"Only a few people read that and cry." - my friend, Jim Spivey
This essay that I'm sharing with you was written 100 years ago. But I read it yesterday. And I had to share it with you today.
Why? you may ask.
Because I must share my heart...for better or worse, I would suffocate and die without doing so. It is burden that many run from, and I can not blame them. But there are also those who receive my need as their gift, and work with me to understand it, and they are my dearest of friends...most especially those who then use it to address and share their own hearts with me and with others. In my world, we are participating in the very work of God as we thumb our noses at the drivenness so presumed and expected by the world and take the time to engage our hearts. "The Kingdom of God is within you," my Lord says, yet even in the church world, drivenness calls "Kingdom work" things that we do externally, and "Kingdom growth" the addition of people to the church. Kingdom work external inasmuch as you are engaging with other people in their own inward work. And Kingdom growth is the expansion of God's rule in the hearts of men.
I feel so explained by this essay. And since it is by a man who wrote it over a century ago, I don't feel so alone, strange, or abnormal. At the very least, I know I am not the only one with my particular set of abnormalities.
I both apologize and refuse to apologize for how glorious this guy paints the picture of what he calls a "reformer". Humility demands that I apologize for applying such glory to myself. Honesty demands that I admit this is exactly the kind of glory that I want to have.
It is long, but if you can not read it slowly, I advise you to not read it. This is more of warning, than a demand, because if you read it fast you will only be able to say "I read that thing", not "I heard it's heart." And the real tragedy in it would be your unawareness of it.
And just for the sake of a little bonus self-disclosure, I bolded some of the statements that particularly stuck out to me.
I love you all.
THE WAY OF THE REFORMER, from an essay entitled The Power of Truth by William George Jordan, published initially in 1902
"The reformers of the world are its  men of mighty purpose.  They are men with the courage of  individual conviction, men who dare run counter to the criticism of smaller  minds and hearts, men who voluntarily bear crosses for what they accept  as right, even without the guarantee of a crown.  They are men who gladly go down into the depths of  silence, darkness, and oblivion, but only to emerge finally like divers, with  pearls in their hands.
He who labors  untiringly toward the attainment of some noble aim, with eyes fixed on the star  of some mighty purpose, as the Magi followed the star in the East, is a  reformer.  He who is loyal to the inspiration of some great spiritual  truth, and with strong hand and heart leads weak, trembling steps of faith into  the glory of eventual certainty, is a reformer.  He who follows the thin  thread of some startling revelation of Nature in any of the great sciences,  follows it in the spirit of truth through a maze of doubt, hope, experiment, and  questioning, till the tiny, guiding thread grows stronger and firmer to his  touch, leading him to some wondrous illumination of Nature's law, is a  reformer.  He who goes up alone into the mountain of truth, and, glowing  with the radiance of some mighty revelation, returns to force (through the power  of his conviction) the hurrying world to listen to his story, is a  reformer.  He who seeks to work  out for himself his own bold destiny, the life-work that all his nature tells  him should be his, bravely, calmly, and with due consideration for the  rights of others and his duty to them, is a  reformer.
These men who renounce the  commonplace and conventional for higher things are reformers because  they are striving to bring about new  conditions; they are consecrating  their lives to ideals.  They are the brave aggressive  vanguard of man's progress and God's promise.  They are men who can  stand a siege, who can take long forced marches without a murmur, who set their  teeth and bow their heads as they fight their way through the smoke, who smile  at the trials and privations that dare to daunt them.  They care not for  the handicaps and perils of the fight, for they are ever inspired by the flag of  triumph that seems already waving on the citadel of their hopes and dreams.  
