The Low Level of Moral Enthusiasm
By A. W. Tozer
How shall we escape, if we neglect so great
salvation?. . . - - Hebrews 2:3In only one field of human interest do we Americans
seem slow and apathetic: that is the field of personal
religion.Church people habitually approach the matter of their
personal relation to God in a dull, halfhearted way
which is altogether out of keeping with their general
temperament and wholly inconsistent with the
importance of the subject.Dante, on his imaginary journey through hell, came
upon a group of lost souls who sighed and moaned con-
tinually as they whirled about aimlessly in the dusky air.
Virgil, his guide, explained that these were the
"wretched people," the "nearly soulless," who while
they lived on earth had not moral energy enough to be
either good or evil. They had earned neither praise nor
blame, and with them and sharing in their punishment
were those angels who would take sides neither with
God nor Satan.The writer pictured the doom of all of the weak and
irresolute crew to be suspended forever between a hell
that despised them and a heaven that would not receive
their defiled presence. Not even their names were to be
mentioned again in heaven or earth or hell.Was Dante saying in his own way what our Lord had
said long before to the church of Laodicea: "I know you
well-you are neither hot nor cold; I wish you were
one or the other! But since you are merely lukewarm,
I will spit you out of my mouth!"The low level of moral enthusiasm among us may have
a significance far deeper than we are willing to believe!
Yours in Christ,
Paul N. F.