Project Canterbury
An Open Letter
To the Rt. Rev. F. R.
Graves, D.D.,
Bishop of Shanghai
and Bishop in Charge of the Missionary District of the Philippine Islands:
from the Rev. John A.
Staunton, Jr.,
Priest-in-Charge of the Mission of St. Mary the Virgin,
Sagada, Philippine Islands.
Sagada: The Igorot Press, 1919.
AN OPEN LETTER
TO THE RT. REV. F. R. GRAVES, D. D.,
BISHOP OF SHANGHAI, AND BISHOP IN CHARGE OF
THE MISSIONARY DISTRICT OF THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS, SHANGHAI, CHINA.
Jan. 3, 1919
DEAR BISHOP:
I have received from you the following letter:--
BISHOP'S HOUSE, MANILA, Dec. 2, 1918
To THE CLERGY OF THE MISSIONARY DISTRICT OF THE
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS: DEAR BRETHREN:
In visiting the work of the Church in this Missionary
District my constant endeavor has been to make as few changes as possible in the
methods which are used in the various stations in carrying on the work. There
are, however, two things in the services of some of the churches which are so
contrary to the rule of worship in our own Church and in the whole Anglican
Communion that it is impossible for me to sanction them.
The first is the perpetual reservation of the Blessed
Sacrament and the burning of a light before it. Reservation for the purpose of
communicating the sick where the Order of the Communion of the Sick cannot be
used owing to peculiar and difficult conditions has been recognized and allowed
and I have no intention of refusing sanction to such a method of reservation
provided it is practised bona fide for the purpose of the Communion of the sick
and that no light is burned before the place where it is reserved.
The second is the singing of the Ave Maria together
with the burning of candles and offering of flowers before the image of the
Virgin. The use of such ceremonies is without warrant in the Book of Common
Prayer and I hereby call upon those of you who have introduced these into the
public services to discontinue the same. I beg you to believe that before
issuing these directions I have patiently and prayerfully considered these
matters and that I take this action only because it is my duty in obedience to
the promises made at my consecration. And I request you to acknowledge the
receipt of this letter and to express the willing-ness to conform to the
directions therein contained.
Faithfully yours in Christ,
(Signed) F. R. GRAVES,
Bishop in charge of the Missionary District
of the Philippine Islands.
You will have received my reply which was as follows:--
SAGADA, P. I. December 31, 1918
DEAR BISHOP:
I have to acknowledge, as you request, my receipt on
December 21, '18 of a letter which you have sent out dated Manila, December 2,
'18, addressed "To the Clergy of the Missionary District of the Philippine
Islands."
In regard to your further request that I express "the
willingness to conform to the directions therein contained", I have to reply
that I cannot conscientiously so conform.
It is my purpose to lay this matter before the Church
at large through the medium of an Open Letter, which I will be mailing to you
immediately. I fully realize that the Church's verdict must either approve for
use in the mission field the methods which have been followed here, or must
condemn them. This will have at least as a result that missionaries volunteering
will thereafter know where they stand, and whether it will be safe for them to
devote the best period of their active life to building up mission undertakings
for the Church, which, in a moment, through a change of superiors, may be
crippled or swept away.
Faithfully yours,
(Signed) JOHN A. STAUNTON, JR.
No further introduction to what I have here to say will
be necessary.
At the outset let me express regret that you have
thought best to take up this matter in the way that you have. You wrote me from
Manila (October 29, '18):--
"Bishop Brent's leaving here has naturally shaken the
Mission a good deal. My aim in the short period in which I shall be connected
with this Missionary District is to do my best to help you all to pull the
Mission through this critical period until you have a permanent head. I want
everybody's help in this".
When, for several days you were with us in Sagada, I
spoke to you with the utmost frankness of all our methods, which have been
routine for many years. In the course of friendly conversation you, with equal
frankness, stated that, while you personally disapproved of some practices, as
your care of the Philippine District was only a temporary one, you wished simply
to confirm our candidates, to help us in any other way that you could, and then
to get back to your own field as quickly as possible. You left us with the
impression that you had no intention of suggesting changes. In your courteous
letter from Baguto (November 20, 18) you said, "I much enjoyed talking with you
and finding so many points on which we agreed and some few in which we did not".
Then, as out of a clear sky, came your mandatory letter
of December 2, 18 from Manila, ordering me to abandon methods and practices which have been intimately interwoven into the life of this Mission since its
foundation fourteen years ago, which are in exact accord with the course our
former Bishop approved for this work, and which represent the conviction of
practically the entire Staff. Allow me to say that I think some other course
would have been more considerate to me, to Bishop Brent, and to all of us.
In handling other matters pertaining to the working of
this Mission you have shown a further lack of consideration to me as the priest
in charge. Custom no less than courtesy requires in every department of life
that a superior should not take up directly with subordinates matters which fall
within the province of the local head; and certainly not without previous
consultation with him. Such a course is considered as an act of official
discourtesy to an inferior. Noblesse oblige. It is one of those things
which, as one may say, are not done. Yet apparently there are exceptions.
Without a previous word to me on the subject, you announced your intention, in
your letter of November 14, 18, to transfer my assistant priest to another
Mission. You acknowledged the receipt of neither the letter nor the telegram
which I then sent you in regard to the matter: and left me to find out
incidentally through my assistant that you had actually transferred him.
Again: there was a change which you thought desirable
affecting another worker in one of my outstations, Besao; and you made it
without consulting me by sending from Manila to my assistant Deaconess a
mandatory letter addressed to her which I was merely to read and then transmit.
I repeat, such things are not ordinarily done where
there is concern to maintain official relations. A regiment would be quickly
demoralized if the colonel in command should issue orders to lieutenants or
sergeants passing over and ignoring the company commanders. I do not cite these
instances merely to draw attention to discourtesy but to show how impossible it
would be for any coordinated work to hold together under such treatment. No
organization could withstand the demoralizing effects of such methods. You know
this as well as I do: and the only interpretation I can find for your course is
that which may be inferred from your following letter disapproving of our Sagada
traditions and practices and ordering us to abandon them.
The practices which you condemn, as you state them,
are:
1. The perpetual reservation of the Blessed Sacrament.
2. The burning of a light before the place where it is reserved.
3. The singing of the Ave Maria.
4. The burning of candles and offering of flowers before the image of the
Virgin.
1. Of course it would be simply contrary to fact to say
that the perpetual reservation of the Blessed Sacrament with a light in front of
It is not permitted in the Episcopal Church, for it obviously is permitted.
There are many more than a hundred churches in the most prominent dioceses of
the American Church where the Blessed Sacrament is so reserved, and I believe
that there are not a few of our Cathedrals in which the sanctuary light is
burning. In England, I understand, this custom is even more common than in
America.
