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Ruling Elder and Baptism |
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Samuel Miller, D.D.
The Nature and Effects of The Stage
Copyright © 1997
Naphtali Press |
A Sermon, Delivered January 19, 1812,
At The Request Of A Number Of Young Gentlemen Of The City Of New York, Who Had Assembled
To Express Their Condolence With The Inhabitants Of Richmond, On The Late Mournful
Dispensation Of Providence In That City.
TO THE YOUNG GENTLEMEN
At Whose Request The Following Sermon Was Delivered, And Is Now
Published.
My Young Friends,
Your resolution to express your condolence with the mourning inhabitants
of Richmond, did you honor. Sympathy with the afflicted is ornamental to every age, but
especially to the young. When, therefore, you requested me to address you on the occasion
from the pulpit, although a compliance with your request was not a little inconvenient, I
did not dare to refuse. But when, after being apprized, that if any thing were said by me
in relation to the awful calamity in question, it must include a solemn protest against
Theatrical entertainments, you still unanimously persisted in urging your application, my
duty to comply with it appeared no longer doubtful. It gives me pleasure to find that you
so far approve of what I thought myself bound to say on that subject, as to wish it made
still more public: for I will enjoy the satisfaction of believing, that approbation of the
truth, had much more agency in prompting your second request, than civility to the
preacher.
My first and chief wish concerning the following discourse, is, that it
may prove useful. Allow me to hope, that you will review it with serious attention, and
with solemn prayer; and that you may have reason to say, that one of the most distressing
dispensations of Providence that our country ever witnessed, has been productive of good
to YOU.
It is said of the great Sir Mathew Hale, that, when he was a youth at
college, the players visiting Oxford, he was so much corrupted by frequenting the theater
that, for some months, he almost wholly forsook his studies. By this habit he not only
lost much time; but also found his mind filled with so many "vain images," and
"False sentiments," that he began to be alarmed for himself, and determined to
abandon a course which he saw was leading him to ruin. On going to London, he resolved
never to see a play again; and rigidly adhered to his resolution. No one who knows the
character of this most illustrious of English judges, will imagine, that he formed such a
resolution rashly or weakly, or that he adhered to it without reason.
Were I to see all of you, my young Friends, like that distinguished
Ornament of the land of our fathers, effecting a complete conquest over this ONE
propensity, I should consider it as a most hopeful pledge that you would go further, and
imitate him in his unfeigned piety, and in the general dignity, purity, and usefulness of
his life.
That you may have grace given you to effect his conquest, and to imitate
this noble example; that the God of all grace may be the Guide of your youth, and the
Consolation of your riper age; and that, finally, with all the disciples of a crucified
REDEEMER, you may share in an inheritance incorruptible, undefiled, and that fadeth not
away, is the sincere prayer of,
Your friend, Samuel Miller.
New York, Jan. 23, 1812.
A SERMON, &c.
Lamentations 2:1,13: How hath the Lord covered the daughter of Zion with
a cloud in his anger, and cast down from heaven unto the earth, the beauty of Israel, and
remembered not his footstool in the day of his anger! What thing shall I take to witness
for thee? What thing shall I liken to thee, O daughter of Jerusalem? What shall I equal to
thee, that I may comfort thee, O virgin daughter of Zion? For thy breach is great like the
sea; who can heal thee?
The prophet Jeremiah lived in a dark and distressing day. Religion,
among his countrymen, had sunk to an ebb awfully low. The body of the people had become
extremely licentious in principle, and corrupt in practice. And a holy God had visited
them with many tokens of his righteous displeasure. By fire, by famine, by pestilence, and
by the sword, he had taught them terrible things in righteousness; until, at length,
wearied with their iniquities, he delivered them into the hands of their enemies, by whom
they were, as a people, nearly destroyed.
Over this melancholy scene of guilt and suffering the Prophet composed
his Lamentations. And never were scenes of misery, and feelings of anguish, painted with a
more masterly hand. Never were the pathos and tenderness, as well as the force of grief,
more strongly displayed. As one of the ancient Fathers [Gregory Nazianzen] beautifully
expresses it, "every letter appears to be written with a tear, and every word to be
the sound of a broken heart; and the writer a man of sorrows, who scarcely ever breathed
but in sighs, or spoke but in groans."
Having been requested, on this occasion, to address my audience with
reference to a late awful calamity, well known to you all, which had destroyed many
valuable lives, and has covered a sister City with mourning; I have chosen the words just
read as the foundation of what shall be offered. May the great Master of assemblies direct
us to such an application of them as shall be profitable to every hearer!
How hath the Lord covered the daughter of Zion with a cloud in his
anger, and cast down from heaven unto earth, the beauty of Israel! What shall I take to
witness for thee? What thing shall I liken unto thee, O daughter of Jerusalem? What shall
I equal to thee, that I may comfort thee, O daughter of Zion? For thy breach is great,
like the sea; who can heal thee?
Without staying, at present, to explain in detail the several parts of
this passage, I shall only observe, that by the daughter of Zion, and the daughter of
Jerusalem, we are to understand, by a figure common with this Prophet, the inhabitants of
the Jewish capital, in which Zion stood; or rather the Jewish nation, the covenanted
people, the visible Church of God, under the Old Testament economy. Of course, what the
Prophet applies to that afflicted city, may, without impropriety, be applied either to the
whole, or any part of a community, who call themselves a Christian people; or who are
embraced even by the most lax profession, within the pale of the visible Church.
We may therefore consider the text First, as a devout acknowledgment of
the hand of God, in the afflictions which the Prophet laments; Secondly, as an expression
of sympathy with the afflicted; Thirdly, as pointing to the moral application of the
calamities which he deplored.
I. There is, in the passage before us, a DEVOUT ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF THE
HAND OF GOD, IN THE AFFLICTION WHICH THE PROPHET LAMENTS. How hath the Lord covered the
daughter of Zion with a cloud in his anger! How hath the Lord cast down the beauty of
Israel!
The doctrine, that the providence of God extends to all events, both in
the natural and moral world; that nothing comes to pass without either his direct agency,
or, at least, his wise permission and control; is a doctrine not only laid down in the
plainest and most pointed manner in scripture; but also one which results from the
perfections and the government of God when admitted in almost any sense. If there be a
general providence, there must be a particular one. If God govern the world at all, he
must order and direct everything, without exception. Yes, brethren, if it were possible
for a sparrow to fall to the ground without our heavenly Father; or if it were possible
for the hairs of any head to fail of being numbered by the infinite One; in short, if it
were possible that there should be anything not under the immediate and the constant
control of the Governor of the world; then it would follow that some things may take place
contrary to his will; then prayer would be a useless, nay, an unmeaning service; then
Jehovah would be liable, every moment, to be arrested or disappointed in the progress of
his plans, by the caprice of accident. But, if none of these things can be supposed
without blasphemy, then the providence of God is Particular as well as universal. It
extends to all creatures, and all their actions. Is there evil in the city and the Lord
hath not done it? No; the devouring fire; the overwhelming tempest; the resistless
lightning; the raging pestilence; the wasting famine; and the bloody sword, even when
wielded by the vilest of men, are all instruments in the hand of God for accomplishing his
will and pleasure. And as the providence of God is actually concerned in every thing which
befalls individuals or communities; so he requires us to notice and acknowledge that
providence in all his dispensations towards us. Not to regard the work of the Lord, or not
to consider the operation of his hands, he pronounces to be sin; and denying his agency in
the works of providence, he expressly condemns, as giving his glory to another.
