Once find a man's ideals, it has been well said, and the rest is easy; and
undoubtedly to get at any true
notion of
character, one must
discover these. They may be covered close with conventionalities, or jealously hidden, like buried treasures, from unsympathetic eyes; but the
patient search is well worth while, since it is his ideals-and not his words nor his deeds, which a thousand circumstances
influence and decide-which show us the real man as known to his Maker. And true as this is of the
individual, it is true in a deeper and larger sense of the nations, and most true of all of that people with whom for centuries
speech was
impolitic and action
impossible. With
articulate expression so long denied to them, the
national ideals must be always to the student of history the truest
revelation of Judaism; and it is
curious and interesting to
trace their
development, and to recognise the crown and
apex of them all in
battlefield and in 'Vineyard,' in Ghetto and in mart, unchanged among the changes, and
practically the same as in the days of the
desert. The
germ was set in the
wilderness, when, amid the thunders and lightnings of Sinai, a
crowd of
frightened, freshly rescued slaves were made 'witnesses' to a living God, and guardians of a 'Law' which demonstrated His
existence. Very new and
strange, and but
dimly understanded of the people it must all have been. 'The lights of sunset and of sunrise mixed.' The
fierce vivid glow under which they had
bent and basked in Egypt had
scarcely faded, when they were
bid look up in the grey
dawn of the
desert to
receive their
trust. There was
worthy stuff in the descendants of the man who had left father and friends and easy,
sensuous idolatry to follow after an
ideal of
righteousness; and they who had but just escaped from the
bondage of centuries, rose to the
occasion. They accepted their
mission; 'All that the Lord has spoken will we do,' came up a
responsive cry from 'all the people answering together,' and in that
supreme moment the ill-fed and so recently ill-treated groups were transformed into a
nation. 'I will make of thee a great people'; 'Through thee shall all families of the
earth be blessed'; the
meaning of such predictions was borne in upon them in one bewildering
flash, and in that
flash the
national idea of Judaism found its
dawn; they, the despised and the
downtrodden, were to become trustees of civilisation.
As the
glow died down, however, a very
rudimentary sort of civilisation the
wilderness must have presented to these builders of the temples and the
treasure cities by the Nile, and to the
vigorous,
resourceful Hebrew women. As day after day, and year after year, the cloud moved onward, darkening the road which it directed, as they gathered the
manna and longed for the fleshpots, it could have been only the few and finer spirits among those
listless groups who were
able to
discern that a civilisation based upon the Decalogue, shorn though it was of all present pleasantness and
ease, had a
promise about it that was lacking to a
culture, '
learned in all the
wisdom of the Egyptians.' It was life reduced to its elements; Sinai and Pisgah stood so far apart, and such long
level stretches of
dull sand lay between the heights. One imagines the women, skilled like their men-folk in all manner of
cunning workmanship, eagerly, generously ransacking their stores of purple and fine
linen to
decorate the Tabernacle, and spinning and embroidering with a
desperately delighted sense of recovered refinements, which, as much perhaps as their fervour of
religious enthusiasm, led them to bring their gifts
till restrained 'from bringing.' The
trust was accepted though in the
wilderness, but
grudgingly, with many a
faint-hearted protest, and to some minds, in some moods, slavery must have seemed less
insistent in its demands than trusteeship.
The
conquest of Canaan was the next
experience, and as sinfulness and
idolatry were relentlessly washed away in rivers of blood, one doubts if the
impressionable descendants of Jacob, to whom it was given to
overcome,
might not perchance have preferred to
endure. But such
choice was not given to them; the
trust had to be realised before it could be
transmitted, and its
value tested by its cost. With Palestine at last in
possession of the chosen people, this civilisation of which they were the guardians by slow degrees became
manifest. Samuel lived it, and David sang it, and Isaiah preached it, and the
nation clung to it,
individual men and women, stumbling and failing often, but dying each, when
need came, a hundred deaths in its defence; perhaps finding it on
occasion less
difficult to die for an idea than to live up to it.