If we are facing some great life ambition, let us see if our heroic  plans are good, high, noble, and exalted enough for the price we must pay for  their attainment.  Let us seriously and honestly look into our needs, our  abilities, our resources, our responsibilities, to assure ourselves that it is  no mere passing whim that is leading us.  Let us hear and consider all  counsel, all light that may be thrown on every side; let us hear it as a judge  on the bench listens to the evidence, and then makes his own decision.   The choice of a life-work is too sacred a responsibility to the  individual to be lightly decided for him by others less thoroughly informed than  himself.  When we have weighed in the balance the mighty question  and have made our decision, let us act, let us concentrate our lives upon that  which we feel is supreme, and, never forsaking a real duty to others,  never be diverted from the attainment of the highest things, no  matter what honest price we have to pay for their realization and  conquest.
When Nature decides any man as a  reformer she whispers to him her great message, she places in his  hand the staff of courage, she wraps around him the robes of patience and  perseverance, and starts him on his way.  Then, in order that he  may have the strength and endurance to live through it all,  she mercifully calls him back for a moment, and makes him ... a dreamer  and an optimist.  For the way of the reformer is hard - very  hard.  The world knows little of it, for it is rare that the reformer  reveals the scars of the conflict, the pangs of hope deferred, the mighty waves  of despair that wash over a great purpose unfolding - except to a very devoted  few.  Men of great purpose and noble ideals must know the path of the  reformer is loneliness.  They must live from within a very tight  circle rather than in dependence on broad and diverse sources of help from  without.  Their mission, their exalted aim, their supreme object in  living, which focuses all their energy, must be their primary sources of  strength and inspiration.  The reformer  must ever light this torch of his own inspiration and tend to  it.  His own hand must ever guard the sacred flame as he  moves steadily forward on his lonely way.
The reformer in morals, in education, in spiritual awareness and practice, in sociology, in invention, in philosophy in any line of aspiration, is ever a pioneer. His privilege is to blaze the path for others, to mark at his peril a road that others may follow in relative safety. He must not expect that the way will be laid out and asphalted for him. He must realize that he must face injustice, ingratitude, opposition, misunderstanding, the cruel and harsh criticism of contemporaries, and often, hardest of all, the wondering reproach of those who love him best. Leading a great purpose is ever an isolation. Should a soldier leading the forlorn hope complain that the army is not abreast of him? The glorious opportunity before him should so inspire him, so absorb him, that he will care nought for the army except to know that if he lead as he should, and do that which the crisis demands, the army must follow to survive and be victorious.
The reformer must realize without a trace of bitterness that the busy world cares little for his struggles, it cares only to join in his final triumph; it will share his feasts, but not his fasts. Christ was alone in Gethsemane, but - at the sermon in the wilderness, where food was provided, the attendance was four thousand.
The world is honest enough in its  attitude.  It takes time for the world to realize, to accept, and  to assimilate a large new truth.  Since the dawn of history, the  great conservative spirit of every age, that ballast that keeps the world in  poise, makes the slow acceptance of great truths an acceptance for its  safety.  It wisely requires proof, clear, absolute, undeniable  attestation, before it fully accepts.  Sometimes the perfect enlightenment  takes years, sometimes decades, sometimes generations.  It is but  the safeguard of truth.  Time is the supreme test, the final court of  appeal that winnows out the chaff of false claims, pretended revelation, empty  boast, and idle dreams.  Time is the touchstone that finally reveals all  true gold.  The process is slow, necessarily so, and the fate of the  world's geniuses and reformers in the balance of their contemporary criticism  should have a sweetness of consolation rather than a bitterness of  cynicism.  If the greatest leaders of the world have had to wait  for recognition, should we, whose best work may be trifling in comparison with  theirs, expect instant sympathy, appreciation, and cooperation, where we are  merely growing toward our own attainment?
The world ever says to  its leaders, by its attitude if not in words, 'If you would lead us to higher  realms of thought, to purer ideals of life, and flash before us, like the  handwriting on the wall, all the possible glories of development, you must pay the price for it, not  we.'  The world has a law as clearly defined as the laws  of Kepler:  'Contemporary credit for  reform works in any line will be in inverse proportion to the square root  of their importance.'  Give us a new fad and we will prostrate  ourselves in the barren dust; give us a new philosophy or way of life, a new  worldview, a higher conception of life, morality, and spiritual truth, and  we may pass you by, but posterity will pay for it.  Send your messages  C.O.D. and posterity will settle for them.  You ask for bread; posterity  will give you a stone, often called a monument.