2. Whether or not a light is kept burning in the church
before the place where the Blessed Sacrament is reserved, or in any other place,
is a matter obviously within the entire discretion of the priest. As well might
a bishop call on a priest "under obedience" to turn out the gas in his own house
before going to bed, or not to put up Christmas decorations. I know of nothing
in the canons of the Church which gives a bishop authority in these matters. How
a priest illuminates his church or decorates it, whether with candles, or oil
lamps, or electricity, or evergreens, is a matter at his sole discretion.
Whether he puts all lights out, or leaves one burning all night, or all day, in
a particular place for a particular purpose, is a matter no one may dictate to
him. Thirty years ago individual bishops attacked the use of altar candles by
issuing orders similar to yours. The well nigh universal use of candles in our
churches to-day proves that they were exceeding their authority.
3. The singing of the Ave Maria is likewise obviously
permitted in the Episcopal Church. It was constantly sung in public services in
the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, New York, twenty-five years ago when I was a
curate there. It was sung in each of the churches of which I was rector. It may
be heard from Maine to California. Even churches which do not represent advanced
churchmanship put Ave Marias by Gounod, Schubert, Mascagni among their musical
numbers. But perhaps this may be considered permissible since love of music
rather than love of the Mother dictates the selection. Perhaps, too, a highly
trained and paid choir might be permitted to sing the Ave Maria; while a
congregation of Igorots might not, lest they should put some devotional feeling
into it.
4. I plead guilty to the offense of, perhaps
sentimentally, occasionally putting a rose bud before the image of Our Lord's Mother and mine. It serves to keep the memory of Mary's pure loveliness fresh in
my heart; and I am always better for the act. But I deny any right of yours to
prevent me from so doing. And as to candles, on Sundays and great feast days we
light all the candles in the church, and I certainly would be unable to explain
to my people why the candles which illumine the Mother's statue should be made
an exception. As to singing the Ave Maria to or before the statue, I do not
recollect that we have ever done this, as yet; but, of course, we might come to
the grossest idolatry in time if these things were allowed to go unchecked.
Nevertheless, in an increasing number of "Anglican" churches both in England and
America the Incarnation is becoming better understood through honor paid to Mary
in picture, statue and shrine.
The doctrinal considerations which prevent me from
complying with your requirements I will not discuss, as these have been argued
again and again; the material is available, and the arguments adduced are
familiar to us both. No conclusive or "exclusive" result can be reached in this
direction while the Episcopal Church leaves open and undefined, as it obviously
does, the doctrine of Our Lord's presence in the Blessed Sacrament, and of
Mary's place in the scheme of redemption.
But I propose to state briefly some other
considerations which make it impossible for me to conform to your directions.
And I do so as an accredited agent whom the Episcopal Church has sent into this
far field to do a particular and a difficult piece of work.
The matter of a priest's canonical obedience to his
bishop, first, naturally, presents itself. I promised at my ordination to obey
the godly admonitions and the godly judgments of the bishop who, according to
the canons of the Church should be over me. I have no hesitation whatever in
denying categorically that the admonitions and judgments contained in your
letter are covered by the terms of a priest's canonical obedience. To make my
meaning perfectly plain I will go so far as to say that I regard those
requirements as stated in your letter not only as not godly, but definitely, as
applied to this work, ungodly. The Living Church addresses itself to the
principle involved in an editorial in its issue of June 8, 18, which I will
quote:--
"Both in the grant of authority to the bishop and in
the promise of obedience by the priest, are definite limitations. The grant of
authority to the bishop and the promise of obedience by the priest must be read
together. The bishop acquires no right to rule except 'by the authority of God's
Word and by the order of this Church'; the priest makes no promise to obey
except 'according to the canons of the Church'. The priest no more places his
liberty in the hands of his bishop than the bishop acquires an unlimited
authority over the priest. The bishop can order the priest to do only what is
explicitly required by the canons; the priest promises only to obey in
connection with that limitation. 'Admonitions' requiring priests to obey the
bishop in matters not thus explicitly set down in the law of the Church are
anything but 'godly'. The priest, and not the bishop, is to
determine what the priest shall do wherever and whenever he is not bound
by explicit law such as binds equally the bishop and the priest. A whole host of
misunderstandings and bitterness would have been avoided during the history of
this Church if this distinction had been perfectly clear."
A priest who is the rector of a parish is placed by the
Church in an impregnable position to resist encroachments on rights which are
his inherently. I will quote again from the same editorial:--
"The rector--not the bishop--is charged with the
exercise of all the discretion that there may be as to how the services of the
Church shall be rendered. Choristers, organists, Servers, ceremonial, are in his
hands. 'Every Act of sacerdotal Function'--a very sweeping grant of
authority--is absolutely vested by the bishop, the chief ordinary, in the
rector, the ordinary of the parish, in the words of the Institution office,
subject to explicit limitation: 'You continuing in communion with us, and
complying with the rubrics and canons of the Church, and with such lawful
directions as you shall at any time receive from us'. The 'lawful directions'
must naturally, be those which are based on the law of the Church, going back
again to the authority vested in the bishop; they cannot extend to preferences
of the bishop not explicitly required by law. 'The control of the worship and
the spiritual jurisdiction of the parish are vested in the rector, subject to
the Rubrics of the Book of Common Prayer, the Canons of the Church, and the
godly counsel' (not the dictation) 'of the bishop' (Canon 16)."
I know, of course, that a bishop has a peculiar power
to coerce a priest who occupies a mission station in his Jurisdiction: but I
note well that this power arises not from any extra-canonical obedience which a
Mission Priest owes to a Missionary Bishop; but from the circumstances under
which the Mission Priest has been appointed and is paid his stipend. It arises
solely from the fact that a Missionary Bishop can, in most cases, by
representations, get a Mission priest recalled and his salary stopped: and a
priest so treated in our Church has no protection or redress. I quite understand
this aspect of the present situation and, though I had hoped to end my life at
the Mission which has been more than a child to me, I am prepared to face it.
For, supposing that I, allowing the principle
underlying your ruling, could conscientiously conform on the issues which you
raise; what guarantee is there that I would not presently be told by a new
bishop to apply the same principle to other matters which you indeed would allow
to be legitimate but which your successor would condemn? How about servers in
the sanctuary, recently condemned by the Bishop of Alabama? How about altar
lights, not so long ago condemned by Bishop Coxe? How about the use of the
crucifix? I can remember when an American bishop shook his fist at one hanging
in the church. How about confessions? We hear hundreds of confessions in Sagada:
in fact everyone who makes his communion comes to confession in the course of
the year. You, personally, think confession is good medicine; but suppose the
new bishop who is coming, disapproving of this practice, should order me to
cease hearing confessions: what, then, for me, if I should now allow the
principle underlying your ruling?
