John 16:5-16 · The Work of the Holy Spirit
What Are Christian Liberals? - 1951
John 16:5-16
Sermon
by Kent Moorehead
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The principle wrapped up in that text would seem to be quite obvious - that the most important thing to remember in dealing with all ambiguities, controversies, uncertainties, is that there is a spirit of truth available and if we keep our hearts and minds receptive, attentive responsive, we shall be led into all truth.

Now that’s the core of the liberal’s approach to life. Keep that in mind as we proceed to discuss this very interesting and important issue: What Are Christian Liberals?

I shall never forget one of the most cogent statements a Professor of Philosophy of mine once gave. He said, "All living is trying to discover what we mean, what others mean, what the world and God mean. All living whatever else it may or may not be, is defining." I would put it down that the first principle of any intellectual progress that we can make is to insist upon definition of terms, before even we begin to discuss, for when we are reluctant to give precise meanings that may be accepted by both parties, then we seem to be incapable of creating what we call a community of discourse.

So I naturally turned to the dictionary and discovered that the word "liberalism" has a very precise connotation. Webster’s International says, "Liberalism is a movement in contemporary Protestantism emphasizing intellectual liberty and the spiritual and ethical content of Christianity." This church, if I understand it at all, is a Christian liberal church, emphasizing intellectual liberty and the spiritual and ethical content of Christianity. Certainly we have as rich a ritual as possible, certainly we believe in the dignity and form of ceremony. Certainly we have profound convictions. But no dogmas. If we cannot persuade you by the inherent reasonableness of the ideas we propound, then you have a right, nay a duty, to discount the things we say and discredit them and deny them. This pulpit, if it is decently aware of the traditions of this church and of its spirit, must recognize that it speaks with only the authority of the truth. If the preacher does not utter the truth, it is not to be taken. And the one test above every other test that we must insist upon is this: Is the thing that is said from this holy place Christian? If it is, then we’re under a certain high compulsion to accept it - not because of its dogmas, not because Jesus said it, but because it’s true - and because it’s true, Jesus said it.

Suppose we set forth the most indispensable characteristics, or better yet stipulate the qualifications for being a Christian liberal. This is what I aspire to, the thing that this church, if I understand it at all, is aiming at. This is the great objective. This is the banner we lift, the ideal we proclaim as a Christian Liberal Church. There are seven outstanding characteristics.

First and foremost is the idea of intellectual freedom. That’s just exactly what the word means: "liber" - free, free! Up here! Under bondage to no man, to no organization, to no set philosophy, to no warden. Free to do your own thinking, and this implies that freedom is not just for me or for my church, but for all people and all churches and all institutions. Even for those who do not believe in it and who fear it. Even for them, we insist upon it. It’s the conviction of the liberal that freedom is an absolute - it must apply everywhere or it doesn’t work anywhere. No one is free unless all of us are free. To take away the freedom of the worst men is at once to endanger the freedom of the best men. The test of freedom is always at the point of danger, and no one wants to deny freedom to the man who is safe and sound. It’s the man who is different who is dangerous.

But this is the essence of Democracy. It was Chief Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes who made the immortal statement concerning this. He said, "If there is any principle of the Constitution that more imperatively calls for attachment than any other, it is the principle of free thought. Not free thought for those who agree with it, but freedom of thought for those we hate."3 I wish I could write that indelibly on your heart, for this is the core of the liberal position. Therefore, it is the liberals who are most sensitive to any infringement of our basic civil liberties. That’s why for twelve years I’ve accepted this onerous job of being Chairman of the Civil Liberties Union (which is not the Civil Rights Congress - which is Communist), which has probably made the most remarkable contribution to the maintenance of our basic democratic principles of any other organization that I know of. Marvelous record and I’m so proud to be a part of it.

We have limitless faith in the truth. And you may never get the truth until you are willing to hear points of view that are different from your own. For all men are fallible, and no institution has all the truth. Therefore, what the liberal always demands is a free field, and no favors, and all the facts, from anybody and everybody. Nothing is so presumptuous or preposterous, from the liberal’s point of view, as gratuitous defenders of the truth. You don’t defend the truth, it defends you. Your job is not to protect it but to proclaim it. Truth is not a treasure to be hidden, hoarded, and protected. It’s a growing plant that is beset by weeds and pests, but a plant that can and will grow if you don’t try to destroy it yourself.