There is nothing in this to discourage  the highest efforts of genius.  Genius is great because it is decades ahead  of its generation.  To appreciate genius requires some level of  comprehension and some of the same characteristics.  The public can  fully appreciate only what is a few steps in advance; it must grow slowly to the  appreciation of great thought.  The genius of the reformer should accept  this as a necessary condition.  It is the price he must pay for being in advance of  his generation, just as front seats in the orchestra cost more than those in the  back row of the third gallery.  . . .  There is nothing the  world cries out for so constantly as a new idea, and there is nothing the  world fears so much.  The milestones of significant progress in the  history of the ages tell the story.  For example, Galileo was cast into  prison in his seventieth year, and his works were prohibited.  He had  committed no crime, other than being in advance of his generation.
The  modern world says with a large sweep of the hand, 'the opposition to progress is  all in the past; the great reformer or the great genius is appreciated and  recognized today.'  No, sadly, this is not true.  In the past  they tried to imprison or kill a great truth by opposition; now  we gently seek to smother it by making it a fad.   
So it is written in the book of human nature: The saviours of the world must ever be martyrs. The death of Christ on the cross for the people He had come to save typifies the temporary crucifixion of public opinion that comes to all who bring to the people the message of some great truth, some clearer revelation of the divine. But truth, right, and justice must triumph, and always will. Let us never close the books of a great work and say, 'it has failed.' No matter how slight seem results, how dark the outlook, the glorious consummation of the past, the revelation of the future, must come. And Christ lived but 30 years; and He had twelve disciples - one denied Him, one doubted Him, one betrayed Him, and the other nine were very human. And in the supreme crisis of His life 'they all forsook Him and fled,' but today - His followers are millions.
Sweet indeed is human sympathy, the warm hand-clasp of confidence and love brings a rich inflow of new strength to him who is struggling and the knowledge that someone dear to us sees with love and comradeship our future through our eyes is a wondrous draught of new life. If we have this, perhaps the loyalty of two or three or six or ten, what the world says or thinks about us should count for little. But if this be denied us, then must we bravely walk our weary way alone, toward the sunrise that must come.
The little world around us that does not  understand us, does not appreciate our ambition or sympathize with our efforts,  that seem to it futile, is not intentionally cruel, callous, bitter, blind, or  heartless.  It is merely that, busied with its own pursuits, it does not  fully realize, does not see as we do.  The world does not, because it  cannot see our ideal as we see it, does not feel the glow of inspiration that  makes our blood tingle, our eyes brighten, and our soul seem flooded with a  wondrous light.  It sees naught but the  rough block of marble before us and the great mass of chips and fragments of  seemingly fruitless effort at our feet, but it does not see the angel of  achievement, beauty, and gracefulness slowly emerging from its stone  prison, from nothingness into full being, under the tireless strokes of our  chisel.  It hears no faint rustle of wings that seem already real to us,  nor the glory of the music of triumph already ringing in our  ears.
There come dark, dreary days in all  great work, when effort seems useless, when hope almost appears a delusion, and  confidence the mirage of folly.  Sometimes for days, weeks, or  months your sails flap idly against the mast, with not a breath of wind to  move you on your way, and with a paralyzing sense of helplessness you just  have to sit and wait and wait.  Sometimes your craft of hope is carried  back by a tide that seems to undo in moments your work of months or years.   But it may not be really so; you may be put into a new channel that brings  you nearer your haven than you dared to hope.  This is the hour that tests  us, that determines whether we are masters or slaves of conditions.  As in  the battle of Marengo, it is the fight that is made when all seems lost that  really counts and wrests victory from the hand of seeming  defeat.
If you are seeking to accomplish  any great serious purpose that your mind and your heart tell you is right, you  must have the spirit of the reformer.  You must have the courage  to face trial, sorrow, and disappointment, to meet them squarely and to  move forward unscathed and undaunted.  In the sublimity of your perfect  faith in the outcome, you can make them as powerless to harm you as a dewdrop  falling on the Pyramids.