While, therefore, we deplore the heart-rending calamity which had fallen
upon a neighboring city, let us not forget, or place out of sight, the hand of God in the
awful scene. It was not the work of chance. A righteous God has done it. His breath
kindled the devouring flame. Not a spark of the raging element rose or fell without his
providential guidance: not a victim sunk under its destroying power, without the
discriminating and immediate hand of sovereign Wisdom. He ordered and controlled all the
circumstances attending the melancholy scene. He doth not, indeed afflict willingly, nor
grieve the children of men.(Lam. 3:33) But still affliction cometh not forth of the dust,
neither doth trouble spring out of the ground.(Job 5:6) What! shall we receive good at the
hand of God, and shall we not receive evil also? The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken
away; blessed be the name of the Lord!(Job 21, and 2:10)
II. The Language of the mourning Prophet, while it notices and
acknowledges the hand of God in the calamities which it deplores, at the same time
EXPRESSES THE TENDEREST SYMPATHY FOR THE SUFFERERS. This is indicated in every line of our
text and context: and it is the feeling which ought to be cherished upon every similar
occasion.
To sympathize with suffering humanity, however that suffering may have
been produced, is a dictate of nature, as well as demanded by the authority of our common
Creator. Thou shalt weep with them that weep, is a divine precept. When one member of the
body suffers, all the members suffer with it. Thus it is in the social as well as in the
physical body. Thus it is in domestic society. And thus it ought to be in the large family
of a city, a state, or a nation. When one part of a nation is afflicted, all the rest
ought to feel for it. When, therefore, any of our friends or neighbors, or any of the most
remote portions of the same associated family are visited with any signal calamity, we are
bound to consider it not only as a solemn lesson addressed to the whole body; but also as
calling upon us to feel for, and sympathize with them; as they, under like circumstances,
ought to sympathize with, and feel for us. When this is not the case, one great design of
Jehovah's judgments, which is to instruct and to impress a whole people, by the calamities
of a part, is, undoubtedly, speaking after the manner of men, opposed and defeated.
The melancholy dispensation of providence which we this day deplore, is
one pre-eminently calculated to interest the feelings, and to excite the tenderest
sympathy of very mind. How shall we speak of a scene of such complicated horror? The heart
sickens at the dreadful recital! When our beloved relatives die on the bed of disease, the
event is solemn, and the bereavement trying; but it is the course of nature; and the
frequency of the occurrence disarms it of more than half its terrors. When our friends and
neighbors fall in battle, the stroke is painful; but the soldier is expected, by himself
and by others, to be in danger of such an end. When those who sail on the mighty deep, are
dashed on the rocks, or swallowed up in the merciless waves, we mourn over the
catastrophe; but when be bade them farewell, we remembered that they might never return.
But how shall we describe a calamity which has plunged a whole city into
agony and tears? A calamity which, to the number and the importance of its victims, added
all the circumstances of horror which can well be conceived, to overwhelm the mind! How
sudden the burst of destruction! How unexpected its approach, at such a place, and at such
a time! What complicated agony, both to the sufferers and to the survivors, attended its
fatal progress! But I dare not attempt further to depict a scene from which the mind
revolts with shuddering!
Is there a Husband or a Wife who does not feel for those who saw beloved
companions writhing in the merciless flames, and sinking in the most dreadful of all
deaths, without being able to afford them relief? Is there a Parent who does not feel for
those agonizing fathers and mothers, who saw their endeared and promising children torn
from them in an hour of unsuspecting confidence and mirth? Is there a Brother or a Sister
who does not sympathize with those almost frantic survivors, who were compelled to abandon
to their cruel fate relatives dear to them as life? Is there a Patriot who does not feel
for the fatal stroke which snatched an amiable and respectable Chief Magistrate from the
bosom of a beloved family, and from the confidence of his fellow citizens? Is there a mind
capable of admiring the attractive, the interesting, and the elegant, who is not ready to
drop a tear over youth, beauty, genius, learning, and active worth, all sinking together
in one smoking ruin? Is there a heart alive to the delights of society, and the
endearments of friendship, who does not mourn over the MELANCHOLY CHASM, which has been
made in the social circles of that hapless city? O RICHMOND! bereaved and mourning
RICHMOND! What shall we say unto thee? How shall we comfort thee? Thy breach is great like
the sea; who can heal thee? None but that God who has inflicted the stroke! O that our
heads were waters, and our eyes fountains of tears, that we might weep over the slain of
the daughter of thy people!
III. We may consider the passage before us as POINTING TO THE MORAL
APPLICATION OF THE CALAMITIES WHICH IT DEPLORES.
We are not only bound, my brethren, to notice and acknowledge the hand
of God, in the dispensations of his providence, but also to study the moral aspect of
those dispensations, and to apply from time to time the great moral lessons which they
inculcate. If one great design of God in all his works of providence, especially in the
judgments which he executeth, is to make us feel, and to constrain us to pause in our
career of folly, and consider our ways; then, undoubtedly, we are criminal unless we study
to derive, from every remarkable event, the instructive lessons which it is suited to
convey. Under this impression I am persuaded, that the Calamity which we lament, ought to
be employed, among other purposes as an occasion of entering a solemn protest against a
prevailing, but most unchristian and most baneful Amusement.
The finger of God, in that calamity, points to this Amusement, with a
distinctness which cannot be mistaken, and with a solemnity which ought to excite our
deepest attention!
I am very far, my brethren, from asserting that the calamity to which we
refer is to be considered as a special judgment on the immediate sufferers, on account of
the unhallowed place and employment in which it found them. And still further am I from
daring to pronounce on the character or the eternal state of those who were hurried before
the bar of God from that place, and that employment. Alas! when mortals undertake to wield
the thunders of Omnipotence, they display more of their own presumption and folly, than of
an enlightened zeal for God and holiness. Still, however, when a dispensation of
Providence of the most signal kind, stands in mournful connexion, as to time and place,
with a prevailing sin; and when public feeling, as well as that Providence, opens the way
for solemn remonstrance and warning, it were criminal to be silent. As a Minister of Jesus
Christ, therefore, and as one bound by his own solemn vows, as well as by the authority of
his Master, to be faithful, I dare not permit the present occasion to pass without
imparting to you, most unreservedly, my impressions of the Theater as a public amusement.1
I am constrained, then, to express my deliberate conviction, that
theatrical entertainments are criminal in their nature, and mischievous in their effects;
that they are directly hostile to the precepts, and to the whole spirit of the Religion of
Jesus Christ; that they are deeply baneful in their influence on society, and utterly
improper to be attended or countenanced, by those who profess to be the disciples of
Christ, or even the friends of morality.
That this estimate is, by no means, an erroneous or extravagant one
will, I trust, be made to appear from the following considerations.
1. To attend on theatrical exhibitions, as an amusement, is a CRIMINAL
WASTE OF TIME. I take for granted that this argument will be thought entirely destitute of
force, by those children of vanity, who never consider the purpose for which they were
sent into the world, or lay to heart the shortness and the infinite value of time. But to
the man of spiritual wisdom, who remembers that life is short; that there is much to be
done; that he has never yet done, either for God or for his generation, a tenth part of
what he might and ought to have performed; and that for the manner in which we spend every
hour, we must speedily give an account before the judgment seat of Christ; to every one
who remembers these things, the argument will carry with it irresistible force. To spend
an hour unprofitably, or even in a less profitable way, when a mode of spending it more
conformably to the will of God, and more usefully to himself and others, is within his
reach, will appear to such an one quite as criminal as many of what are called gross sins,
and quite as sacredly to be avoided.