I may well quote here a paragraph of Bishop Brent's
final Report, from the Spirit of Missions for March 1918:--
"A bishop as I conceive of his responsibilities, is
bound to sink his own tastes and preferences in such matters and not put himself
in the position of trying to impose his personal interpretations and conclusions
upon his clergy. He must secure for them their legitimate freedom, while
retaining his own. He can authorize only that which he himself has in the
fullest interpretation of his prerogatives liberty to authorize. But only those
of us who have been put in the position of having to apply, without freedom of
adaptation, an Anglo-Saxon liturgical use to the need of a primitive and
oriental people, can appreciate the strain that conformity entails. The pain
that comes from trying to be real when adherence to one's own conception of
things or the traditional law of the Church means artificiality, ranks high in
the category of suffering, and forces one to the conclusion that the
provincialisms of our Church hamper her missionary effectiveness. The principles
that I have advocated have been to keep the structure of the sacramental offices
inviolate (which has not always been scrupulously done) and to distinguish
between the authorized services of the Church and the popular devotions of the
people. For instance, while it may be the custom of the people to gather in the
church to say the Rosary, I have no right to license it in its traditional form,
and give it a place by the side of the Litany as an office to be led by the
priest. Neither do I believe it to be within my province to forbid a service
which has in it so much that is quite in accord with our own religious
position."
It would be useless for me to attempt to justify our
practices to you, but I may say something as to how you happened to find a work
so unfamiliar at our mountain mission stations.
It would be futile to attempt mission work among any
peculiar people without taking into account their personal characteristics and
the conditions under which they live. Especially, all writers agree that to know
the Malay character requires acute observation during a long period of close
association.
With Bishop Brent's sanction I spent my first year in
the Philippine Islands (1902) in a secular position which gave me unrivalled
opportunities to study Malay character and life. In the capacity of Deputy
Superintendent of Schools, it not being generally known that I was a priest and
missionary, I travelled back and forth through the Island of Cebu, staying with
Spanish and Filipino priests in conventos and in private homes, till I
knew every padre and presidente in the Island and had become well
acquainted with native life, temperament and customs. I lived with the people
day in day out. At the end of the year I was sent into the mountains of Luzon to
apply what I had learned and if possible to convert the Igorots to Christianity.
A casual visitor coming for the first time into the
Philippines, or into Igorot land, can get but a superficial idea of the
situation. If he comes, as you did, from some mission definitely organized on
another basis, among an entirely different race of people, he will be apt to
bring all of his new and hurried observations to the touchstone of
preconceptions formed in that other field. Xo an extent a background of such
experience will partially inhibit him from seeing things as they really are.
An antecedent prejudice will also inhibit sympathetic
understanding and handling. This you certainly have shown. On the trail, a day
before you arrived in Sagada, you received from me the following letter: --
SAGADA, P. I. November 2, 1918
DEAR BISHOP GRAVES:
I shall hope to see you soon. If the weather is good we
may some of us go out on the trail to meet you. It has been customary at Sagada
when the Bishop comes to greet him by ringing the church bells, tooting horns,
and otherwise making a barbaric noise. I warn you beforehand as this noise is
not altogether pleasant to the ear, also some of the people who may wish to
shake your hand in the hopes of receiving a blessing will not be over clean. Do
not mind this: we are simple folk.
Bishop Brent's custom was to go first of all on arrival
to the church and, after kneeling before the altar while a few prayers were
being said, to put on his cope and mitre, go up to the altar and give the people
his episcopal blessing. I do not know whether you will wish to follow this
course, but it will help us if you do. We have one of the Bishop's mitres here,
which he left just for such occasions, and we also have a pastoral staff which
the Bishop ordered made in China.
I shall hope to hear from you that you have had a good
trip. The weather so far has been perfect here.
Faithfully yours,
(Signed) JOHN A. STAUNTON, JR.
Your reply to me, when I went out with my people to
welcome you at the entrance to the Mission, was that I might make any
explanation I liked to them, but that you would not go to the church for the
accustomed reception and blessing.
Later you refused to use at any time the mitre and
pastoral staff which Bishop Brent kept in the mountains for use on episcopal
visitations, or to adopt the attitude which these people have always been
accustomed to associate with the office of a bishop. These matters, naturally,
were noted and commented on: "Why doesn't he wear the dress of a bishop?" was a
question put by an Igorot. As a result, our people are now wondering and
questioning whether we are really Catholics, as we claim to be; or only "make
believe" Catholics, as, years ago, they were told we were. Would it not have
been far better had you felt compelled conscientiously to stay away, rather than
thus to come here and by non-conformity to introduce doubt and distress among a
simple people who have no background of intellectual life enabling them to
understand and ignore such variations?
It is usual for one who makes changes in a long
continued administration, to make a study of conditions first: but, so far as I
know, you did not even make pertinent inquiries as to the conditions of Igorot
life. In fact you showed a disinclination even to visit our out-stations, where
you might have seen something of how our people lived. "I've seen mission
stations before", was your remark.
The Christian Filipinos, or the pagan Igorots of Luzon,
both differ widely from the Chinese. Their background, habits, and their
mentality are all different. As for the Igorots, they represent a pagan remnant
in the midst of a Malay population which has been Christian for centuries.
Methods for the Christianization of the Igorots must take this fact into
account.
To swing the whole Filipino people, most of them Roman
Catholics, to Episcopalianism, even were this desirable, would be a task of a
magnitude which the Episcopal Church has neither men nor resources to undertake.
As Bishop Brent says in his final Report, (Spirit of Missions, March
1918): --
"The responsibility before God and men for the
spiritual condition and progress of the Filipinos rests and will continue to
rest mainly with the venerable Church which for nearly four hundred years has
claimed and, until recently, maintained exclusive and jealous jurisdiction over
them".
"I could not from conviction undertake or promote that
attack on the Roman Catholic Church which, directly or indirectly, seems to be
necessary for success. The raising of altar against altar is a process of which
I am temperamentally incapable. My theory has been that constructive
presentation of the truth as God has made it known to us would win those who
ought to be won. Even those doctrines in another communion which I cannot
accept, I am unable to condemn. It is for a united Church to reset the norm in
doctrine, discipline and worship."
Yet a mission like other enterprises must have a
definite aim and purpose, and not be merely desultory and objectless. It would
have been sheer folly and waste had the work of Bishop Brent resulted merely in
adding a few feeble Episcopalian mission stations to the numerous sects now
striving for possession of the Filipino's soul. But Bishop Brent had a larger
ideal. He placed the emphasis of his work for natives on the as yet
unChristianized remnant, and chiefly on the Igorot.
And the methods which he approved for his missions
among the Igorots were determined by the place the Igorots occupied with respect
to the great bulk of the Philippine population. The Filipinos were Catholics.
Their religious ties were strongly social. The Igorots would eventually take
their place in the general civilization. To bring about a political unity was
the constant endeavor of our American Government. Political unity ought to have
religious unity as its background and safeguard. The only religious unity within
the realm of possibility for the Filipinos was that which existed already in the
Catholic Church. Therefore, Bishop Brent's work sought so to present
Christianity to the Igorots that converts would not by the very fact of their
embracing Christianity be thereby cut off from the common Christian life of the
great bulk of their own race.
