Chapter Nine
HENRY MAXWELL
finished reading and dropped the paper.
"I must go
and see Powers. This is the result of his promise."
He rose, and as
he was going out, his wife said: "Do you think, Henry,
that Jesus would have done that?"
Maxwell paused a
moment. Then he answered slowly, "Yes, I think He would.
At any rate, Powers has decided so and each one of us who made
the promise understands that he is not deciding Jesus' conduct
for any one else, only for himself."
"How about
his family? How will Mrs. Powers and Celia be likely to take
it?"
"Very hard,
I've no doubt. That will be Powers' cross in this matter. They
will not understand his motive."
Maxwell went out
and walked over to the next block where Superintendent Powers
lived. To his relief, Powers himself came to the door.
The two men
shook hands silently. They instantly understood each other
without words. There had never before been such a bond of
union between the minister and his parishioner.
"What are
you going to do?" Henry Maxwell asked after they had
talked over the facts in the case.
"You mean
another position? I have no plans yet. I can go back to my old
work as a telegraph operator. My family will not suffer,
except in a social way."
Powers spoke
calmly and sadly. Henry Maxwell did not need to ask him how
the wife and daughter felt. He knew well enough that the
superintendent had suffered deepest at that point.
"There is
one matter I wish you would see to," said Powers after
awhile, "and that is, the work begun at the shops. So far
as I know, the company will not object to that going on. It is
one of the contradictions of the railroad world that Y. M. C.
A.'s and other Christian influences are encouraged by the
roads, while all the time the most un-Christian and lawless
acts may be committed in the official management of the roads
themselves. Of course it is well understood that it pays a
railroad to have in its employ men who are temperate, honest
and Christian. So I have no doubt the master mechanic will
have the same courtesy shown him in the use of the room. But
what I want you to do, Mr. Maxwell, is to see that my plan is
carried out. Will you? You understand what it was in general.
You made a very favorable impression on the men. Go down there
as often as you can. Get Milton Wright interested to provide
something for the furnishing and expense of the coffee plant
and reading tables. Will you do it?"
"Yes,"
replied Henry Maxwell. He stayed a little longer. Before he
went away, he and the superintendent had a prayer together,
and they parted with that silent hand grasp that seemed to
them like a new token of their Christian discipleship and
fellowship.
The pastor of
the First Church went home stirred deeply by the events of the
week. Gradually the truth was growing upon him that the pledge
to do as Jesus would was working out a revolution in his
parish and throughout the city. Every day added to the serious
results of obedience to that pledge. Maxwell did not pretend
to see the end. He was, in fact, only now at the very
beginning of events that were destined to change the history
of hundreds of families not only in Raymond but throughout the
entire country. As he thought of Edward Norman and Rachel and
Mr. Powers, and of the results that had already come from
their actions, he could not help a feeling of intense interest
in the probable effect if all the persons in the First Church
who had made the pledge, faithfully kept it. Would they all
keep it, or would some of them turn back when the cross became
too heavy?
He was asking
this question the next morning as he sat in his study when the
President of the Endeavor Society of his church called to see
him.
"I suppose
I ought not to trouble you with my case," said young
Morris coming at once to his errand, "but I thought, Mr.
Maxwell, that you might advise me a little."
"I'm glad
you came. Go on, Fred." He had known the young man ever
since his first year in the pastorate, and loved and honored
him for his consistent, faithful service in the church.
"Well, the
fact is, I am out of a job. You know I've been doing reporter
work on the morning SENTINEL since I graduated last year.
Well, last Saturday Mr. Burr asked me to go down the road
Sunday morning and get the details of that train robbery at
the Junction, and write the thing up for the extra edition
that came out Monday morning, just to get the start of the
NEWS. I refused to go, and Burr gave me my dismissal. He was
in a bad temper, or I think perhaps he would not have done it.
He has always treated me well before. Now, do you think Jesus
would have done as I did? I ask because the other fellows say
I was a fool not to do the work. I want to feel that a
Christian acts from motives that may seem strange to others
sometimes, but not foolish. What do you think?"
"I think
you kept your promise, Fred. I cannot believe Jesus would do
newspaper reporting on Sunday as you were asked to do
it."
"Thank
you, Mr. Maxwell. I felt a little troubled over it, but the
longer I think it over the better I feel."
Morris rose to
go, and his pastor rose and laid a loving hand on the young
man's shoulder. "What are you going to do, Fred?"
"I don't
know yet. I have thought some of going to Chicago or some
large city ."
"Why don't
you try the NEWS?"
"They are
all supplied. I have not thought of applying there."
Maxwell thought
a moment. "Come down to the NEWS office with me, and let
us see Norman about it."
So a few
minutes later Edward Norman received into his room the
minister and young Morris, and Maxwell briefly told the cause
of the errand.
