The American Missionary — Volume 42, No. 11, November, 1888 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 67 pages of information about The American Missionary — Volume 42, No. 11, November, 1888.

The American Missionary — Volume 42, No. 11, November, 1888 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 67 pages of information about The American Missionary — Volume 42, No. 11, November, 1888.
They had been degraded for centuries.  The Jews shunned them.  Socially our Lord was making a great blunder, perhaps a fatal blunder, in talking to this Samaritan woman.  His cause was in its infancy.  The hand of social prejudice would surely throttle it.  Why antagonize the existing order of society?  How much better to utilize it for the establishment and enlargement of the great and glorious kingdom of our Lord!  This cause needed the influence of Jewish leaders.  Why risk this potent influence for the sake of one miserable Samaritan woman, or, for that matter, for a whole race of Samaritans?  It seemed very poor management of a cause, new in that country.  “Far be such unwisdom from thee, Lord,” we can hear the impassioned and worldly-wise Peter exclaim.  But our Lord chose to sacrifice the temporary success of his kingdom that he might be true to the eternal principles of that kingdom; and so he talked with this sinful woman of this despised race just as considerately as with Nicodemus.  He invited her to his discipleship just as cordially, and to the same discipleship.  There is not a hint that the Good Shepherd built another fold for the Samaritan sheep, lest some of the Jewish flock should jump over the fence, if they were put into the same fold.

These Samaritans were not only degraded and despised socially, but they were also superstitious in their religious beliefs, and semi-heathen in their forms of worship.  It would take generations to bring them up to a level with the Jewish Christians.  They could not comprehend much of the intelligent preaching that Christ addressed to the Jews.  Why not appoint a special missionary for them, and then quietly exclude them from the ordinary gatherings?  This course would avoid criticism; it would not violate the established ideas of social and religious propriety.  Nothing need be said about it.  It would not be best to put it on parchment; just let it be quietly whispered about that the disciples thought it was better for the Samaritan Christians not to meet with the others.  The disciples were surrounded by prejudiced people, to be sure, but these prejudices were very old; time would correct all these social and race inequalities.  The disciples thought it better to ignore them, and just organize and carry on their work with no reference to these degraded and superstitious Samaritans.  Such seems to have been somewhat the reasoning of these timid disciples.  It was not our Lord’s reasoning; the doors of his blessed kingdom opened to all.  It required no magic sesame of race respectability to throw back these gates of pardon and hope.  Sin must be left outside, but the sinner of every race and tribe was welcomed to all the privileges of this kingdom.  We now see the wisdom and the divinity of our Lord’s course.

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The American Missionary — Volume 42, No. 11, November, 1888 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.