In methods Bishop Brent has repeatedly, and at his last
visit to us particularly, expressed approval of the policy of so approximating
our "use" to the Roman as to make our services and ministrations present the
same general impression to the people. And this, not for the purpose of
deceiving them as to our position, but to familiarize them with that form of
religion which will most help them to continue as good Christians when they
remove beyond the reach of our own ministrations. You may find Bishop Brent's
opinions on this subject in his printed utterances. I quote again from his final
Report:--
"For a double reason I feel that a mission of our
Church in a Latin country like the Philippines can best do its work among the
natives by advanced ritual. It is the obvious mode of approach to the child and
the childlike. But further than that, we ought to avoid raising among them
questions involving disputations, controversies and all that weary process of
doctrinal hairsplitting which is the bane of the Christian Church. The saving
truths of the Christian religion have never been and never will be those of
doubtful and disputable substance. I believe it to be our duty in such
circumstances as are under consideration, to avoid as far as we conscientiously
and legitimately can, any emphasis on the differences between ourselves and our
Roman Catholic brethren, and to lay stress on our points of contact, conforming
where we can to the established traditions of the country".
Again, addressing the Board of Missions in New York on
May 10, 1916, Bishop Brent said:--
"He [Fr. Staunton] has put us .............. into such
a relation with the Belgian clergy of that district that, though officially the
Roman Catholic clergy may feel it necessary to present something of an
opposition, really and personally they feel that
after all the Church of God is one, and that the work we are doing is part of
the great work of the Catholic Church. Let me tell you I am as proud of that
relation to that great, venerable Roman Catholic Church, as I am of our
relationship with the clergy and the various missions of the Protestant
communions".
In any rapprochement of friendliness which I may
have been instrumental in establishing between ourselves and the Roman clergy, I
have known that I had the encouragement of Bishop Brent.
When we first established ourselves in Sagada in 1904
it seemed unlikely that the Roman Catholic mission, which had not been a success
in Spanish times, would ever be reopened. Later, however, in 1909, a Roman
priest was sent here to "fight" us, and remained for a year and a half. It was
perfectly clear to the people that the two missions were not identical, for we
told them so, and they could see for themselves that we were not in communion.
But we made it equally clear that our Mission was Catholic; emphasizing the
identity of our Creeds, Sacraments, Scriptures and Ministry: our services showed
no marked dissimilarity; and we built up what was practically an identical
devotional life, in which love for Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament and love
for Our Lord's Mother, Mary, were prominent.
After a year and a half in Sagada the Roman priest was
moved away. There was practically nothing here for him to do. He had no
following. Scarcely a dozen of old time Catholics remained in Sagada; and
practically all the new converts from paganism, numbering hundreds, were being
baptized by us. Later the Roman Catholic buildings consisting of convento
and church were taken down and moved away. Best of all, when Father------, now
Superior of his Order in the Philippines, departed, he went away as my friend. I
wish to put on record that Father------'s simple and devoted life have always
been an inspiration to me. I believe that I have profited by his prayers ever
since.
In organizing and carrying on our work along Catholic
lines, I, equally, have received encouragement from Bishop Brent; more
especially of late years, since he has seen more clearly its bearing and effect.
At the opening of the Sagada Mission it was Bishop Brent himself who provided
the money to purchase the large copy in color of Murillo's "Immaculate
Conception" which for thirteen years has been our altarpiece. Bishop Brent gave
our first metal altar candlesticks. Later, when Baguio filled up with boys and
young men who had received their preliminary training in Bontoc and Sagada, it
was Bishop Brent who saw to it that a regular mass was celebrated for them there
and who provided the colored chasuble (Roman shape) to be used by the priest in
charge of the Baguio work. He has contributed towards erecting the Stations of
the Cross in our new church. It was from Bishop Brent that I hold the valuable
"watch case" pix which I constantly use in carrying the Blessed Sacrament from
the tabernacle to the sick. From the beginning of the Mission the Blessed
Sacrament has been reserved on the main altar in a tabernacle where It is the
center of our people's devotions. A letter written by Bishop Brent in the early
days of the Sagada Mission rejoiced over the way the Igorots brought mountain
lilies to decorate our shrine. Even in those early days the picture of Mary was
in place over our altar and a light was burning before it. From the first this
church has been a shrine of Mary in whose honor the Mission was named, and from
the first the Ave Maria, or Angelus, has been rung from our bell tower three
times a day.
The evening Angelus (see form printed below) is what
you heard and objected to. Coming as it does at six o'clock, immediately after
the conclusion of our daily vesper service, it is sung together in dialect by
members of the Mission staff, school children and workmen who gather in the
church for this evening salutation before they disperse for the night. It is the
simple and universally used memorial of the Incarnation: and you condemn it
because it contains the Ave Maria. Yet the Angelus has the power to teach simple
people that Jesus our God is Son of Mary as nothing else can; and more than one
visitor, hearing our people sing it, has been moved to tears.
When Dr. Lloyd, President of the Board of Missions, and
now Bishop, visited Sagada in 1906 he heard the Angelus sung, and if he objected
to this practice he certainly did not so express himself to me. We are still
blessing him for his instrumentality in leaving with us at that time the first
large contribution which the Mission had received, enabling us to pipe spring
water from the mountain, and so making the growth of the Mission possible.
In 1913 Bishop Gilbert White of Carpentaria, Australia,
spent several days with us in Sagada during the season of Lent. On Fridays
during Lent we are accustomed to sing the Stations of the Cross in the church,
stopping at each of the fourteen stations to sing the Lord's Prayer, the Ave
Maria, and other devotions. Bishop White took part in this service, and after
his return to Australia expressed himself as follows in his diocesan magazine. I
am obliged to condense.
"About eleven years ago, on the arrival of Bishop Brent
at Manila, a mission was established at Sagada, which lies in a fairly open
valley 5000 feet above the sea. A Roman Catholic mission had been sent to Sagada
some twenty years before, but had been abandoned as a failure, and the only
trace left of it was that the people had learned and remembered how to sing the
'Ave Maria'.
"It was thought well that the mission should, as far as
possible, be conducted on lines not differing too much in outward appearances
from those which they had already learned to associate with Christianity, and
the lines on which the Mission is run are of a somewhat advanced and ritualistic
type, appealing especially to the eye, although I saw nothing that was disloyal
to or inconsistent with the Prayer Book teaching. Although I could not
personally agree with everything that was done, I am bound to admit that the
results seemed to be excellent, and the church seemed to have a most remarkable
spiritual grip, not only on the converts but upon the white officials and
residents in Bontoc and elsewhere.