The design of recreation, I mean the design of it in the view of the
Christian, or even of the sober minded votary of mere natural religion, is not to kill
time; but to refresh the body and mind, and to prepare them for the more vigorous and
comfortable performance of duty. It follows, therefore, that recreations are lawful only
so far as they are necessary and suitable for this purpose; of course, when they are
either carried to such a length as to consume more time than we need to employ in this
manner; or when they are of such a nature as to have no tendency to prepare either the
body or the mind for the more easy, comfortable, and perfect discharge of the sober duties
of life, but the contrary, they become wholly unjustifiable. They are a criminal waste of
time; and to indulge in them is utterly unsuitable to the character of rational and
accountable beings.
Let us apply these principles to an attendance on the theater as an
amusement. Can any of the patrons of this amusement lay their hands on their hearts, and
say, in the presence of God, that they attend upon it merely, or even chiefly, for the
purpose of preparing their minds and bodies for a more suitable discharge of their duties
as moral and accountable beings! Can they say that it is better calculated, than any other
within their reach, to prepare them for the conscientious discharge of those duties? And
can they appeal to the Searcher of hearts, and declare, that four, five, or six hours in
an evening, devoted to preparation for this amusement and attendance upon it, is no more
time than is necessary to refresh and invigorate them for the sober and all-important work
for which they were sent into the world? The most determined advocate of the theater that
lives, will not dare to answer these questions in the affirmative. He would blush at the
thought of applying such principles to his practice. Either then the scriptural precept to
redeem time, and the scriptural rules for disposing of time, must be utterly rejected; or
theatrical amusements must be pronounced criminal. Either men are not accountable for the
manner in which they spend their time; or it is a sin to squander precious hours in
amusements, of which the lightest censure that can be passed upon them is, that they are
unprofitable and vain.
2. But we may go further; theatrical entertainments are not merely
unprofitable; not merely a waste of time, which, if nothing more could be said, would be
sufficient to condemn them; but they have also a direct and unavoidable tendency to
DISSIPATE THE MIND, AND TO LESSEN, IF NOT DESTROY, ALL TASTE FOR SERIOUS AND SPIRITUAL
EMPLOYMENTS. Let me appeal to every one who has been in the habit of attending on them,
whether they are not directly hostile to the spirit of prayer, and to a life of communion
with God? Is there not something, I speak now of the most decent plays, is there not
something in the sentiments uttered in the theater; in the scenery displayed; in the
dress, attitudes, and deportment of the performers; and in the licentious appearance, and
libertine conduct of many of the audience, which is calculated, to say the least, to expel
seriousness from the mind; to drive away all thoughts of God, of eternity, and of a
judgment to come; and to extinguish all taste for spiritual services? Did ever an
attendant on the theater feel a cordial relish for the devotions of the closet, or of the
family, immediately after his return from that place of amusement? I need not wait for an
answer. There is no one who ever beheld the assemblage of "dazzling vanities"
there displayed, who is not perfectly ready to pronounce, that few things have a more
direct tendency to give the mind a vain and frivolous cast; to impair a taste for
devotion; and to lessen, if not entirely banish, that spirituality which is at once the
duty and the glory of the Christian.
Here I might rest the weight of the argument: for that which has a
tendency to make the mind vain and frivolous must be criminal. That which has a tendency
to draw off the heart from the sober, the solid, the useful, and the pious; and to inspire
it with a ruling passion for the gay, the airy, the romantic, and the extravagant, cannot
fail of being deeply pernicious. What a late eloquent writer says on another subject, is
strictly applicable to this. The theater "does not instruct a man to act, to enjoy,
and to suffer, as a being that may tomorrow have finally abandoned this orb. Every thing
is done to beguile the feeling of his being a stranger "and a pilgrim on the
earth." The great end of all its art is "to raise the groves of an earthly
paradise, to shade from sight that vista which opens into eternity."2
But this is not all: for,
3. The theater is now, and ever has been, A SCHOOL OF FALSE SENTIMENT,
AND OF LICENTIOUS PRACTICE. While even the few plays which may be called decent have a
tendency to impart to the mind a vain and dissipating influence; a much larger number
produce a more deep and extensive mischief. By far the greater part of the most popular
dramas are profane, obscene, and calculated to pollute the imagination, to inflame the
passions, and to recommend principles the most pernicious, and practices the most corrupt.
How common is it to find in the language of the theater, the most unqualified profaneness,
and even blasphemy! How often are mock prayers, and irreverent appeals to the Majesty of
heaven, exhibited on the most trivial occasions! How often is the dialogue interspersed
with terms and allusions which pain the ear of modesty; and these pronounced and exhibited
in a way calculated to give additional force to the evil!3
and are such exhibitions innocent? Are they such as a disciple of Christ can witness with
safety, or countenance with a good conscience? If they are, then it is difficult to say
what is criminal, or what may not be justified.
But in a large number even of those plays which are not chargeable with
open profaneness, or indelicacy of language,4 the
moral is such as no friend of religion, or of human happiness, can approve. Piety and
virtue are made to appear contemptible; and vice, in the person of some favorite hero, is
exhibited as attractive, honorable, and triumphant. Folly and crime have palliative, and
even commendatory names bestowed upon them; and the extravagance of sinful passion is
represented as amiable sensibility. The good man of the stage is a character as opposite
to the good man of the Bible, as light to darkness, of as Christ to Belial.5 The almost universal maxims of the theater are,
"that love is the grand business of life: that present gratification is to be
preferred to suffering virtue; that ambition is superior to contentment; that pride is
necessary to carry a man with decency through the world; that revenge is manliness of
spirit; that patience is meanness; that humility is degradation; that forgiveness of
injuries is beneath a gentleman; that human opinion is the strongest motive of action;
that human praise is the highest reward; that human censure is to be deprecated more
carefully than the wrath of God; that dueling is unavoidable; that self-murder may be
justified; that conjugal infidelity is a venial, if not an amiable frailty; and that,
provided a man be frank, generous, and brave, he may be a libertine, and invader of
conjugal purity, a despiser of God and a trampler on his laws, and yet celebrated as the
possessor of an excellent heart." Yes, my brethren, very often, nay, almost
continually, are plays not only exhibited in this Christian city, but received by
thousands, with bursts of applause, which convey, and directly or indirectly recommend,
sentiments no less exceptionable and pestiferous than these!
But, let me ask, are sentiments and representations such as these,
reconcileable with the Gospel of Jesus Christ? Are they friendly either to individual
happiness, or social order? Are they proper for Christians to witness or to encourage? Are
ribaldry, blasphemy, and indirect commendations of sin, proper even for decent ears? Is
this a school to which we ought to be willing to introduce our sons and daughters, even if
we had no higher aim than to prepare them for virtuous, dignified, and useful action in
the present life? Alas! it is humiliating to be driven to the necessity of asking these
questions; but it is still more humiliating to see thousands who profess to be Christians,
acting as if they might be deliberately answered in the affirmative!
4. Once more; those who attend the theater SUPPORT AND ENCOURAGE A SET
OF PERFORMERS IN A LIFE OF VANITY, LICENTIOUSNESS AND SIN. What is the life of Players?
