I. M. HALDEMAN ON MODERNISM (Although published in 1929, it sounds like today!)
The only thing
recognized in matters of morals, the only standard for the definition
and measure of God and things divine will be personal experience. Those
who attempt to bind the conscience, direct the soul, and set before it a
definite concept of God and a fixed line of conduct in respect to Him and
to one another will be looked upon, not only as narrow bigots, but as
intolerable tyrants, as criminal hinderers to all true knowledge. The new
generation is intoxicated with the rallying cry of 'self-expression.'
The new generation
is letting itself go. If it has any standard, it is the standard of exalted
personalism and self-pleasing at any cost to old law and old custom, or
old manners . . . With the weakening down of law and self-restraint,
there is the over-leaping race for material pleasures.
This is the
inspiration of the 'get rich quick' movement; get money that may be spent
on pleasure and more pleasure . . . No one has time; all are pressed,
life is too short to stop and think . . . 'On with the song' and 'on
with the dance,' these are the cries, and the music goes faster and more
furiously. The very sounds of the music are barbaric, appealing to the
animal, to the brute sense within, stirring the blood, adding fuel to
the fire till passion is at white heat . . .
'The life that
now is' forms the horizon of the vast army of young men and women coming
out of school and college. All their instruction, all their equipment is
for this world . . . Let modernism continue its work of near pantheism,
its agnostic attitude concerning the soul and the other side of death,
and in a few hurrying years the moral and spiritual ruin of the coming
generation cannot be imagined.
To raise a cry
against this as 'divisive,', to appeal to compromise for the sake of
'brotherhood' and 'Christian charity' and to talk about love being more
important in the church than correctness of doctrine, is emotional weakness
and fallacious folly . . .
The word 'toleration'
must be cut out of the church vocabulary. You cannot find it in the Bible.
It is not a nice word. It is not to be found in good company. It is a word
much used by middle-of-the-road men. It has in it, no matter how much
dissimulated, the crawling, creeping movement of surrender . . . Why should
the Church tolerate men who no longer tolerate the Bible as God gave it to
us?"
(--- From I. M.
Haldeman, in "Why I Am Opposed To Modernism", 1929)