"I was at the Mission on a Friday in Lent, and at 5 p.
m. there was a service of the Stations of the Cross. I do not know whether or no
the devotion is as a general rule a desirable one, but there could be no doubt
that the congregation was thoroughly in earnest. In addition to the children,
there were about forty adults, of whom a majority were men just come in from
work from the adjoining native village. There was no address, the service, which
lasted a full hour, consisting of a procession with prayers and hymns only; but
there was no sign of flagging attention or interest. Certainly it was the most
democratic service I ever attended, as men, women, and children, bishops and
priests, Igorots, Ilocanos, Americans, English, Canadians, Spanish, and Mestizos
were all mixed up in a dense crowd and it was impossible to doubt that the
people were there because Our Lord's Passion was a reality to them and they
wanted to be there to commemorate His sufferings.
"The Superintendent [is] Father
Staunton............Curiously enough the assistant priest [the Rev. Robb White,
Jr.] is a man of totally different ecclesiastical views, being a convinced
Evangelical, and his testimony to the spiritual results of Father Staunton's
work is therefore the more remarkable. Happily the American Church seems largely
free from that bitter party feeling which has not been unknown in Australia and
it is recognized that men may differ in their ecclesiastical views, and yet work
together honestly and amicably for God's glory and the extension of His
Kingdom".
On the feasts of Mary our practice is to carry our
Lord's statue in an out-of-doors procession; after the Filipinos' custom which I
learned during that year which I spent in Cebu; and Bishop Brent when visiting
us has taken part in these solemnities not grudgingly, but with enthusiasm. He
has entered into the spirit of it, and helped to "swing" it. One of the enclosed
pictures will show you our late Bishop in the act of administering Confirmation
in our church. On one side may be seen, though not plainly in this picture, the
statue of Mary surrounded with lights and flowers, the practice you now order us
to abandon. Other pictures show the statue of Mary as carried in procession on
our patronal feasts. In his own Manila Cathedral Bishop Brent has preached on
the honor due to Mary; and in an article which was printed two years ago in the
Living Church he commended a book of verse put out to make Mary better
known and loved ("A Posie from a Royal Garden").
There have been some few minor theological points
bearing on the conduct of the Mission as to which Bishop Brent and I have not
always been in perfect accord; but they are not the points which you criticize
in your letter. And I think it will be fair, under the circumstances, though
perhaps not quite modest of me, to quote what Bishop Brent said before the Board
of Missions on May 10, 1916:--
"There were times when I thought that I could teach Fr.
Staunton better ways of doing his work than those he has learned from God
Himself. I have ceased to interject my own theories into the life of a man who
has proved by his work that he knows how to bring simple minded people into
close and intimate touch with God as revealed in Jesus Christ".
The two practices which you condemn have been followed
not only in Sagada but in Bontoc with Bishop Brent's expressed approval. The
priest in charge of the services at Bontoc, whom you now so easily rebuke, was
invited into this Jurisdiction by Bishop Brent because in Australia he had
practiced and taught the very two points which you condemn, till he was forced
to resign a marvelously successful work there by a bishop whose sympathies were
Protestant. In giving this priest (whose honesty and integrity even his
opponents acknowledged), an asylum from persecution, Bishop Brent, cognisant of
all the facts of the case from those who were on the court which tried him,
wrote to him as follows:--
''Your churchmanship is the sort I desire."
"The position you hold, so far from being an
embarrassment to us, is the reverse."
As to Sagada: not only did our Bishop approve of the
way in which this work was conducted, but he sent a Filipino deacon into
residence here so that he might learn our ways and methods for use in Manila
after he should be priested.
All very well, you might say, so far as you were
working under a Bishop who sympathized with your methods; but you are under a
very different management now. And to this I might reply: that if an incoming
bishop pro tem may suddenly reverse the carefully worked out and
continuously applied missionary policy of his predecessors, to the utter
demoralization of the stations that have been built up on that policy, then, the
quicker the Episcopal Church abandons this mission field, at least, to the
exclusive ministrations of the Roman Church the better for these people.
I think I have said enough to establish the fact that I
have had all the episcopal authorization that was necessary for what has been
done in Sagada. But a contention of your letter--or, at least, a legitimate
inference from it--is that I do not represent the Church.
Let me go back, then, and consider my "rating", so to
speak, before I came to the Philippines. I wish it to be clear that the Church
in sending me to the Philippines in 1901 as one of its accredited
representatives did so fully knowing who and what I was, and therefore stood
back of me in what I would supposedly do.
I volunteered and was accepted because I was a
"Catholic Churchman", though I doubt I would have been considered as a member of
"the Catholic party". Men of Catholic churchmanship were being urged to
volunteer for our new possessions because of the peculiar conditions of the
field. It was largely because of my churchmanship that the late Bishop Henry C.
Potter of New York encouraged me to go and indorsed my appointment. He had heard
me argue for Catholic ceremonial and practice at the St. Paul Church Congress
and had there taken occasion to commend the position I took. I made it plain at
the Missions House what I was, and indeed could not have concealed it had I
wished. My past was well known. I had been connected with the Church of St. Mary
the Virgin, New York, altogether for thirteen years; including six years as a
priest, at a time when that church was marked out (as happily it is not now) ,
by the bitter controversies of the period. I had been rector of two parishes,
St. James", Cleveland, Ohio, and St. Peter's, Springfield, Massachusetts, in
each of which the Blessed Sacrament was publicly reserved and the Hail Mary used
in public services, without disturbing the pleasant relations which existed
between myself and my bishops.
If now, after seventeen years of hard work, I am to be
discredited for continuing to be what I was known to be when I was originally
sent out, the application papers of missionaries should hereafter be headed in
red ink: "Missionaries who volunteer must be prepared to surrender their
convictions and their personalities to their bishop pro tern: in the event of a
change in the Episcopate they must be prepared immediately to adjust their
beliefs and practices accordingly, or to expect to be recalled and see their
labor go for naught". For nothing less than complete destruction would come
to this work should the teaching by which it has been built up during these
fourteen years be denounced and reversed.
I utter no threat, but I am bound to give you warning,
based on my intimate knowledge of the people among whom we work, a 1 of the
temperaments of the loyal band of missionary workers at Bontoc and Sagada who
were wisely selected for this district because they were in sympathy with the
way things are done here. I have made no canvass of the situation, but I may
hazard a guess that should the Church insist that the customs of the Sagada and
Bontoc Missions be reversed as outlined in your letter, our Church would lose,
to another Christian body, practically all of the Christian Igorots of this
district (numbering upwards of three thousand); and that the mission field would
lose by retirement as soon as it could be conveniently arranged nearly all of
our white workers. For even should these workers wish to stay, they would not be
able to handle the situation after such a fiasco.
And the fall of the Mission at Sagada will mean the
fall of the town itself, back into a dirty and unprogressive Igorot settlement;
for Sagada was put on the map of the Philippines by the Mission of St. Mary the
Virgin, and is kept alive by our Mission industries. Already under changed
conditions, procrastination, and an utter lack of constructive policy, Bishop
Brent's work in the Philippines is melting away. Must this work go too, through
forgetfulness that this is the Twentieth and not the Sixteenth Century?