"I can
give you a place on the NEWS," said Norman with his keen
look softened by a smile that made it winsome. "I want
reporters who won't work Sundays. And what is more, I am
making plans for a special kind of reporting which I believe
you can develop because you are in sympathy with what Jesus
would do."
He assigned
Morris a definite task, and Maxwell started back to his study,
feeling that kind of satisfaction (and it is a very deep kind)
which a man feels when he has been even partly instrumental in
finding an unemployed person a remunerative position.
He had intended
to go right to his study, but on his way home he passed by one
of Milton Wright's stores. He thought he would simply step in
and shake hands with his parishioner and bid him God-speed in
what he had heard he was doing to put Christ into his
business. But when he went into the office, Wright insisted on
detaining him to talk over some of his new plans. Maxwell
asked himself if this was the Milton Wright he used to know,
eminently practical, business-like, according to the regular
code of the business world, and viewing every thing first and
foremost from the standpoint of, "Will it pay?"
"There is
no use to disguise the fact, Mr. Maxwell, that I have been
compelled to revolutionize the entire method of my business
since I made that promise. I have been doing a great many
things during the last twenty years in this store that I know
Jesus would not do. But that is a small item compared with the
number of things I begin to believe Jesus would do. My sins of
commission have not been as many as those of omission in
business relations."
"What was
the first change you made?" He felt as if his sermon
could wait for him in his study. As the interview with Milton
Wright continued, he was not so sure but that he had found
material for a sermon without going back to his study.
"I think
the first change I had to make was in my thought of my
employees. I came down here Monday morning after that Sunday
and asked myself, 'What would Jesus do in His relation to
these clerks, bookkeepers, office-boys, draymen, salesmen?
Would He try to establish some sort of personal relation to
them different from that which I have sustained all these
years?' I soon answered this by saying, 'Yes.' Then came the
question of what that relation would be and what it would lead
me to do. I did not see how I could answer it to my
satisfaction without getting all my employees together and
having a talk with them. So I sent invitations to all of them,
and we had a meeting out there in the warehouse Tuesday night.
A good many things came out of that meeting. I can't tell you
all. I tried to talk with the men as I imagined Jesus might.
It was hard work, for I have not been in the habit of it, and
must have made some mistakes. But I can hardly make you
believe, Mr. Maxwell, the effect of that meeting on some of
the men. Before it closed I saw more than a dozen of them with
tears on their faces. I kept asking, 'What would Jesus do?'
and the more I asked it the farther along it pushed me into
the most intimate and loving relations with the men who have
worked for me all these years.
Every day something new is
coming up and I am right now in the midst of a reconstruction
of the entire business so far as its motive for being
conducted is concerned. I am so practically ignorant of all
plans for cooperation and its application to business that I
am trying to get information from every possible source. I
have lately made a special study of the life of Titus Salt,
the great mill-owner of Bradford, England, who afterward built
that model town on the banks of the Aire. There is a good deal
in his plans that will help me. But I have not yet reached
definite conclusions in regard to all the details. I am not
enough used to Jesus' methods. But see here."
Wright eagerly
reached up into one of the pigeon holes of his desk and took
out a paper.
"I have
sketched out what seems to me like a program such as Jesus
might go by in a business like mine. I want you to tell me
what you think of it:
"WHAT
JESUS WOULD PROBABLY DO IN MILTON WRIGHT'S PLACE AS A BUSINESS
MAN"
He would engage in
the business first of all for the purpose of glorifying God,
and not for the primary purpose of making money.
All money that
might be made he would never regard as his own, but as trust
funds to be used for the good of humanity.
His relations with
all the persons in his employ would be the most loving and
helpful. He could not help thinking of all of them in the
light of souls to be saved. This thought would always be
greater than his thought of making money in the business.
He would never do
a single dishonest or questionable thing or try in any
remotest way to get the advantage of any one else in the same
business.
The principle of
unselfishness and helpfulness in the business would direct all
its details.
Upon this
principle he would shape the entire plan of his relations to
his employees, to the people who were his customers and to the
general business world with which he was connected.
Henry Maxwell
read this over slowly. It reminded him of his own attempts the
day before to put into a concrete form his thought of Jesus'
probable action. He was very thoughtful as he looked up and
met Wright's eager gaze.
"Do you
believe you can continue to make your business pay on these
lines?"
"I do.
Intelligent unselfishness ought to be wiser than intelligent
selfishness, don't you think? If the men who work as employees
begin to feel a personal share in the profits of the business
and, more than that, a personal love for themselves on the
part of the firm, won't the result be more care, less waste,
more diligence, more faithfulness?"
"Yes, I
think so. A good many other business men don't, do they? I
mean as a general thing. How about your relations to the
selfish world that is not trying to make money on Christian
principles?"
"That
complicates my action, of course."