Even in its best form, and when not degraded by uttering or exhibiting anything directly
immoral, it is submission to a course of mean and unworthy personation for the
entertainment of the multitude. But it is in fact, much worse than this. A large portion
of their time is employed in personating, displaying, and recommending vice. It were easy,
moreover, to show, that the constant habit of acting a part; the practice of personating
characters the most profligate and vile, much more frequently than those of an opposite
cast; together with the nature of the intercourse which takes place, and must take place,
between performers on the same stage, all have a tendency to corrupt morals. Were the
purity both of their principles and practice to be maintained under circumstances such as
these, it would be almost a miracle. Accordingly, in perfect correspondence with their
employment, is their prevailing character. In all countries under heaven they are found,
what, upon principles of philosophy, as well as religion, we might expect to find them,
triflers, buffoons, sensualists, unfit for sober employment, regardless of religion, and
loose in their morals.6 It is not pretended that
there have been no exceptions to this character. But the exceptions have been so few, and
their circumstances so peculiar, as to confirm rather than invalidate the general
argument. And is it even true, that there ever have been complete exceptions? Was there
ever a player who exhibited a life of steady, exemplary piety? Was there ever a theatrical
performer, even of the greatest talents, who enjoyed the respect and confidence of any
community? Nay, has there not been, in all ages, and in all states of society, a sort of
infamy attached to the professions? Yet this is the profession which all who frequent the
theater contribute their share to encourage and support. They are chargeable with giving
their influence and their pecuniary aid, for the maintenance of a class of persons, whose
business it is, indirectly, to recommend error and crime, to corrupt our children; and to
counteract whatever the friends of religion and good morals are striving to accomplish for
the benefit of society.
If this representation be just; if attending on the theater is a
criminal waste of time; if it tends to dissipate the mind and to render it indisposed for
serious and spiritual employments; if theatrical exhibitions are, very often to say the
least, indecent, profane, and demoralizing in their tendency; and if their patrons, by
every attendance on them, encourage and support sin, as a trade; then I ask, can any man
who claims to be barely moral, placing piety out of the question, can any man who claims
to be barely moral, conscientiously countenance such a seminary of vice? Above all, can a
disciple of Jesus Christ, who professes to be governed by the Spirit, and to imitate the
example of his Divine Master; who is commanded to live soberly, righteously, and godly in
this present world;7 who is required to pass
the time of his sojourning here in fear;8
who is warned not to be conformed to the world, and to have no fellowship with the
unfruitful works of darkness, but rather to reprove them;9 who is required to deny himself,
to crucify the flesh with the affections and lusts, and whether he eats or drinks, or
whatever he does, to do all to the glory of God;10
can a disciple of Jesus Christ, who is commanded to shun the company of the profane, to
avoid the very appearance of evil, and to pray, Lead us not into temptation,11 can HE be found in such a place without sin? Is
the theater an amusement in the immediate prospect of which any man can go to the throne
of grace, and implore a blessing? Is the theater an amusement which will be remembered
with complacency by any man when he comes to die?12
Or is it a place from which any reflecting man would be willing to be called to the bar of
God? These are questions which, I take for granted, some of my hearers will receive with a
smile; but which I most affectionately entreat those who have named the name of Christ to
ponder in their hearts.
I am aware that, to this view of the subject, many objections will be
made. It will be confidently asked, "Are there not some correct and moral plays, from
which noble sentiments may be learned? Why, then, condemn theatrical entertainments in the
gross?" I answer, allowing, for argument sake, that there are SOME unexceptionable,
nay even excellent plays; allowing that one in twenty (an allowance much beyond the truth)
is of this character; is it wise, is it lawful, to administer more than a pound of poison,
for the sake of conveying with it an ounce of nourishment? Besides, we are not to judge of
the theater by the character of a single play, or by the merits of a single actor. We are
to contemplate and to decide upon it as a SYSTEM; and that, not as it might be supposed to
be, but as it actually exists. And if its GENERAL CHARACTER is, and in all ages and
nations has been, corrupt and mischievous, then the argument which pleads in its favor, on
account of the small portion of just sentiment and real decency which it may exhibit, is
as weak in logic as it is detestable in morals.13
"But persons," it will be said, "as pious as the
preacher, or any of those who condemn it, have gone to the theater; undoubtedly, then it
cannot be a very immoral place of resort." And so persons more pious, perhaps, than
the preacher, or any of his hearers, have committed, what are acknowledged on all hands to
be sins, and sometimes even gross sins: but do they cease to be sins, because pious men
have committed them? Alas! brethren, how long will men deceive themselves by taking the
example of fallible mortals, and the fashion of the world, instead of the Word of God as
their guide? It is not denied, that professing Christians very often, and real Christians
sometimes, may have been found in the theater: but we insist upon it, that all such cases
ought to be regarded precisely in the same light, as when professing, or real Christians,
fall into the commission of any other sin; that is, with total disapprobation of their
conduct, as unworthy of the name which they bear; and with humiliation and mourning, as
injurious to the honor of religion. It is not what this or that professor does, that will
be asked of us, or that will be the rule of proceeding, before the judgment seat of
Christ. To the law, and to the testimony; if they speak not according to this word, it is
because there is no light in them.14
"But the play-house never injured me," another advocate of
this amusement may plead "My principles are so firmly fixed, and my mind so well
balanced, that I can attend upon it, at least now and then, without the smallest sensible
injury. In me, therefore, it can be no sin; especially as I go but seldom, and then only
to see a good play." When persons discover so much confidence in their own strength,
as to imagine, that they alone, of all the children of men, may safely trifle with
temptation, and tamper with sin, they give the worst possible evidence of the fact being
really so. As a general rule, we are never so much in danger of moral mischief, as when we
presumptuously imagine that we are totally beyond its reach. But allowing it to be as they
say; they ought to remember, that "if they can venture into the fire with safety,
there are others who cannot." If they can attend theatrical exhibitions without
injury, thousands of the young whose principles are unfixed, and whose characters are
unformed, go at the peril of their perdition. If they have no reason to apprehend danger,
they encourage, by their example, multitudes, who have every reason to apprehend the
utmost danger. If they go but seldom, and then only to good plays, they give the sanction
of their presence to others who will go often, and to plays of all descriptions. And is
this to be justified in persons who live in society, and who are bound habitually to
regard the welfare of society? The truth is, my brethren, whatever may be the harmlessness
of the theater to particular individuals, who frequent it, they encourage by their
example, and help to support by their money, that which is a source of corruption to
thousands. In fact, no person can contribute, in the smallest degree, to the support of
the stage, either by his presence or his purse, without being more or less, a partaker in
all the sin, and an accessory to all the mischief which may be transacted there.
"But certainly," another class of objectors will say,
"attending the theater, though allowed to be, in a degree, improper, is not so
criminal as some other practices, in which the mass of mankind, and more particularly the
inhabitants of great cities, will always indulge. Is it not adviseable, therefore, to
countenance, or at least to tolerate this, as a less evil than many others? Especially
when it is recollected, that there is something in theatrical entertainments more refined,
more intellectual, and more elevated, than in almost any other that can be imagined."
This precisely, in principle, as if any one were to say, "Swearing and lying,
sabbath-breaking and drunkenness, are none of them so atrocious in their nature as murder;
and, therefore, when we see men in danger of committing the last mentioned crime, we ought
to endeavor to divert them from it, by persuading them to engage in the practice of the
former sins." But I need not say, that such reasoning and such counsel would be
abhorred by every correct mind. It is not for us to attempt to balance known sins against
each other. Whether attending the theater be, in its own nature, and in the sight of the
heart-searching God, more or less criminal than many of those transgressions of the divine
law which we are accustomed to call gross sins, is a question which I dare not decide,
because I do not know. This, however, I know, that if it be a sin at all, it ought to be
abhorred and avoided. It is never justifiable to make a compromise with sin. It is always
criminal to do evil that good may come.