Still, you may further ask, "Does the Church at home
know what you have been doing at Sagada all these years?" I reply that, if it
does not, this is certainly not my fault. At St. Louis in 1916, in an address to
the Alumni of the General Theological Seminary, in the presence of the Presiding
Bishop, I told the story of Sagada, without reticence as to methods used.
Indeed, I particularly emphasized those practices which might possibly have been
disapproved. I heard nothing but commendation afterwards from this
representative body of priests of all schools of churchmanship.
Literature which we have issued has been frankly
outspoken as to our methods. Colored lantern slides showing the interior of our
church, and our out-of-doors ceremonial (including pictures herewith enclosed),
have been shown in many cities including St. Louis at the time of the last
General Convention. A set of these slides purchased by the Missions House has
been widely used by mission study classes. The probability is that Sagada's
methods are unknown only to those churchmen who take slight interest in
missions.
And I have been scrupulous to a fault to use in my
printed reports to the Bishop, which have had wide circulation, a terminology
which could not be misunderstood. (See extracts from Reports, below). For
example: the device at the heading of this letter was adopted not simply for
local strategic reasons, but to insure that there should bs no misunderstanding,
on the part those who should contribute to us, of what the Mission stands for.
A narrowly "Broad Churchman"--for there are a few such
of the Poughkeepsie Chronicle school--once said to me while I was in the
States that apparently we were running a Roman Catholic mission with Protestant
money. It was intimated that the funds with which the Sagada Mission has been
developed come chiefly from persons who were not in sympathy with the methods
here employed. I believe that opinion to be quite untrue: and that by far the
greater number of those who have specially contributed to Sagada have, whatever
their "school", actively sympathized with the work as conducted here.
Contributors of very diverse shades of churchmanship--Broad Churchmen
included--have written me to that effect. Among the multitude of American
visitors to Sagada during all these years, excepting only one lay Presbyterian,
one lay Roman Catholic, and one fanatical minister of an obscure Protestant
sect, all of whom vigorously protested--although they did not scruple to accept
my hospitality--I recall only words of commendation for the methods on which
this mission is run. It is true that funds allowed to us by appropriation come
from churches representing all schools of thought; but, if assessments are to be
levied generally on parishes without regard to churchmanship, disbursements to
the field must necessarily be made, as they have been, without partisan
discrimination. In this respect we have constantly been treated with perfect
fairness by the Board.
And it may give you a new idea, if you will pardon me
for mentioning it, to know that I have put upwards of $8,000.00 of my own
money--all I have--into this work; and I will not grudge a penny of it unless I
am prevented from resting finally among my people in a grave in the Campo Santo
on our hillside where I have during even this month laid twenty to rest.
A clear idea of what this Mission has always stood for
and its methods, can best be presented by reprinting extracts from the Reports,
referred to above, which I rendered to Bishop Brent as early as 1907 and 1912.
These Reports, which have been widely read in the States, and others may be
found in full in the official annual Journal of this Missionary District on file
in the archives of each Diocese. I am italicizing certain paragraphs.
"In concluding the Report I may say that the year 1907
shows no falling off from the former progress of the Mission, but rather a
steady gain. As is well known, the work of this Mission has been from the
first conducted an 'what are sometimes called 'Catholic lines'. Appeal is made
to the eye as well as to the ear. Our services are made as ornate as possible.
Every symbol or devotional practice which appeals to these people is freely made
use of. At times when public service is not going on Christian Igorots are
allowed and encouraged to use the church for such popular devotions as appeal to
them, conducted in the native language and by their own leaders. They are
encouraged to be their own missionaries, and most of our converts have been
brought to baptism through the agency of other Igorot Christians. On the other
hand it must not be thought that our work is conducted with a narrow
ecclesiasticism. We aim not to make Christians
only, but to develop our Christians in every way possible. Better houses, better
clothes, better food, better customs, better instruction, better methods of
work, better health, better lives,--all are included in our plans for these
people. They know that we have their best interests constantly in mind, and as a
result they trust us.
"Material development is a necessity of true spiritual
progress among any primitive people. It is one thing for the highest and deepest
natures to revert to the simple or the monastic life for the sake of religion;
it is quite another thing for the savage to retain his primitive simplicity. In
the former case the simple life is an abandonment of the artificialities of
modern civilization in the interest of a closer union with God: in the latter it
is a retention of brutish characteristics which civilization no less than
religion has the power to eliminate. The first is a true imitation of Christ,
the latter is an imitation of the soulless life of the lower animals.
"The savage in his 'gee-string' or loin cloth may
indeed be a sincere Christian, but his aspiration will then neccessarily include
material development. There is no hope for the Christianized savage who has no
discontent with his former surroundings; who does not want to be cleaner in
body, better clothed, better fed, better housed, better educated, more
industrious, and to push his children upward by giving them advantages which
were denied to him. It is not the absolute value of soap over dirt; beef over
dog-flesh; board houses over those made of grass; reading, writing and figuring
over illiteracy; the use of saws and planes instead of the primitive axe, that
is important: but it is the tendency of these things, and the aspirations which
they represent. There is no absolute standard of civilization, or education, or
enlightenment; these things are relative; but there is an absolute direction
which a man must follow if he is ascending. It is unthinkable that a man should
be ascending to Christ while at the same time he is degenerating as a social
being.
"There are two natures in every human being, and there
are two influences which should be incessantly and simultaneously at work in
every mission station. We aim in Sagada to make devotion and industry go hand in
hand. The center of all our activities is the altar where dwells the
crucified, risen, and ascended Christ. At the ringing of the Angelus, three
times a day we turn there in recognition of the Incarnation; twice daily we
gather there, as for our family prayers; we visit the church for private or
common prayers at other than the set limes of service; special prayers are made
there, special offerings made, special vows taken.
"With all our talk of the material progress and
prosperity of the Mission it must not be thought that the spiritual side of our
work is underestimated or neglected. This is the real work for which a mission
exists, and it would be a poor sort of a missionary who would be content to see
material development only. With 1124 baptisms on our own Registers, and with
many who have been baptized elsewhere looking to us for ministrations, it will
be realized how impossible it would be for even half a dozen priests to exhaust
the work which might be done.
"The matter of systematic instruction of converts
offers special difficulties. While the general processes of thought are the same
in all human beings, in the Malay mind the content of thought is fundamentally
different from that in our own. The Malay's outlook on life is radically
different. My endeavor has not been to occidentalize, still less to
Anglicize, the native; but, taking him at his own estimate of himself, to add to
his makeup those elevating influences which he is able to assimilate. To
this end parrot-like recitations of dignified formulas and catechisms which have
done honorable service among Anglo-Saxon Christians are of little or no value.