So Jesus was the truest of liberals when he described the Kingdom of God and a wheat field in which an enemy has sown tares. He says that the foolish servant urged and insisted upon rooting out all the tares and casting them into the fire. And the master of the field said correctly, "No, lest while ye gather up the tares ye root up the wheat with them. Let them both grow together until the harvest." The assumption of authoritarians that truth must be free but error must be repressed is vicious in the extreme, for who is the self-appointed authority who can tell us just what the truth is, and who is he who can say excathedra what is error. No human being has that much intelligence, for there are phases of falsehood in every truth that we utter. And there are phases of truth in every falsehood that is propounded. What we insist upon is an open field and an open mind so that anyone can say whatever he pleases, and let the truth defend itself. If we don’t have that faith, we don’t have any real faith in God Almighty. When Jesus says, "I am the way I am the truth, I am the life," (John 14:6) this is what he means.

In that fearful hour of anti-slavery agitation, there were some always hushing everything up because of their terror. They said to Wendell Phillips, "Don’t talk about it. It’s too dangerous. You will destroy the Union. You will ruin the country." Then Phillips made a statement that I love to hug to my own heart, "If there is anything in the universe that can’t stand free discussion, then let it crack." That’s the essence of democracy as it understands itself, and it certainly is the core of vital Christianity. So, no thought control by church or by state or by party or by Politburo or by Pentagon! Nobody tells us what to think. They present their evidence and let us make up our own minds.

The second characteristic of the Christian liberal is a decent intellectual humility. He knows he is liable to error and he knows he is susceptible to delusion. He has strong convictions but no pride of opinions, he distrusts all dogmas and he insists upon the prerogative of examining and testing all orthodoxies. For he knows perfectly well that nothing human is infallible or final. This is the contrast between the liberal and either of the extremes. You discover that a radical reactionary or a rabid radical is so cocksure of himself. There it is. Take it or leave it. A liberal may never say that. He may say, "This is what I really believe. This is what I think. Will you test it? Will you try it? Will you examine it?" That’s what we mean by intellectual humility. When there begins to reveal itself, as so humanly it does in all of us, that kind of cockiness and cocksureness, you may be sure that the liberal spirit that one professes is flitting out of the window. Therefore he has a right to be challenged and this undue dogmatism ought immediately to be pointed out. He must accept it and ask forgiveness.

The, third characteristic is open-mindedness. The kind of hospitality that is utterly unafraid of all different kinds of ideas. All living things must constantly grow, hence change is inevitable. Christianity is not a finished article, fixed in creed and ritual and practice. It is a growing movement. Old forms become outgrown and must be brushed aside. The great ideal of the Christian liberal is the Master, who said, "Ye have heard of old time ... but, I say unto you" (Matthew 5:21). Not one jot or tittle of the truth was ever changed, but the reinterpretation of the truth for the new day was given. That truth for succeeding generations will become half untrue, so that it must be reinterpreted so that every generation must reinterpret the gospel, must reinterpret the Spirit of Jesus in its own terms and in the light of the new knowledge and the new awareness that it has. That is why Jesus said, "Many things I would say to you, but you can’t stand them. You haven’t developed enough. Therefore my Spirit, the Spirit of truth, will come to you and guide you into all truth." Keep your minds open therefore and never shut them and say, "I’m all done, I won’t listen to anybody else. This is what I’ve been told and I won’t listen to anyone else." This is the most horrible way of destroying Christian vitality. Then you become a sort of static semblance of a Christian.

I will never fail to appreciate a fairy story that was once told to me. John Haynes Holmes has a way of repeating it most winsomely. It is the story of the little sunbeam that lost its way from heaven. At nightfall it found a great stone castle and it tried to get in. But the doors were all shut and locked. Likewise the windows were all closed and barred. Then it went along all the outside walls and couldn’t find a cranny or crack to get through. So it went away. That was a pity, a very great pity. Not for the sunbeam, but for the castle. For you see, the castle was dark, and it needed light. The castle was cold and it needed warmth. The castle was cheerless and it needed comfort. And so is the mind that bars out ideas, for all ideas have a contribution to make. Therefore keep the windows and the doors ajar - intellectual hospitality.