Truth, with time as its ally, always wins  in the end.  The knowledge of the inappreciation, the  coldness, and the indifference of the world should never make you  pessimistic.  They should inspire you with that large, broad  optimism that sees all the opposition of the world can never keep back the  triumph of truth, that your work is so great that the petty jealousies,  misrepresentations, and hardships caused by those around you dwindle into  nothingness.  What cares the messenger of the king for his trials and  sufferings if he knows that he has delivered his message?  Large  movements, great plans, always take time for development.  If you want great things, pay the price  like a man.
Anyone can plant radishes; it takes courage to plant acorns and wait for the oaks. Learn to look not merely at the clouds, but through them to the sun shining behind them. When things look darkest, grasp your weapon firmer and fight harder. There is always more progress than you can perceive through your senses, and it is really only the outcome of the battle that counts.
And when it is all over and the victory is yours, and the smoke clears away, and the smell of the powder is dissipated, and you bury the relationships that died because they could not stand the strain, and you nurse back the wounded and faint-hearted who loyally stood by you, even when doubting, then the hard years of fighting will seem but a dream. You will stand brave, heartened, strengthened by the struggle, re-created to a new, better, and stronger life by a noble battle, nobly waged, in a noble cause. And the price will then seem to you . . . nothing."
Final note from Brian: And now, dear reader, if you have made it this far...and you have paid the price of listening...and you have resonated with anything in this (and it is not to your shame if you have not)...I would love to hear the cry of your heart that it awakens.

 
3 comments:
Brian,
I once again stand in awe of God's timing and wisdom. A week ago, had you written this, I would not have taken the time or the heart to read it in it fullness. And yet, God orchestrated events in my life to prepare the soil to accept the message in this message. There is so much to say about it, and yet, there are currently no words in my vocabulary to say it. I will more than likely have to read this again and again and again before a coherent thought that I am able to share is developed. Until then, know that this post is powerful and will find its place in me.
What a message!
To my shame I don't have enough mud and blood on my britches, not enough wear on my boots, the cloth over my knees is not worn, and I don't smell of powder from the battle.
God help me to wake to reality and give the courage to enter the fight at full throttle.
Thanks for pushing me off the throne of complacency once more friend.
His peace,
Royce
William Jordan - the reformer of reformers....:)
Reformers (leaders) need guidance, instruction and encouragement -- just as much (if not more than) anybody else. And who is there to give them these things? Who is there to lead, mentor and encourage the reformer? Those with doubtful, confused, dissapointed or even hurt looks in their eyes when the reformer begins to share whatever truth he or she has been entrusted with?
How does a young (or newly awakened) reformer feel when he finds his ideas so completely contrary to those who have been charged with leading, mentoring and shepherding him? A sane man, when confronted with the reality that he's at odds with most folks, will begin to look inward. He'll attempt to "fix" himself. Or, after looking inward further and realizing that he's not crazy - he may decide to forfeit that truth for the sake of comfort and companionship. Loneliness may drive him to deny truth - to attempt to "fall in line" or "get with the program".
Anyway - this has spurred so many thoughts...very encouraging writing.
BRIAN - I love you deeply brother. It was you who brought the reformer in me to the surface. For that - for your friendship - your unbelievable leadership - for believing in me when I didn't believe in myself - I AM ETERNALLY THANKFUL.
Know the God honoring, Kingdom increasing, glorious power of awakening the reformer within others. See a hint of the unimaginable power and potential of encouraging, leading, mentoring other reformers (just as you have been encouraged by Mr. Jordan - and Mr. Spivey)
I know about the reform you've devoted your life's work to and I want to say - once again - THAT I BELIEVE IN YOUR CALLING AND I BELIEVE IN GOD'S ABILITY TO CONTINUE TO EQUIP YOU TO ANSWER THAT CALLING.
Your friend and fellow reformer,
Chuck
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