Even translated into the native dialects these formularies will be but so much
inert material hindering rather than otherwise the spiritual digestion. After
trying many experiments, I have found that leading ideas based on the cardinal
doctrines of the Faith as found in the Creeds, expressed in the extremest of
unconventional language make the strongest appeal and are the most effective
means of imparting religious knowledge. Instruction of this kind is given to at
least two hundred persons each week at the regular services, and in our daily
intercourse with people religion is a frequent and a natural topic.
"In the schools, of course, catechetical instruction is
given, and, so far as mere repetition is concerned, our children can compete
with the children at home, for they can repeat parrotlike the Church
Catechism and the Holy Cross Catechism by heart:
but the hymns sung, Bible
stories read, pictures looked at, the casual conversation and example of the
missionaries, and above all the frequent receiving of the Holy Communion after
due preparation are the real influences which make over the lives of our
children. It is difficult to bring adults under all of these influences, but we
are alert for opportunities; and among our people a talk about God is as natural
as any other conversation.
"The foregoing considerations have a direct bearing on
the work of our Mission in Sagada. We are given advice by every theorist who
comes over the trail. 'Why don't you do this?' 'Why don't you do that?' One
says--he was a professor from Chicago--that native races should be left
untouched; another that they should be developed materially, but left to their
native beliefs--this was a physician's opinion; another that they should be
taught the Gospel, but that no attempt should be made to civilize them-- it was
a missionary who said this: one says that they are capable of any development,
another that they can never be advanced. In the midst of this clamor of
discordant advice from people who give it and pass on, the Mission of St. Mary
the Virgin has been approving itself to those who stay by producing results
based upon the theory that the two sides of a man's nature must be developed at
the same time, in the same direction, and at approximately the same rate of
speed, if results are to be produced which are lasting and worth while.
"The forced product of a mission school is in some
respects worse than an untouched native. That mission product, the native girl
in the mountains of Thibet, who made love to Kim is a type which it does not
need the penetration of a Kipling to discover. Little religious prigs and
hypocrites are many who can stand up and 'repeat the Lord's Prayer for the
gentleman' well enough, but whose veneer of artificial and exotic religion
splits off and leaves them scaly under the first rain of adversity. Parasites
these children become without resources or character. They are forced products
which cannot stand the actual conditions of their inevitable future environment.
No forced development should be permitted in any mission school, and the worst
forcing of all is that which crowds religious knowledge or information upon
either children or adults beyond their capacity to absorb and appropriate it.
"There is only one right way, and it is also the
psychological way, to feed either side of a man's nature; and that is, to create
in the individual such an appetite for the food supplied that he will seek it
with eagerness himself. Whether the man--we all know him--who says, 'I had
religion so pumped into me in my youth that as soon as I was free I dropped it
all', has a valid excuse for his irreligion or not, he certainly represents a
class that is very numerous. He is the product of the ill-advised effort of
well-meaning persons. We are producing no such product in Sagada. Pass our
school building of an evening and one may hear our boys singing hymns, or
reciting the Creed, or reading Bible stories, or saying common prayers with the
greatest enjoyment. A few days ago a group of our girls at work were observed to
stop, kneel down on the floor, make the sign of the Cross, put their hands
together, say a prayer in unison, then get up and resume their duties with a
healthy unconsciousness that they had done anything remarkable. No one had
taught them to do this, the action was spontaneous, yet
they had unconsciously
placed prayer where it belongs in its natural relation to daily life, and this
as a result of the unartificial influences of the daily life of the Mission.
"No material inducements should ever be made to bring
the natives to accept Christianity. It is psychologically wrong even to be
urging incessantly the claims of our religious system. Rather it would be better
for the zealous missionary to feign an indifference which he does not really
feel. The drawing to Christ should come from within the individual, if the
practical blessings of the Christian system are obviously in evidence; when it
so comes it will hold the convert to the Faith with the strongest of chains, a
personal interest discovered by himself. He has found the pearl of great price,
he will sell all to get it; and he will fight the devil to keep it.
"A convert should be allowed to discover the material
and the spiritual advantages of Christianity at the same time. A change of heart
and a change of life should come together, and there should be no officious
meddling on the part of the minister of baptism as to how these motives
interlock: in the first place, because the priest is given no power of God to
judge motives; and in the second, because it is not evil if temporarily one
motive looms higher in the mind of the ignorant native than another. The
acceptance of Christ as God and Saviour may not be accompanied with spasms of
religious ecstacy, yet if under the influence of the Christian life accepted
there begins a life in which repentance and prayer and the use of the sacraments
becomes a regular feature, who shall say that the convert shall be debarred from
these influences because his faith is not as well balanced as our own?
"We produce, I believe, in the Mission at Sagada, some
Igorot Christians who are true saints of God; but
the character we seek to
develop is not that of the religious devotee but of the normal Christian.
Devotion is encouraged, but hardly more so than industry and thrift. United
development of both sides of a man's nature is what we aim at, and what, to a
surprising extent, we achieve. To this end the industries which have centered in
the Mission since its first beginning have contributed. Sagada from a dirty
Igorot settlement has become as progressive an Igorot community as there is in
the Mountain Province: though I would not have it thought that there is not
still great room for improvement.
''The Sagada Mission is frankly an experiment, but
one based on faith and common sense: a novelty, perhaps, in the mission field,
but a novelty thoroughly loyal to the Church; for hundreds of parishes at home
have for years employed the same ecclesiastical methods, been recognized as
thoroughly loyal, and their help sought in support of general mission work.
We pray God that He will grant during the coming year continuous peace and
progress".
If these extracts from our publicity matter have not
sufficiently revealed to churchmen the whole of it and the worst of it, then I
gladly offer the hospitality of my home to an investigating committee.
But let me even more explicitly define some of our
methods, and our reasons for adopting them; for I cannot believe that had you
rightly appraised the situation here you could have written that letter.
Our problem is to Christianize an ignorant,
superstitious, conservative, and until recently savage people("head-hunters").
Shortly before the Mission was opened eighty heads were taken right here on this
spot, and forty more, half an hour from here, in the town of Balugan where we
now have many Christians. Any methods which will bring this generation of people
into even a semblance of Christianity would be justified. Should the use of
rosaries, or even scapulars--which we do not use, by the way--be refused on
purist grounds? We are not trying to make our appeal to refined, well educated,
or smug Episcopalians; but to erstwhile head-hunting savages, who cannot read
and write, and in the civilized sense cannot think; who have no educational
background except such as we have given them.
This whole missionary enterprise has been put through
by both bishop and clergy in this part of the mountains, not by attempting to
explain to these simple people that the "Anglican" Church is a welter of
theological parties; but by assuming that the Anglican Church is Catholic in
doctrine and practice as a matter of course, and never letting the people know
that there is any other side to the matter. If one seeks to influence children
or simple people, one must be definite in one's teaching and let them take
everything for granted. To have attempted to tell these people that the sum
total of permitted heresy spells Catholicism would have been likely to confuse
them.
