<h2 class="new-h2">VI</h2>
<p>Two thousand years ago John the Baptist and then
Jesus said to men: The time is fulfilled and the Kingdom
of God is at hand; (<ins class="greek" title="metanoeite">μετανοεῖτε</ins>) bethink yourselves
and believe in the Gospel (Mark i. 15); and if you
do not bethink yourselves you will all perish (Luke
xiii. 5).</p>
<p>But men did not listen to them, and the destruction
they foretold is already near at hand. And we men of
our time cannot but see it. We are already perishing,
and, therefore, we cannot leave unheeded that—old in
time, but for us new—means of salvation. We cannot
but see that, besides all the other calamities which flow
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from our bad and irrational life, military preparations
alone and the wars inevitably growing from them must
infallibly destroy us. We cannot but see that all the
means of escape invented by men from these evils are
found and must be found to be ineffectual, and that the
disastrous position of the nations arming themselves
against each other cannot but go on advancing continually.
And therefore the words of Jesus refer to us
and our time more than to any time or to any one.</p>
<p>Jesus said, “Bethink yourselves”—<i>i.e.</i> “Let every
man interrupt the work he has begun and ask himself:
Who am I? From whence have I appeared, and in what
consists my destiny? And having answered these
questions, according to the answer decide whether that
which thou doest is in conformity with thy destiny.”
And every man of our world and time, that is, being
acquainted with the essence of the Christian teaching,
needs only for a minute to interrupt his activity, to forget
the capacity in which he is regarded by men, be it
of Emperor, soldier, minister, or journalist, and seriously
ask himself who he is and what is his destiny—in
order to begin to doubt the utility, lawfulness,
and reasonableness of his actions. “Before I am Emperor,
soldier, minister, or journalist,” must say to himself
every man of our time and of the Christian world,
“before any of these, I am a man—<i>i.e.</i> an organic
being sent by the Higher Will into a universe infinite
in time and space, in order, after staying in it for an instant,
to die—<i>i.e.</i> to disappear from it. And, therefore,
all those personal, social, and even universal human
aims which I may place before myself and which are
placed before me by men are all insignificant, owing to
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the shortness of my life as well as to the infiniteness of
the life of the universe, and should be subordinated to
that higher aim for the attainment of which I am sent
into the world. This ultimate aim, owing to my limitations,
is inaccessible to me, but it does exist (as there
must be a purpose in all that exists), and my business is
that of being its instrument—<i>i.e.</i> my destiny, my
vocation, is that of being a workman of God, of
fulfilling His work.” And having understood this
destiny, every man of our world and time, from
Emperor to soldier, cannot but regard differently those
duties which he has taken upon himself or other men
have imposed upon him.</p>
<p>“Before I was crowned, recognized as Emperor,”
must the Emperor say to himself: “before I undertook
to fulfil the duties of the head of the State, I, by the
very fact that I live, have promised to fulfil that which
is demanded of me by the Higher Will that sent me
into life. These demands I not only know, but feel in
my heart. They consist, as it is expressed in the
Christian law, which I profess, in that I should submit
to the will of God, and fulfil that which it requires of
me, that I should love my neighbor, serve him, and act
towards him as I would wish others to act towards me.
Am I doing this?—ruling men, prescribing violence,
executions, and, the most dreadful of all,—wars. Men
tell me that I ought to do this. But God says that
I ought to do something quite different. And, therefore,
however much I may be told that, as the head
of the State, I must direct acts of violence, the levying
of taxes, executions and, above all, war, that is,
the slaughter of one's neighbor, I do not wish to and
cannot do these things.”</p>
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<p>So must say to himself the soldier, who is taught
that he must kill men, and the minister, who deemed it
his duty to prepare for war, and the journalist who
incited to war, and every man, who puts to himself the
question, Who is he, what is his destination in life?
And the moment the head of the State will cease to
direct war, the soldier to fight, the minister to prepare
means for war, the journalist to incite thereto—then,
without any new institutions, adaptations, balance of
power, tribunals, there will of itself be destroyed that
hopeless position in which men have placed themselves,
not only in relation to war, but also to all other calamities
which they themselves inflict upon themselves.</p>
<p>So that, however strange this may appear, the most
effective and certain deliverance of men from all the
calamities which they inflict upon themselves and from
the most dreadful of all—war—is attainable, not by
any external general measures, but merely by that
simple appeal to the consciousness of each separate
man which, nineteen hundred years ago, was proposed
by Jesus—that every man bethink himself, and
ask himself, who is he, why he lives, and what he should
and should not do.</p>
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