The securities were shifted, the terms of the trusteeship changed when the people of the Land became the people of the Book. The civilisation which they
guarded grew narrower in its issues and more limited in its
outlook,
till, as the years rolled into the centuries, it was hard to recognise the 'witnesses' of God in the hunted outcasts of man. Yet to the student of history, who reads the hieroglyph of the Egyptian into the postcard of to-day, it is not
difficult to see the civilisation of Sinai shining under the folds of the gaberdine or of the san benito. It was taught in the schools and it was lived in the homes, and the Ghetto could not altogether
degrade it, nor the Holy Office effectually
disguise it. Jews sank sometimes to the lower
level of the sad lives they led, but Judaism remained unconquerably
buoyant. Judaism, as they believed in it, was a Personal Force making for
righteousness, a Law which knew no change, the Promise of a
period when the
earth should be filled with the
knowledge of the Lord; and the 'witnesses' stuck to this their
trust,
through good
repute and
through evil repute, with a
simple doggedness which disarms all
superficial criticism. The
glamour of the
cause,
through which a Barcochba could
loom heroic to an Akiba, the
utter absence of self-
consciousness or of self-seeking, which made Judas in his fight for
freedom pin the Lord's name on his
flag, and which, with the
kingdom lost, made the scrolls of the Law the
spoil with which Ben Zaccai retreated-this was at the
root of the
national idea, and its impersonality gives the secret of its
strength,'Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but unto Thy name!' This
vivid sense of being the trustees of civilisation was
wholly dissociated from any feeling of
conceit either in the leaders or in the
rank and file of the Jewish
nation. It is
curious indeed to realise how so
intense a
conviction of the
survival of the fittest could be held in so intensely unmodernised a
spirit.
The idea of their trusteeship was a
sheet anchor to the Jews as the waves and the billows passed over them. In the fifteen hundred years'
tragedy of their history there have been no entr'actes of
frenzied stampede or of
revolutionary, revengeful
conspiracy. A
resolute endurance, which, characteristically enough,
rarely approaches
asceticism, marks the
depth and
strength and
buoyancy of the
national idea. Trustees of civilisation
might not
sigh nor sing in solitudes; nor with the feeling so
keen that 'a thousand years in Thy
sight are but as a day,' was it worth while to
plot or
plan against the oppressors of the
moment. Time was on their side, and 'that which shapes it to some
perfect end.' And this
attitude explains, possibly, some unattractive phases of it, since however honestly the
individual consciousness may be absorbed in a
national conscience, yet the
individual will generally, in some way,
manage to
express himself, and the self is not always quite up to the
ideal, nor indeed is it always in
harmony with those who would
interpret it. When a David dances before the Ark it needs other than a daughter of Saul to
understand him. There have been Jews in David's case, their
enthusiasm mocked at; and there have been Jews
indifferent to their
trust, and Jews who have betrayed it, and Jews too, and these not a few, who have pushed it into
prominence with
undue display. The
infinite changes of
circumstance and surrounding in Jewish fortunes no less than differences in
individual character have induced a
considerable divergence in the
practical politics of the
national idea. The persecuted have been
exclusive over it, and the
prosperous careless; it has been vulgarised by
superstition, and ignored by indifferentism,
till modern '
rational' thinkers now and again question whether Palestine be indeed the
goal of Jewish separateness, and make it a
matter for
academic discussion whether 'Jews'
mean a
sect of
cosmopolitan citizens with
religious customs more or less in
common, or a people whose
religion has a
national origin and a
national purpose in its observances. With questioners such as these, Revelation, possibly, would not be admitted as
sound evidence in reply, else the
promise, 'Ye shall be to me a
kingdom of priests and a
holy nation,' would,one
might think, show a
design that
ritual by itself does not fulfil. It was no
sect with '
tribal'
customs, but a '
nation' and a '
kingdom' who were to be '
holy to the Lord.' But though texts may be inadmissible with those who
prefer their sermons in stones, yet the records of the ages are little less
impartial and unimpassioned than the records of the rocks, and doubters
might find an answer in the
insistent tones of history when she tells of the results of
occasional unnatural
divorce between
religion and
nationality among Jews.