Even only from a pragmatic point of view, if statues
and rosaries and sweet smelling incense will keep a man from killing his
neighbor, I will use all these means and more. I would be a fool or a knave to
sit down here ineffectively and meticulously saying Prayer Book offices in an
empty church while opportunity passed by. Our Christians come to mass, but they
have also been taught to say their prayers by counting them off on a home-made
string of beads, which they wear on their wrists, as they go to their work in
rice field or mountain. They know few prayers, but among those which appeal to
them are the Lord's Prayer and the Hail Mary, those two forms most used by our
Christian and Catholic ancestors in the ages of faith.
Our endeavor for years
has been to reduce Christian belief and methods to such simple terms as an Igorot could apprehend, accept and use. Sacraments with their analogies to
natural life, are as the play of children.
Twenty times during the last
fortnight I have been called upon to take the Blessed Sacrament from our altar
to the sick: are not such requests, in such a community, sufficiently
significant?
As to general results, I will simply add to what has
already been said elsewhere in this letter, that there have been nearly three
thousand baptisms credited to Sagada since the Mission was opened; that you
confirmed 332 candidates when you were here, fifteen months since Bishop Brent's
last visit; and that our statistics for one year as they appeared in my last
annual report were as follows:
|
Baptisms 629 |
Confirmations
180 |
|
Marriages 10 |
Burials 32 |
Communicants (Numbers of different individuals who have
received during the year, not counting visitors) 756
And as to missionary strategic in general: The
Episcopal Church, attempting to hold the loyalty of men of opposite convictions,
has elected to leave certain important questions open and undefined. When,
therefore, she enters the mission field, one of two methods of strategy are
forced upon her. Either she can send to any given station workers whose ideals,
convictions, and methods are bound to clash, thereby creating a little cosmos of
all her home dissentions, as a spectacle for converts,--if there are any; or she
can send like-minded workers exclusively to the same culture area, giving them
full opportunity to present the best that is in them, though this may represent
the Church on only one side of her life. As between these two methods can any
broad-minded man hesitate?
Does the Church really wish to see her missionaries
destroy each other by wrangling over undefined details in the face of a common
foe? Does she wish her constructive work to be represented merely by a greatest
common divisor of our diversities? Or does she not rather wish that it be
represented by the least common multiple of all our opportunities?
And why
should we attempt to confine our strategy to a middle-of-the-road-Episcopalianism;
in which it is not permitted to pluck beautiful flowers which grow in fields
beyond the ditch? Is it not best to let children get a background of faith
before they are initiated into the muddle of sectarian antagonisms? And should
not the same principle apply equally to the mission field? It is not for me to
criticize the way work may be done in Virginia or in Liberia. May God bless His
own, whatever means they may employ to bring men to Him.
During the last ten years innumerable calls have been
made by churchmen that we should rise above partisanship in the mission field
for the sake of winning the world to Christ; but let that man beware who
attempts to win even an Igorot to Christ by missionary methods which are
unusual. If the Episcopal Church wishes to do effective work in the mission
field she will have to penalize that inane cry--"Stop him! he's doing
something!"
Your appeal is to "the rule of worship in our own
Church and in the whole Anglican Communion", and "to warrant in the Book of
Common Prayer". Is this quite fair? Is it not true that this same appeal has
been made again and again in the last fifty years against a multitude of
doctrines, practices and ceremonies which are now incorporated, with
satisfaction even to bishops, into our devotional life? Have not bishops urged
this plea successively against the real presence, auricular confession, prayers
for the dead, non-communicating attendance, surpliced choirs, eucharistic hymns,
servers, flowers and altar candles, wafer bread, incense, crucifixes and even
altar crosses? Have not all of these things come steadily into use in spite of
the episcopal plea that they were contrary to some intangible, unwritten, rule
of Anglican worship? Are we not all, now, for the most part, glad that these
aids to worship have been revived? Did not a General Convention go on what might
be called a pilgrimage of reparation to the tomb of DeKoven, who was tried and
punished because he kept the Faith? Was not even the extremist Father Stanton of
St. Alban's, Holborn, offered a stall in St. Paul's Cathedral, by way of
reparation, towards the end of his life? Mark well the decorated tombstones of
priests whom our Fathers in God condemned. Is this thing to continue forever? Is
the Episcopal Church till the end of time going to scourge those of her children
who try to make her the vehicle of a more spiritual life?
Before the Oxford Movement there was stagnation: since
that Movement, it may frankly be admitted there has been chaos. But, wisely as
it appears to many, after years of prosecutions and persecutions the Church has
tacitly determined not to attempt an impossible coercion, but to
let the worship of the future be evolved as was the
worship of the past by the devotional requirements of the times. In the face of
the actual facts of our recent history can it be denied, then, that the Prayer
Book presents only a minimum, and that the maximum is not defined? We ought to
apply to the Prayer Book the principle which we have long since applied to the
Bible: Doctrines are not true because they are
in it, but are in it because they are true.
And there is one other aspect of this matter which is
more important still. Our children's children will soon be woshipping sun, moon
and stars again unless we can rehabilitate the Christian Faith: and many of us
believe that the only Christian Faith which can grip the multitude to-day is the
old Catholicism, whether Roman or non-Roman. Mere drab survivals raked from
Reformation scrap heaps are not even treated nowadays with contempt. Does any
sane man think that a via media Anglicanism can ever win the world for
Christ? Sects of every name are dying; but new religions are being born and
growing in our very midst. Eddyism, Theosophy, Spiritualism, and even
Mormonism--each having the characteristics of a religion--are rapidly
making false prophets even of our own children. The world craves and will have a
religion, true or false, with its superlative assertions, its stupendous
miracles, and its sacrificial demands. As such a religion, the Saints whom we
reverence once propagated Christianity. Why not try it again?
And now, at a time when every review and literary
magazine is calling attention to new books by Anglican clergymen who deny the
virginity of Mary and the virgin-birth of her Son, is it a time for Christians
to hesitate to call Mary blessed, or to give visible, and audible, evidences
that they mean it? This is the real significance not only of the rapidly growing
custom of reciting the Angelus, but of the statues of Mary which are being set
up in so many of our churches. You can no more stop this movement than you can,
without it, turn back the tide which now sets so heavily towards unbelief. It is
amazing that you should wish to do so. This is no time to silence Ave Marias or
to quench sacrament lights; but to adventure for God.
And so, I end as I began
by appealing from you to the Church which you, and I no less, though in a more
humble sphere, represent. This work must either be approved or condemned; that
hereafter our missionaries may know what awaits them in the field.
Believe me,
Faithfully yours in Christ,
JOHN A. STAUNTON, JR.
Project Canterbury
Source: http://justus.anglican.org/resources/pc/asia/sagada1.html
|