With respect to the plea that theatrical entertainments have a refined
and intellectual character which recommends them to the more intelligent part of society,
it does not weaken, in the least degree, the preceding course of reasoning. The fact under
certain qualifications, is not disputed. Oratory is doubtless, a great and, in itself,
most respectable art. Even the mimickry of it has wonderful charms; and therefore, when
dramas of the better sort are represented with that exquisite skill and force which have
sometimes appeared on the stage, they certainly form an amusement which is less gross and
frivolous than many others, and which more particularly addresses itself to the
intellectual powers, and to a literary taste. All this may be freely granted; and yet, if
the theater is now, always has been, and from the nature and design of the amusement, must
ever be,15 a system of deep, wide-spreading,
and incalculable corruption; is it not the duty of every one who values the welfare of
society, to deny himself a favorite gratification, rather than to encourage so great an
evil? Nay, the more plausible and fascinating the amusement, the greater its danger, when
it draws such consequences in its train; and, of course, the greater the sin of giving it
encouragement. And let that person who acknowledges the theater to be a corrupting and
criminal amusement, and who, at the same time, suffers himself to be drawn thither by the
fame of a celebrated actor, or by what he calls a taste for the exhibition of talents; let
him know, and tremble at the thought, that he is practically declaring, that his taste is
to be indulged at the expense of the most precious interests of society, and at the risk
of the everlasting displeasure of his God!
But it will, probably, still be demanded, "Why single out the
theater from all other sins, and hold it up with this reiterated and marked reprobation?
Is it so much worse than other evils, as to be worthy of such peculiar and unrelenting
censure?" I answer, we recur to the subject the more frequently, and raise our
warning voice against it, with the more emphasis, for two reasons. The first is, because
we are verily persuaded, that the mischiefs of this amusement are by no means so limited
and unimportant in their extent, as many, who acknowledge its sinfulness in general, are
ready to imagine. We are persuaded that, estimating its immediate and its ultimate
consequences; considering the close connection in which it stands with many other sins,
the mass of evil to which it gives rise, is so great as to defy calculation. The second
reason is, that, by some strange concurrence of circumstances, it has happened that this
evil, criminal and pestiferous as it evidently is, has crept, under a sort of disguise,
into the Church of Christ, and has come to be considered as a lawful amusement for
Christians! With respect to most other sins, which we are in the habit of reproving, they
are freely and generally acknowledged to be such; and when any of those who profess to be
Christians fall into them, the propriety of admonishing, suspending, or excommunicating
the offenders, as the case may be, is acknowledged by all. But we have here the strange
phenomenon of a great and crying sin, which professing Christians not only indulge, but
which they openly vindicate; to which they freely and publicly introduce their children;
and, as if this were not enough, in behalf of which they take serious offence when the
Ministers of Christ venture to speak of it in the terms which it deserves! It has been
often said, that Christians are most in danger from things lawful. It is certain that
there is often more danger from things esteemed lawful, than from those of which the
iniquity is known and undisputed. We are constrained, then, to dwell the more largely, and
to remonstrate the more solemnly, on the sin under consideration, because we are confident
it is not understood; because we are verily persuaded that a considerable portion of
professing Christians need instruction, as well as warning, on the subject; and because we
cherish the hope that nothing more than further light is necessary to induce thousands,
who now rank among the patrons of the theater, to forsake it with indignation.
I am perfectly sensible that all this will be called by some, "the
dark and scowling spirit of Calvinism;" that it will be stigmatized as "the cant
of that puritannical austerity, which aims at being righteous overmuch." And is it
come to this, my brethren, that when the plainest demonstration, drawn from the word of
God, and from the essential principles of morals, cannot be answered by argument, it is to
be assailed by the pitiful weapons of sneer and abuse? Answer me one plain question. Does
the representation which has been made, comport with God's word, or does it not? If not,
reject it without hesitation. But if it does, then reject it at your peril! If it does,
then, believe me, no man will gain anything by loading it with contemptuous epithets. It
does comport with that word! It is the truth of God! It is SUCH Calvinism; it is SUCH
Puritanism, as will be found to stand the trial of the Great Day; when all those miserable
apologies, and unscriptural subterfuges, in which multitudes who call themselves
Christians, now take shelter, shall be covered with shame and contempt.
But is it a FACT that the doctrine which condemns the theater, as an
immoral and criminal amusement, is an austerity confined to the advocates of a particular
creed? No, brethren; you ought to know that theatrical amusements have been unequivically
condemned, by the decent, and the virtuous part of society, in all ages. You ought to
know, that even pagans, and Christians of all denominations, and in every period of the
Church, have united in denouncing this class of amusements, as essentially corrupt and
demoralizing in their nature. The following extracts will fully establish this position.
Plato tells us, that "plays raise the passions, and pervert the use
of them; and, of consequence, are dangerous to morality." For this reason he banished
them from his commonwealth. Aristotle lays it down as a rule, "that the seeing of
comedies ought to be forbidden to young people; such indulgencies not being safe, until
age and discipline have confirmed them in sobriety, fortified their virtue, and made them
proof against debauchery." Tacitus informs us, that the "German women were
guarded against danger, and preserved their purity, by having no playhouses among
them." And even Ovid, in his most licentious poems, speaks of the theater as
favorable to dissoluteness of principle and manners; and, afterwards, in a graver work,
addressed to Augustus, advises the suppression of this amusenment, as a grand source of
corruption.16
In the primitive Church, both the players, and those who attend the
theater, were debarred from the Christian sacraments. All the Fathers, who speak on the
subject, with one voice attest that this was the case. A number of the early Synods or
Councils, passed formal canons, condemning the theater, and excluding actors, and those
who intermarried with them, or openly encouraged them, from the privileges of the Church.
The following declarations of Theophilus, pastor of Antioch, an eminent divine, who lived
in the second century, are too pointed and appropriate to be omitted. "It is not
lawful for US (Christians) to be present at the prizes of your gladiators, lest, by this
means, we should be accessary to the murders there committed. Neither dare we take the
liberty of attending on your other shows, lest our senses should be polluted and offended
with indecency and profaneness. We dare not see any representations of lewdness. They are
unwarrantable entertainments; and so much the worse, because the mercenary players set
them off, with all the charms and advantages of speaking. God forbid that CHRISTIANS, who
are remarkable for modesty and reserve, who are bound to enforce self-discipline, and who
are trained up in virtue, God forbid, I say, that we should dishonor our THOUGHTS, much
less our PRACTICE, with such wickedness as this!"17
Almost all the reformed Churches have, at different times, spoken the
same language, and enacted regulations of a similar kind. The Churches of France, Holland,
and Scotland, have declared it to be "unlawful to go to comedies, tragedies,
interludes, farces, or other stage plays, acted in public or private; because, in all
ages, these have been forbidden among Christians, as bringing in a corruption of good
manners." Surely this concurrence of opinion, in different countries, expressed not
lightly or rashly, but as the voice of the whole Church, ought to commend, at least the
respectful attention, of all who remember how plain and how important is the duty of
Christians to follow the footsteps of the flock.
