*THE UNKNOWN SAINTS*
By A. W. Tozer
William Wordsworth, in a fine passage states his belief that there are many more poets in the world than we suppose,
". . .men endowed with highest gifts,
The vision and the faculty divine,"but who are unknown because they lacked or failed to cultivate the gift of versification.
Then he sums up his belief in a sentence that suggests truth far beyond any that he had in mind at the time:
"Strongest minds
Are often those of whom the noisy world
Hears least."Most of us in our soberer moments would admit the soundness of this observation, but the hard fact is that for the average person it is the sober moment that determine our total working philosophy; rather it is the shallow and deceptive notions pressed upon us by the "noisy world." Human society generally (and especially in the United States) has fallen into the error of assuming that greatness and fame are synonymous. Americans appear to take for granted that each generation provides a certain number of superior men and the democratic processes unerringly find those men and set them in a place of prominence. How wrong can people get!
We have but to become acquainted with, or even listen to, the big names of our times to discover how wretchedly inferior most of them are. Many appear to have arrived at their present eminence by pull, brass, nerve, gall and lucky accident. We turn away from them sick to our stomach and wonder for a discouraged moment if this is the best the human race can produce. But we gain our self possession again by the simple expedient of recalling some of the plain men we know, who live unheralded and unsung, and who are made of stuff infinitely finer than the hoarse voiced braggarts who occupy too many of the highest offices in the land.
If we would see life steadily and see it whole we must make a stern
effort to break away from the power of that false philosophy that
equates greatness with fame. The two may be and often are oceans and continents apart.If the church were a body wholly unaffected by the world, we could toss the above problem over to the secular philosophers and go about our business; but the truth is that the church also suffers from this evil notion. Christians have fallen into the habit of accepting the noisiest and most notorious among them as the best and the greatest. They too have learned to equate popularity with excellence, and in open defiance of the SERMON ON THE MOUNT they have given their approval not to the meek but to the self assertive; not to the mourner, but to the self-assured; not to the pure in heart who see God but to the publicity hunter who seeks headlines.
If we might paraphrase Wordsworth we could make his lines run,
"Purest saints
Are often those of whom the noisy church
Hears least,"and the words would be true, deeply, wonderfully true.
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Yours in Christ,
Paul N. F.