justified this on the ground that he
would not serve in the army any longer, was fined thirty rubles for
non-compliance with the orders of the superior authority. This fine he also
declined voluntarily to pay. In the same way some peasants and soldiers who have
refused to be drilled and to bear arms have been placed under arrest on a charge
of breach of discipline and insolence.
And cases of refusing to comply with the demands
of government when they are opposed to Christianity, and especially cases of
refusing to serve in the army, are occurring of late not in Russia only, but
everywhere. Thus I happen to know that in Servia men of the so-called sect of
Nazarenes steadily refuse to serve in the army, and the Austrian Government has
been carrying on a fruitless contest with them for years, punishing them with
imprisonment. In the year 1885 there were 130 such cases. I know that in
Switzerland in the year 1890 there were men in prison in the castle of Chillon
for declining to serve in the army, whose resolution was not shaken by their
punishment. There have been such cases in Sweden, and the men who refused
obedience were sent to prison in exactly the same way, and the government
studiously concealed these cases from the people. There have been similar cases
also in Prussia. I know of the case of a sub-lieutenant of the Guards, who in
1891 declared to the authorities in Berlin that he would not, as a Christian,
continue to serve, and in spite of all admonitions, threats, and punishments he
stuck to his resolution. In the south of France a society has arisen of late
bearing the name of the Hinschists (these facts are taken from the PEACE HERALD,
July, 1891), the members of which refuse to enter military service on the
grounds of their Christian principles. At first they were enrolled in the
ambulance corps, but now, as their numbers increase, they are subjected to
punishment for non- compliance, but they still refuse to bear arms just the
same.
The socialists, the communists, the anarchists,
with their bombs and riots and revolutions, are not nearly so much dreaded by
governments as these disconnected individuals coming from different parts, and
all justifying their non-compliance on the grounds of the same religion, which
is known to all the world. Every government knows by what means and in what
manner to defend itself from revolutionists, and has resources for doing so, and
therefore does not dread these external foes. But what are governments to do
against men who show the uselessness, superfluousness, and perniciousness of all
governments, and who do not contend against them, but simply do not need them
and do without them, and therefore are unwilling to take any part in them? The
revolutionists say: The form of government is bad in this respect and that
respect; we must overturn it and substitute this or that form of government. The
Christian says: I know nothing about the form of government, I don't know
whether it is good or bad, and I don't want to overturn it precisely because I
don't know whether it is good or bad, but for the very same reason I don't want
to support it either. And I not only don't want to, but I can't, because what it
demands of me is against my conscience.
All state obligations are against the conscience
of a Christian-- the oath of allegiance, taxes, law proceedings, and military
service. And the whole power of the government rests on these very obligations.
Revolutionary enemies attack the government from
without. Christianity does not attack it at all, but, from within, it destroys
all the foundations on which government rests.
Among the Russian people, especially since the
age of Peter I., the protest of Christianity against the government has never
ceased, and the social organization has been such that men emigrate in communes
to Turkey, to China, and to uninhabited lands, and not only feel no need of
state aid, but always regard the state as a useless burden, only to be endured
as a misfortune, whether it happens to be Turkish, Russian, or Chinese. And so,
too, among the Russian people more and more frequent examples have of late
appeared of conscious Christian freedom from subjection to the state. And these
examples are the more alarming for the government from the fact that these
non-compliant persons often belong not to the so-called lower uneducated
classes, but are men of fair or good education; and also from the fact that they
do not in these days justify their position by any mystic and exceptional views,
as in former times, do not associate themselves with any superstitious or
fanatic rites, like the sects who practice self- immolation by fire, or the
wandering pilgrims, but put their refusal on the very simplest and clearest
grounds, comprehensible to all, and recognized as true by all.
Thus they refuse the voluntary payment of taxes,
because taxes are spent on deeds of violence--on the pay of men of violence--
soldiers, on the construction of prisons, fortresses, and cannons. They as
Christians regard it as sinful and immoral to have any hand in such deeds.
Those who refuse to take the oath of allegiance
refuse because to promise obedience to authorities, that is, to men who are
given to deeds of violence, is contrary to the sense of Christ's teaching. They
refuse to take the oath in the law courts, because oaths are directly forbidden
by the Gospel. They refuse to perform police duties, because in the performance
of these duties they must use force against their brothers and ill treat them,
and a Christian cannot do that. They refuse to take part in trials at law,
because they consider every appeal to law is fulfilling the law of vengeance,
which is inconsistent with the Christian law of forgiveness and love. They
refuse to take any part in military preparations and in the army, because they
cannot be executioners, and they are unwilling to prepare themselves to be so.