To these authorities it may not be useless to add the judgment of a few
conspicuous individuals, of different characters and situations, all of whom were well
qualified to decide on the subject: individuals, not of austere or illiberal minds, and
who have never been charged with the desire of contracting to an unreasonable degree the
limits of public or private amusement.
Archbishop Tillotson was neither a Calvinist nor a Puritan; yet he,
after some pointed and forcible reasoning against it, pronounces the play-house to be
"the Devil's chapel;" a "nursery of licentiousness and vice;" "a
recreation which ought not to be allowed among a civilized, much less a Christian
people."18 Bishop Collier was
very far from being either a Calvinist or a Puritan; yet he solemnly declares, in the
preface to a learned and able volume which he wrote against the theater, that he was
"persuaded nothing had done more to debauch the age in which he lived, than the stage
poets and the play-house."19 Sir John
Hawkins was never considered as over-rigid or illiberal; but we find him speaking of the
theater in this pointed and unequivocal language: "Although it is said of the plays,
that they teach morality; and of the stage, that it is the horror of human life; these
assertions are mere declamation, and have no foundation in truth or experience. On the
contrary, a play house, and the regions about it, are the very hotbeds of vice."20 Nay, even the infidel philosopher,
Rousseau, in opposing the establishment of a theater at Geneva, speaks of it in the
following manner "It is impossible that an establishment so contrary to our ancient
manners can be generally applauded. How many generous citizens will see with indignation
this monument of luxury and effeminacy raise itself upon the ruins of our ancient
simplicity! Do you think they will authorize this innovation by their presence, after
having loudly disapproved it? Be assured that many go without scruple to the theater at
Paris, who will never enter that of Geneva, because the good of their country is dearer to
them than their amusement. Where would be the imprudent mother who would dare to carry her
daughter to this dangerous school; and how many respectable women would think they
dishonored themselves in going there! If some persons at Paris abstain from the theater,
it is simply on a principle of religion; and surely this principle will not be less
powerful amongst us, who shall have the additional motives of morals, of virtue, and of
patriotism; motives which will restrain those whom religion would not restrain."21
I have thus, my brethren, endeavored, I trust in the fear of God, to
discharge a duty which my office, and the present occasion, have laid upon me. It has been
my aim to speak the truth in love. If one word of a contrary kind has escaped me, I
heartily wish it unsaid. But if, as I verily believe, what you have heard is the
unexaggerated truth, may the Holy Spirit impress it on every heart! Brethren, the subject
is a serious one! If the half of what has been told you concerning the theater is true,
then not only every professing Christian, but every father of a family, every good
citizen, every friend to social order and happiness, ought to set his face against it as a
flint, and discountenance it by all fair and honorable means. But, to such of you, my
hearers, as profess to be followers of Jesus Christ, I address myself with especial
confidence. Can you, if you believe the foregoing statement, can you, after this, ever set
your feet within the walls of a theater? I do not ask whether you can go OFTEN, but can
you go AT ALL? It is impossible for me to conceive HOW you can venture, without previously
coming to the conclusion, that the morality of the Bible is too rigid and austere for YOU.
But will you venture to adopt this conclusion? No, you dare not. To do so, would be to
seal the death-warrant of your Christian character. Brethren, I repeat it, the subject is
a serious one! You may apologize and evade; you may secretly complain about the
"strictness," and "austerity;" you may plead the current of fashion,
and the habits of those around you, as much as you please: but the question is short; Will
you obey God rather than man, or the reverse? Will you take the scriptures, or the maxims
of a corrupt world for your guide? I leave it with your consciences and your God!
The remainder of this discourse will be addressed to the YOUNGER PART OF
MY AUDIENCE.
In undertaking this service, my young friends, one of the most pleasing
hopes that occurred to my mind, was, that God might bless it to some, at least, of your
number. It is delightful to preach to the young! When we address the aged, or even those
who have passed the meridian of life, and who have lived all their days in carelessness
and sin, our hopes are comparatively small. The Spirit of God may, indeed, carry home to
their hearts the word of his grace. But they have so long resisted and grieved that
Spirit, that our prospect of success, speaking after the manner of men, is alas! awfully
gloomy. But to admonish the young; to counsel those who have not yet become hardened by
inveterate habits of iniquity; and to warn the tender and the inexperienced against the
errors, the excesses, the false hopes, and the numberless dangers to which they are
exposed; as they are among the most important, so they are also among the most hopeful and
pleasant parts of our office. Happy, happy indeed, shall I be, if this service should
prove the means of leading even ONE young person to serious consideration; to embrace that
wisdom which is profitable unto all things, having the promise of the life that now is,
and of that which is to come!
Let me remind you, my young friends, that you live in an age, and in a
city peculiarly ensnaring to youth. The delusions of infidelity; the allurements of
criminal pleasure; the arts of vain companions; and the fascinations of diversified
amusements, present on every side much to dazzle and to deceive; much from which you are
hourly in danger. And, alas! how many youth, endowed with talents which might have done
honor to religion, to their parents, and to themselves, are daily falling victims to these
temptations, and sinking into infamy and destruction! Shall we have the mortification, my
young hearers, to see any of YOU among these wretched victims? God forbid! Our heart's
desire and prayer is, that, despising equally the dreams of false principle, and the
pollutions of licentious practice, you may be followers of them who serve their generation
by the will of God; and who, through faith and patience, inherit the promises!
Although the occasion has led me to speak particularly by of ONE kind of
amusement, to which the young of the present day are lamentably addicted; yet the same
reasoning will apply, with no less force, to a number of others, to which you are equally
exposed. I cannot stay, at present, to detail these, or to reason upon them. But whatever
amusements, no matter how fashionable, or how strongly recommended they may be, whatever
amusements have a tendency to produce dissipation of mind, to lead it away from God, and
to impair a relish for spiritual employments; whatever amusements cannot be begun and
ended with prayer, and are hostile to a life of communion with the Father of your spirits,
and his son Jesus Christ, are criminal, are mischievous, and, of course, are to be avoided
by all those who desire to be really wise, either for this world, or that which is to
come.
Let no young person say, "All this reasoning might properly and
strongly apply to us were we professors of religion. Those who are such, we acknowledge,
are bound to act upon this plan; but WE make no profession, and, consequently, are NOT
thus bound." And is it, then, no sin for any but professors of religion to waste
their time; to indulge in vanity and dissipation; to encourage obscenity, profaneness, and
contempt of the gospel; and to give their influence to the support of iniquity as a trade?
Is it no sin for any but professors of religion to walk in the way of their hearts, and in
the sight of their eyes, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind; and to be
lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God? Alas! there cannot be a greater delusion! We
are all under obligations in the sight of God, anterior to any act of profession on our
part. Whatever, then, is a sin in a professor, is a sin in any other person. Yes, my young
friends, whether you are professors of religion or not, you are rational creatures; you
have immortal souls; you are under a holy law; you are hastening to the bar of God; and,
as such, in the name of the Master whom I serve, I put in his claim to your affections and
your services. As such, I charge you, by all that is glorious in God; by all that is
tender in redeeming love; by all that is precious in the hopes of the soul; and by all
that is solemn in eternity; that you renounce every thing that is hostile to the service
of Christ; and that you make it your study to glorify him in your bodies, and in your
spirits which are his.