There were times not a few, whilst their own judges ruled, and whilst their own kings reigned in Palestine, when, with a firm
grip on the land, but a loose hold on the law, Israel was well-nigh
lost and absorbed in the idolatrous peoples by whom it was surrounded; when the race, which was ceasing to
worship at the
national altars, was in danger of ceasing to
exist as a
nation. Exile taught them to
value by loss what was
possession. 'How shall we sing the Lord's song in a
strange land?' was the
passionate cry in Babylon. Was it perchance the feeling that the land was '
strange,' which gave that new fervour to the songs, choking off
utterance and finding
adequate expression only in the Return? Did Judas, the Maccabee,
understand something of this as he led his
patriotic, '
zealous' troops to
victory? Did Mendelssohn
forget it when, nineteen hundred years later, he
emancipated his people from the results of worse than Syrian
oppression, at the cost of so many, his own children among the rest, shaking off memories and duties as lightly as they shook off restraints? Over and over again, in the
wonderful history of the Jews, does
religion without
nationality prove itself as
impossible as
nationality without
religion to
serve for a sustaining
force in Judaism. The people who, while 'the city of palm-trees' was yet their own, could set up
strange gods in the groves, were not one
whit more false to their
faith, nor more
harmful to their people, than those later representatives of the
opposite type, Hellenists, as history calls them, who built a
temple, and read the law and observed the precepts, whilst their very priests changed their good Jewish names for Greek-sounding ones in
contemptuous and
contemptible depreciation of their Jewish
nationality. One inclines, perhaps, to
accentuate the facts of history and to moralise over the
might-have-beens where these
fit into a
theory; but so much as this at least seems indisputable-that those who would dissociate the
national from the
religious, or the
religious from the
national element in Judaism
attempt the
impossible. The
ideal of the Jews must always be 'from Zion shall come forth
instruction, and the Word of God from Jerusalem'; and to this end-'that all people of the
earth may know Thy name, as do thy people Israel.' This is the
goal of Jewish separateness. The separateness may have been part of the Divine
plan, as
distinctive practices and
customs are due in the first place to the Divine
command; but they are also and none the less a means of strengthening the
national character of the Jews. Jewish
religion neither 'happens' to have a
national origin, nor does Jewish
nationality 'happen' to have
religious customs. The Jewish
nation has become a
nation and has been preserved as a
nation for the
distinct purpose of
religion. This, as we read it, is the
lesson of history. And this too is its
consolation. The
faithful few who see the fulfilment of history and of
prophecy in a restored and localised
nationality-a Jerusalem reinstated as the joy of the whole
earth; the
careless many who, in
comfortable complacency, are well
content to
await it
indefinitely, in
dispersion; the
loyal many, who believe that a
political restoration would be a retrogressive step, narrowing and
embarrassing the wider issues; the children of light and the children of the world, the
spiritual and the spirituel
element in Israel, alike, if unequally, have each their share in spreading the civilisation of Sinai, as surely as 'fire and
hail and snow and mist and
stormy wind' all 'fulfil His word.' The seed that was
sown in the sands of the
desert has germinated
through the ages, and its
fruition is foretold. The
promise to the Patriarch, 'I will make of thee a great
nation,' foreshadowed that his descendants were to be trustees, '
through them shall all families of the
earth be blessed.' There are those who would read into this
national idea a
taint of
arrogance or of exclusiveness, as there are some scientifically-minded folks, a
trifle slow perhaps, to
apply their own favoured
dogma of
evolution, who can see in the Exodus only a capriciously selected band of slaves, led forth to
serve a
tribal deity. But the history of the Jews, which is
inseparable from the
religion of the Jews, rebukes those who would
thus halt mid-way and
stumble over the evidences. It lifts the
veil, it flashes the light on dark places, it unriddles the
weary puzzle of the travailing ages, leaving only indifferentism unsolvable, as it shows clear how the Lord, the Spirit of all flesh, the
universal Father, brought Israel out of Egypt and gave them name and place to be His witnesses, and the means He chose whereby 'all families of the
earth should be blessed.'