The motives in all these cases are so excellent
that, however despotic governments may be, they could hardly punish them openly.
To punish men for refusing to act against their conscience the government must
renounce all claim to good sense and benevolence. And they assure people that
they only rule in the name of good sense and benevolence.
What are governments to do against such people?
Governments can of course flog to death or
execute or keep in perpetual imprisonment all enemies who want to overturn them
by violence, they can lavish gold on that section of the people who are ready to
destroy their enemies. But what can they do against men who, without wishing to
overturn or destroy anything, desire simply for their part to do nothing against
the law of Christ, and who, therefore, refuse to perform the commonest state
requirements, which are, therefore, the most indispensable to the maintenance of
the state?
If they had been revolutionists, advocating and
practicing violence and murder, their suppression would have been an easy
matter; some of them could have been bought over, some could have been duped,
some could have been overawed, and these who could not be bought over, duped, or
overawed would have been treated as criminals, enemies of society, would have
been executed or imprisoned, and the crowd would have approved of the action of
the government. If they had been fanatics, professing some peculiar belief, it
might have been possible, in disproving the superstitious errors mixed in with
their religion, to attack also the truth they advocate. But what is to be done
with men who profess no revolutionary ideas nor any peculiar religious dogmas,
but merely because they are unwilling to do evil to any man, refuse to take the
oath, to pay taxes, to take part in law proceedings, to serve in the army, to
fulfill, in fact, any of the obligations upon which the whole fabric of a state
rests? What is to done with such people? To buy them over with bribes is
impossible; the very risks to which they voluntarily expose themselves show that
they are incorruptible. To dupe them into believing that this is their duty to
God is also impossible, since their refusal is based on the clear, unmistakable
law of God, recognized even by those who are trying to compel men to act against
it. To terrify them by threats is still less possible, because the deprivations
and sufferings to which they are subjected only strengthen their desire to
follow the faith by which they are commanded: to obey God rather than men, and
not to fear those who can destroy the body, but to fear him who can destroy body
and soul. To kill them or keep them in perpetual imprisonment is also
impossible. These men have friends, and a past; their way of thinking and acting
is well known; they are known by everyone for good, gentle, peaceable people,
and they cannot be regarded as criminals who must be removed for the safety of
society. And to put men to death who are regarded as good men is to provoke
others to champion them and justify their refusal. And it is only necessary to
explain the reasons of their refusal to make clear to everyone that these
reasons have the same force for all other men, and that they all ought to have
done the same long ago. These cases put the ruling powers into a desperate
position. They see that the prophecy of Christianity is coming to pass, that it
is loosening the fetters of those in chains, and setting free them that are in
bondage, and that this must inevitably be the end of all oppressors. The ruling
authorities see this, they know that their hours are numbered, and they can do
nothing. All that they can do to save themselves is only deferring the hour of
their downfall. And this they do, but their position is none the less desperate.
It is like the position of a conqueror who is
trying to save a town which has been been set on fire by its own inhabitants.
Directly he puts out the conflagration in one place, it is alight in two other
places; directly he gives in to the fire and cuts off what is on fire from a
large building, the building itself is alight at both ends. These separate fires
may be few, but they are burning with a flame which, however small a spark it
starts from, never ceases till it has set the whole ablaze.
Thus it is that the ruling authorities are in
such a defenseless position before men who advocate Christianity, that but
little is necessary to overthrow this sovereign power which seems so powerful,
and has held such an exalted position for so many centuries. And yet social
reformers are busy promulgating the idea that it is not necessary and is even
pernicious and immoral for every man separately to work out his own freedom. As
though, while one set of men have been at work a long while turning a river into
a new channel, and had dug out a complete water-course and had only to open the
floodgates for the water to rush in and do the rest, another set of men should
come along and begin to advise them that it would be much better, instead of
letting the water out, to construct a machine which would ladle the water up
from one side and pour it over the other side.
But the thing has gone too far. Already ruling
governments feel their weak and defenseless position, and men of Christian
principles are awakening from their apathy, and already begin to feel their
power.
"I am come to send a fire on the
earth," said Christ, "and what will I, if it be already kindled?"
And this fire is beginning to burn.
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Now
to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to make you stand in
the presence of His glory blameless with great joy, to the only God our
Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion and
authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen. Jude
1:24-25

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