"Does your
plan contemplate what is coming to be known as
co-operation?"
"Yes, as
far as I have gone, it does. As I told you, I am studying out
my details carefully. I am absolutely convinced that Jesus in
my place would be absolutely unselfish. He would love all
these men in His employ. He would consider the main purpose of
all the business to be a mutual helpfulness, and would conduct
it all so that God's kingdom would be evidently the first
object sought. On those general principles, as I say, I am
working. I must have time to complete the details."
When Maxwell
finally left he was profoundly impressed with the revolution
that was being wrought already in the business. As he passed
out of the store he caught something of the new spirit of the
place. There was no mistaking the fact that Milton Wright's
new relations to his employees were beginning even so soon,
after less than two weeks, to transform the entire business.
This was apparent in the conduct and faces of the clerks.
"If he
keeps on he will be one of the most influential preachers in
Raymond," said Maxwell to himself when he reached his
study. The question rose as to his continuance in this course
when he began to lose money by it, as was possible. He prayed
that the Holy Spirit, who had shown Himself with growing power
in the company of First Church disciples, might abide long
with them all. And with that prayer on his lips and in his
heart he began the preparation of a sermon in which he was
going to present to his people on Sunday the subject of the
saloon in Raymond, as he now believed Jesus would do. He had
never preached against the saloon in this way before. He knew
that the things he should say would lead to serious results.
Nevertheless, he went on with his work, and every sentence he
wrote or shaped was preceded with the question, "Would
Jesus say that?" Once in the course of his study, he went
down on his knees. No one except himself could know what that
meant to him. When had he done that in his preparation of
sermons, before the change that had come into his thought of
discipleship? As he viewed his ministry now, he did not dare
preach without praying long for wisdom. He no longer thought
of his dramatic delivery and its effect on his audience. The
great question with him now was, "What would Jesus
do?"
Saturday night
at the Rectangle witnessed some of the most remarkable scenes
that Mr. Gray and his wife had ever known. The meetings had
intensified with each night of Rachel's singing. A stranger
passing through the Rectangle in the day-time might have heard
a good deal about the meetings in one way and another. It
cannot be said that up to that Saturday night there was any
appreciable lack of oaths and impurity and heavy drinking. The
Rectangle would not have acknowledged that it was growing any
better or that even the singing had softened its outward
manner. It had too much local pride in being
"tough." But in spite of itself there was a yielding
to a power it had never measured and did not know we enough to
resist beforehand.
Gray had
recovered his voice so that by Saturday he was able to speak.
The fact that he was obliged to use his voice carefully made
it necessary for the people to be very quiet if they wanted to
hear. Gradually they had come to understand that this man was
talking these many weeks and giving his time and strength to
give them a knowledge of a Savior, all out of a perfectly
unselfish love for them. Tonight the great crowd was as quiet
as Henry Maxwell's decorous audience ever was. The fringe
around the tent was deeper and the saloons were practically
empty. The Holy Spirit had come at last, and Gray knew that
one of the great prayers of his life was going to be answered.
And Rachel her
singing was the best, most wonderful, that Virginia or Jasper
Chase had ever known. They came together again tonight, this
time with Dr. West, who had spent all his spare time that week
in the Rectangle with some charity cases. Virginia was at the
organ, Jasper sat on a front seat looking up at Rachel, and
the Rectangle swayed as one man towards the platform as she
sang:
"Just as I
am, without one plea,
But that Thy blood was shed for me,
And that Thou bidst me come to Thee,
O Lamb of God, I come, I come."
Gray hardly said
a word. He stretched out his hand with a gesture of
invitation. And down the two aisles of the tent, broken,
sinful creatures, men and women, stumbled towards the
platform. One woman out of the street was near the organ.
Virginia caught the look of her face, and for the first time
in the life of the rich girl the thought of what Jesus was to
the sinful woman came with a suddenness and power that was
like nothing but a new birth. Virginia left the organ, went to
her, looked into her face and caught her hands in her own. The
other girl trembled, then fell on her knees sobbing, with her
head down upon the back of the rude bench in front of her,
still clinging to Virginia. And Virginia, after a moment's
hesitation, kneeled down by her and the two heads were bowed
close together.
But when the
people had crowded in a double row all about the platform,
most of them kneeling and crying, a man in evening dress,
different from the others, pushed through the seats and came
and kneeled down by the side of the drunken man who had
disturbed the meeting when Maxwell spoke. He kneeled within a
few feet of Rachel Winslow, who was still singing softly. And
as she turned for a moment and looked in his direction, she
was amazed to see the face of Rollin Page! For a moment her
voice faltered. Then she went on:
"Just as I
am, thou wilt receive,
Wilt welcome, pardon, cleanse, relieve,
Because Thy promise I believe,
O Lamb of God, I come, I come."