This leads us to fourth characteristic: a genuine tolerance. Not indifference, not neutrality, not apathy, but the recognition that we must not merely endure disagreement but we must seek those who disagree with us and encourage them. We must listen to them, study them, and do all we can to get acquainted with different points of view. My pet definition of reality is this:

"Reality is the synthesis of all possible points of view, and to the degree that you shut out any point of view, to the degree you are ignoring a phase that rounds out the total picture."4 The outstanding characteristic of the totalitarians, whether they are to the right or to the left, is that they are intolerant and repressive. Each demands unquestioning acceptance and any deviation or dissent is disastrous. So they say, "One major demand we make, and that is absolute adherence to the line." This is just as true of Fascists as it is of Communists. It is just as true of the left as it is of the right. The worst sin you can commit, from the standpoint of the Communists, is any sort of deviation from the line, and they will do all things to coerce you into that kind of thought control. This is abhorrent to the liberal. There must be tolerance.

We come then to the fifth major characteristic, which is the test or the guide on which liberals rely. Not in any absolute sense, but as a major guide, there is reason. The supremacy of reason - my reason, your reason. Any dogma, any decree, any authoritarian statement that does violence to your reason must be rejected at all costs. You may believe much that is beyond your reason and that enters into the realm of faith, but the test of the difference between faith and credulity is whether or not it is rational. If it is just irrational and you believe it because you are told to you do not have faith, you indulge in the worst form of superstition and credulity.

Anything that is beyond the power of reason adequately to comprehend requires a reach of faith. It is beyond reason but it does not violate reason. We take a leap of faith and then test it in the crucible of great living. Therefore when we find ourselves afraid to face facts and examine them all, we become unreasonable, illogical, and illiberal. So Galileo dramatized the whole thing when he first discovered the moons of Jupiter and began to proclaim this great discovery. The Churchmen came to him and said, "That is not so! There is nothing in our theology that makes place for moons around Jupiter!" "Come here and look," said Galileo. "See for yourselves. Look through this telescope." The answer they gave was, "We will not look. It can’t be so." Therefore they refused to admit the testimony of their own senses.

The sixth characteristic is the importance of principle. The Christian Liberal always deals in terms of principles. He believes in standards that should control his life. He assumes that there are structural concepts of right and wrong which, like the laws of nature, must be obeyed at the price of peril of existence itself. Hence in any crisis and at whatever cost, he must be faithful to the moral law. He says, "Hew to the line. Let the chips fall where they may." How different is this from the extremists who say, "We must do what is most effective at the moment." They endorse this vile concept that the end justifies the means. The end never justifies the means! The end is determined by the means. So the Nazis kill Jews for the sake of the cause, and the Communists kill off five million Kulaks for the sake of the cause.

So the liberal stands resolutely by his principles and expediency is the wickedest of immoralities to him.

Finally, not only is principle his guiding force, but he has a profound respect for and belief in the importance of the individual human being. This is his passion. His major thesis is that nothing is so important as persons. He is profoundly concerned with the betterment of man. So it was liberals who have fought to bring real progress; the abolition of the slave trade, the enfranchisement of women, the establishment of public education, the advancement of the cause of labor, and the long struggle against poverty and injustice.

The Christian liberal believes that whatever is done is right or wrong according to how it helps or hurts persons. Ordinary persons as well as great ones, little people as well as big people. Jesus put down the fundamental law for the liberals when he said, "When you do whatever you do even to these, the least of my brethren, you are doing it to me" (Matthew 25:40). This is the revelation of your attitude toward God Almighty.

So the Christian liberal is one who believes above all else in freedom, intellectual freedom, fundamental civil rights, who is humble and never assumes he has all the answers, who is open-minded, who is tolerant, who believes in the validity of reason, who is a creature of principle, and who believes above all else in people. This is my answer to the question "What are Christian Liberals?"


3. From Holmes Vs. Schwimmer, 799 U.S. 644 (1928).

4. Dr. Crane in another sermon credits this basic idea as coming to him from Professor H. A. Overstreet.

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Achieving An All-In Victory, by Kent Moorehead