To such of my young hearers as have urged me to the performance of this
service, let me especially say, Another voice, speaking through a catastrophe of the most
heart-rending nature, has proclaimed, that the theater, and all that train of unhallowed
pleasures, to which the young are so much attached, are madness and folly! Will you not
hear this voice and lay it to heart? If, after all that has lately passed; if, after
having your attention seriously drawn to this subject, both by the providence and the word
of God; if, after the part you have taken in THE EXERCISES OF THIS DAY, you are still
found incorrigibly devoted to those pleasures, allow me affectionately to say, you will
have no cloak for your sin. You will have reason to fear the special and destroying
judgments of God. For they that being often reproved, harden their necks, shall suddenly
be cut off, and that without remedy.
But remember my young friends, that something more is necessary to form
a Christian than mere abstinence from what are called criminal pleasures. You may keep at
the greatest distance from all of them; you may be models of the industry, the temperance,
and the sobriety, which constitute the orderly citizen; and yet be far from the kingdom of
heaven. Remember, that, except a man be born again he cannot see the kingdom of God.
Remember, that unless you receive Christ, by a living faith, as your Prophet, Priest, and
King, and study to walk in him in all holy obedience, you are Christians only in name. It
is the religion which dwells in the heart, and which controls, adorns, and sanctifies the
life, that I recommend to your choice. With this religion, and this alone, you will be
happy in yourselves, and a blessing to others. With this religion, you will be prepared to
enjoy prosperity with comfort, and to meet adversity with resignation. With this religion,
you will be able to contemplate death without alarm, and to rejoice in hope of the glory
of God.
Beloved youth! the hope of your parents, and of the church; seek this
religion. Give neither sleep to your eyes, nor slumber to your eye-lids, until you can, on
good grounds, call it YOUR OWN. To the grace of the Saviour we commend you. May he give
you to experience the light of his countenance, and the joys of his salvation! May he
teach you how to live, and how to die! May he guide you by his counsel, and afterwards
receive you to glory! AMEN.
NOTE: The melancholy dispensation of Providence to which the preceding
discourse refers, has been so deeply impressed upon the mind of every American, that no
information can be supposed to be necessary to render these passages which relate to the
affecting scene, perfectly intelligible to every reader; yet, should the eye of a
stranger, some eight or ten years hence, accidentally fall on the foregoing pages the
following account may not be altogether useless.
On the night of December 26, 1811, the theater in the city of Richmond,
Virginia, was unusually crowded; a new play having drawn together an audience of not less
than six hundred persons. Toward the close of the performances, just before the
commencement of the last act of the concluding pantomime, the scenery caught fire, from a
lamp inadvertently raised to an improper position, and, in a few minutes the whole
building was wrapped in flames. The doors being very few, and the avenues leading to them
extremely narrow, the scene which ensued was truly a scene of horror! It may be in some
degree imagined, but can never be adequately described! About seventy-five persons
perished in the flames. Among these were the governor of the State; the President of the
Bank of Virginia; one of the most eminent Attornies belonging to the bar of the
commonwealth; a number of other respectable Gentlemen; and about FIFTY FEMALES, a large
portion of whom were among the Ladies of the greatest conspicuity and fashion in the city.
FOOTNOTES
1 For a fuller view of the
arguments against the theater, the reader is referred to the masterly Essay on the Stage,
by the Rev. Dr. Witherspoon; to a work on the same subject by the Rev. John Styles, of
Great Britain; to A short View of the English Stage, by the Rev. Jeremy Collier,
afterwards a nonjuring Bishop; and to Mrs. Hannah More's remarks on this subject in the
Preface to her Tragedies, I have also seen Dennis's answer to Collier; and am of the
opinion that it may, with great confidence, be placed among those works which show the
mischiefs of the stage.
2 Foster's Essays. Essay iv.
On Polite Literature.
3 "It is
amazing," says Dr. Witherspoon, "It is amazing to think that women who pretend
to decency and reputation, whose brightest ornament ought to be modesty, should continue
to abet, by their presence, so much unchastity, as is to be found in Theater! How few
plays are acted which a modest woman can see, consistently with decency, in every part?
And even when the plays are more reserved themselves, they are sure to be seasoned with
something of this kind in the prologue or epilogue, the music between the acts, or in some
scandalous farce with which the diversion is concluded. The power of custom and fashion is
very great in making people blind to the most manifest qualities and tendencies of things.
There are ladies who frequently attend the stage, who, if they were but once entertained
with the same images in a private family, with which they are often presented there, would
rise with indignation, and reckon their reputation ruined, if they ever should return. No
Woman of reputation, much less of piety, who has been ten times in a play house, durst
repeat in company all that she has heard there. With what consistency they gravely return
to the same school of lewdness, they themselves best know." Essay on the Stage.
Works, vol. iii. p. 84.
4 It is a notorious fact,
however, that in the actual exhibition of many plays, the language of which, as published
from the press, is tolerably pure, the performers, especially the more popular of them,
are in the habit of adding, on their own responsibility, expressions and allusions of the
most exceptionable kind. This is continually done; and seldom fails to receive testimonies
of approbation from the audience! so that no one can be sure that even a decent play will
be exhibited as the author left it, and as he is accustomed to read it.
5 Lord Kaimes, (who was
sufficiently liberal) speaking of English Comedy, as it "continued, with very little
softening," in his day, says "It is there an established rule to deck out the
chief characters with every vice in fashion, however gross. But as such characters, viewed
in a true light, would be disgustful, care is taken to disguise their deformity under the
embellishments of wit, sprightliness, and good-humor, which, in mixed company, make a
capital figure. It requires not time nor much thought to discover the poisonous influence
of such plays. A young man of figure, emancipated at last from the severity and restraint
of a college education, repairs to the capital, disposed to every sort of excess. The
play-house becomes his favorite amusement; and he is enchanted with the gaiety and
splendor of the chief personages. The disgust which vice gives him at first, soon wears
off, to make way for new notions, more liberal in his opinion; by which a sovereign
contempt of religion, and a declared war upon the purity of the female sex, are converted
from being infamous vices, to be fashionable virtues. The infection spreads gradually
through all ranks, and becomes universal. How gladly would I listen to any one who would
undertake to prove that what I have been describing is chimerical! But the dissoluteness
of our young people of birth will not suffer me to doubt of its reality." Elements of
Criticism, chap. ii. sect. 2.
6 This representation is more
than confirmed by the celebrated Rousseau, who, with all his laxness of sentiment and
practice, speaks of theatrical performers in the following strain: "I observe, in
general, that the situation of an actor, is a state of licentiousness and bad morals; that
the men are abandoned to disorder; that the women lead a scandalous life; that the one and
the other, at once, avaricious and profane, ever overwhelmed with debt, and ever prodigal,
are as unrestrained in their disposition, as they are void of scruple in respect to the
means of providing for it. In all countries their profession is dishonorable: those who
exercise it are every where contemned. Even at Paris, where they are treated with more
consideration, and where their conduct is better than in any other place, a sober citizen
would fear to be upon terms of intimacy with the same actors who may be seen every day at
the tables of the great. This contempt is stongest wherever the manners are the most pure;
and there are countries of innocence and simplicity, where the trade of an actor is held
almost in horror. These are incontestible facts. You will say that they result only from
prejudices. I agree to it; but these prejudices being universal, we must seek for an
universal cause; and I do not see where we can find it excepting in the profession itself.
I might impute these prejudices to the declamations of priests, if I did not find them
established among the Romans, before the birth of Christianity; and not only vaguely
scattered in the minds of the people, but authorized by express laws, which declared
actors infamous, and took from them the title and the rights of Roman citizens." See
Christian Observer, vol. iv. p. 239.
7 Titus 2:12
8 1 Peter 1:17
9 Rom. 12:2,
Ephes. 5:11
10 Gal. 5:24, 1
Cor.
10:31
11 Thess. 5:22, Matt. 6:13
12 It is related, I think,
of the Rev. Mr. Hervey, that being once on a journey in a stage coach, the theater became
the topic of conversation. A lady in company, who was much attached to this amusement,
expatiated largely on the pleasures attending it. She observed, that she found much
pleasure in anticipating the performance; much in witnessing it; and much in recollecting
and conversing upon it afterwards. Mr. Hervey listened with respectful attention, and,
when she had done, said "Madam, there is one pleasure growing out of the theater
which you have omitted to mention." Delighted to think of her opinion being confirmed
by a person of his respectable appearance, when asked him, with eagerness, to what he
referred? "I refer, Madam" said he gravely, "to the pleasure which the
remembrance of having attended on the theater will give you on a dying bed." The
seasonable remark proved better than a thousand arguments. It made a deep and permanent
impression. The lady never again went to the theater, and became eminently pious.
13 After all, the number
of plays that can be pronounced unexceptionable, with respect both to sentiment and
language, is so small, that they are scarcely worthy of being taken into the account. This
cannot be said of Cato, of the Revenge, of Douglas, of the very best of Shakespeare's
Tragedies, nor of many others which have been highly eulogized; as may be seen clearly and
strongly illustrated in the Essays on the Stage, by Witherspoon, Styles, Mrs. H. More,
Collier, &c. With regard to the great mass of modern dramas, not excepting many which
have been pronounced excellent, and exhibited with the highest applause on the New York
stage, it is a burlesque on every principle to speak of them as pure in their moral
character.
14 Isaiah 8:20.
15 Some advocates of the
theater have contended, that though it is, at present, by no means unexceptionable in its
character and tendency; yet, that if it were properly encouraged and regulated, it might
be made a school of good morals. The fact, that such a regulated and pure theater never
has existed, in any nation on earth, affords very strong presumption against the
correctness of this opinion. The more decent friends of the theater, have had every
inducement, if it had been possible to reform its character. That they have not done it,
may, therefore, be fairly ascribed to the impracticability of the task. But independent of
this consideration, it is easy to show that an amusement which necessarily includes the
maintenance of a hired company of actors by profession; and which must be so far adapted
to the various tastes in society, as to attract and secure sufficient patronage, from the
mass of mankind, cannot fail of being corrupt in its character, and pernicious in its
tendency. Were a theater strictly and purely Christian, to be established, it would be
shut up in less than twelve months, and its managers become bankrupt, for want of support.
The stage may be, and has been partially reformed. It is by no means as grossly licentious
at this day, in Great Britain, as it was in the days of Dryden, Farquhar, and Congreve.
But it is still, there as well as here, dreadfully corrupt; and it is one of those evils
which, from their very nature, do not admit of radical and total reform. If it exists at
all, it must be, in a degree, impure. The only method of curing the evil, is to banish it
entirely.
16 These quotations are
taken from Collier's View of the English Stage, chap. vi.
17 See Collier's
View, &c. chap. vi. where also a number of quotations may be found, equally applicable
and pointed, from Tertullian, Clemens Alexandrinus, Minutius Felix, Cyprian, Lactantius,
Chrysostom, Jerome, and Augustine.
18 Christian
Observer, vol. iv. p. 46, 237.
19 Collier was one of
the most intolerant high-churchmen, and determined opponents of the Puritans in his day.
Dr. Johnson says, being a "fierce and implacable non-juror," "he knew that
an attack on the theater would never make him suspected for a Puritan; he therefore
published A short View of the Immorality and Profaneness of the English Stage, I believe
with no other motive than religious zeal, and honest indignation. He was formed for a
controvertist; with sufficient learning; with diction vehement and pointed; with wit in
the highest degree keen and sarcastic; and with all those powers exalted and invigorated
by just confidence in his cause. His onset was violent; those passages which, while they
stood single, had passed with little notice, when they were accumulated and exposed
together, excited horror; the wise and the pious caught the alarm; and the nation wondered
why it had suffered irreligion and licentiousness to be openly taught at the public
charge." Life of Congreve. Such was Dr. Johnson's judgment of this writer and his
cause.
20 Johnson's Life.
21
Christian Observer, vol. iv. p. 239. It is even practicable to bring the testimony of
a player against himself and his profession. A celebrated comic performer on the English
stage, who died a few years ago, meeting with a clergyman whom he had once intimately
known, and who had been for some time engaged in preaching in London, but had been obliged
to leave it for the benefit of his health, said, "And I have been acting Sir John
Falstaff so often, that I thought I should have died; and the physicians advised me to
come into the country for the benefit of the air. Had you died, it would have been in
serving the best of masters; but had I, it would have been in the service of the Devil. As
soon as I leave you, I shall be king Richard. This is what they call a good play. I
acknowledge there are some striking and moral things in it; but after it, I shall come in
again with my farce of "A dish of all Sorts," and knock all that on the head.
Fine reformers we!" Style's Essay, p. 61,62.
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Press main page James Bannerman Rites
& Ceremonies in Public Worship
Thomas Boston
The Evil, Nature and Danger of Schism
William Cunningham
Relation Between Church and State
The Westminster Confession on the Relation Between Church and
State
Albert Dod: Review of Charles Finney's Revival
Methods
Part One
Part Two
James Durham
Repentance
The Fourth Commandment
Introduction
1. Morality of the Fourth Commandment
Excurses: Family Worship
2. The Particular Morality of the Fourth Commandment
3. The Change of the Day
4. The Sanctification of the day.
Lectures on Job
Extracts: To the Reader, Job Chapter One
A Treatise Concerning Scandal
Extracts: Historical Introduction,
Author's
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George Gillespie
Assurance of an Interest in Christ
Holy Days
Wholesome Severity Reconciled with Christian Liberty
The English Popish Ceremonies
Extracts: Historical Introduction, Gillespie's Introduction
Against Holy Days
EPC Bibliography
David Hay Fleming
Discipline of the Reformation part one
part two part three
John M. Mason
Letters on Frequent
Communion
Thomas M'Crie:
Brief View of the evidence for the exercise of Civil
Authority about religion.
Sermon: Grief for the Sins of Men
Sermon: Christian Friendship
Sermon: The Fan in Christ's Hand
Samuel Miller
Nature and Effects of the Stage
Conversation
Religious Conversation
Revivals of Religion
Samuel Rutherfurd
Against Separatism § Part One § Part
Two § Part Three § Part Four
William Sprague
Danger of Being Overwise (On Use of Wine in the Lord's Supper)
James Wood
Separation from Corrupt Churches
Church Government
Thomas M'Crie: Brief View of
the evidence for the exercise of Civil Authority about religion.
Divine Right of Church Government
Extracts: Publisher's Preface, 1-2 What is a Jus Divinum?
Revivals of Religion
Samuel Miller: Revivals of Religion
Dod on Finney Part One
Dod on Finney Part Two
Schism and Separatism
James Wood: Separation from Corrupt Churches
John MacPherson: Unity of the Church
Thomas Boston: The Evil, Nature and Danger of Schism
Samuel Rutherford: Against Separatism § Part One § Part
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James Gilfillan, Holidays
David Calderwood, Against Festival
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John L. Girardeau: The
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Robert L. Dabney: Review of Girardeau's
Instrumental Music in Worship
William Sprague: Danger of Being Overwise: Wine in Communion
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