BY WAY OF INTRODUCTION
Many
and great things have been delivered unto us by the Law and the Prophets,
and by others that have followed their steps, for the which things Israel
ought to be commended for learning and wisdom; and whereof not only the
readers must needs become skilful themselves, but also they that desire
to learn be able to profit them which are without, both by speaking and writing."—The
Prologue of the Wisdom of Jesus, the son Sirach.
§ 1. IT is still, I believe, a popular
superstition that, on the first day of Lent in each year, the Church of
England invites her children to meet in their parish churches for the purpose
of "cursing their neighbours." No one who is familiar with the Commination
Service will need to be reminded that this is neither an accurate nor an
adequate description of the "godly discipline of the Primitive Church,"
so far as it is somewhat mildly reflected in the special service appointed
for the beginning of the season of spiritual spring-cleaning. The cheap
and easy exercise of confessing other folk's sins comes too naturally to
the ordinary man to need a special day to be set apart for it; he does
it most days without the stimulus of a solemn exhortation.
What we are invited to do on Ash Wednesday is
(not to utter a string of imprecations upon other "miserable sinners,"
who are not present to hear them; but) to note, for our own warning and
betterment, a number of facts. The formula is not "cursed be," but "cursed
is." We are asked to give our solemn assent to the proposition that there
are certain offences against morals that, in the very nature of things,
carry with them a curse. The offences which are specified are nearly all
social sins-sins, which break up the sacred family life; sins, which destroy
confidence between man and man; sins, which poison the fountain of justice;
sins of taking a mean advantage of one's fellow's; sins, which deny fundamental
rights. The avowed purpose of the service which strikes the keynote of the
Church's Lenten discipline is, that, being admonished by this terrible recital,
we may "flee from such vices, for which we affirm with our own mouths the
curse of God to be due."
§ 2. Sermons and addresses on social subjects
have, therefore, rightly had a notable prominence among Lenten observances
for several years past. No such demonstration in favour of Social Reform
has been seen in our time as would take place if, on any Ash-Wednesday,
all the people in every English parish should meet, and understandingly
and unfeignedly give their assent to the series of "resolutions" which
their parish priests are instructed to move in the parish assembly, and
for which the people are asked to "vote" by saying, not "Aye," but "Amen."
In the very forefront of the catalogue of sins
that bring a curse—in the same dreadful list as the "unmerciful, fornicators,
and adulterers, covetous persons, idolaters, slanderers, drunkards, and extortioners
"—stands this—
"Cursed is he that removeth his neighbour's
landmark.
And the people shall answer and say, Amen."
Nothing could more clearly illustrate the social
purpose of the Ash-Wednesday service. We are told that this is one of the
"sentences gathered out of the seven-and-twentieth chapter of Deuteronomy."1
Like her Lord and Master, in the parable of Social Inequality,2
the Church throws us back on the social lessons to be learnt from the history
and laws of the Hebrew people. "They have Moses and the prophets; let them
hear them." "Think not that I am come to destroy the law or the prophets:
I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil."3 She throws us back
on the teaching of the Old Testament about the Land Question.
§ 3. It has been well said that every great
reform has to pass through three stages.
First, "it's against the teaching of the Bible,"
and no one will listen to it. Then, "it's all very well in theory, but you
can't carry it out"; and practical politicians pooh-pooh it as visionary
and Utopian. Lastly, when the impossible thing is done, "that's exactly what
we have been in favour of, all along!" and all men praise it, and take credit
for it. Especially the practical politicians.
As regards the great movement of Social Reform
which, in nearly every civilised country, is working towards the abolition
of private property in land, we are beginning to hope that some of us, who
have taken part in it, may, after all, live to see it reach the beginning
of the third stage. But although the world as a whole moves forward, some
men move more slowly than others; and there are many who are still struggling
against doubts which strike at the very root of the proposed reform. Is the
proposed change, they ask, —a change so vast and momentous as to amount to
a social revolution, —is this change in accordance with those principles
by which we have learned to judge what is right and wrong in the sight of
God, and between man and man? And, for a very large number of Englishmen,
this still means—Is it in accordance with the teaching of the Bible?
§ 4 Now, whether we regard the Bible as
a book in a special way "inspired," or as a collection of books in a special
degree "inspiring"; whether we treat these ancient Hebrew writings as authentic
history or as allegorical tradition, the answer is, in either case, interesting
and important. For the traditions, history, laws and literature of the
Jews are better known to most Englishmen than the traditions, history,
laws and literature of their own nation. There is still, as Dr. Margoliouth
points out4, a large class, "though smaller than it once was,
whose sole encyclopædia, not only of theology and ethics, but also
of history and archaeology, is the Bible." For the Hebrew records, in their
English version, have long been the most widely circulated English classic.
It is even "sold under cost price at tenpence" by a great Society, solely
devoted to its dissemination. Men who know nothing of the Laws of their own
Edward the Confessor, who never heard that Edward I. was called the English
Justinian, and could not even guess why he was so called, know at least something
of the Laws of Moses and of the reconstructive work of Nehemiah. If we are
to learn from the lessons of history at all, here is the best known and most
accessible of all histories ready to our hand. Pliny's Latifundia perdidere
Italiam ... et provincias5 teaches the same lesson as, e.g., Isaiah
v. 8-10, but to English ears it has not the same intimate appeal to old-standing
memories and treasured associations. Only a very small number of English
citizens pursue their study of moral principles in the somewhat dreary atmosphere
of "Ethical" Societies, or through the pages of and volumes on Moral Philosophy.
But, to the vast majority of our fellow-country-men, the Hebrew Bible, clothed
in the beautiful English of the Jacobean translation, still holds a position
of pre-eminent authority on moral questions.
§ 5. It is quite possible to doubt whether
Moses actually wrote the whole of the five books to which his name is attached,
and to be uncertain whether there were one or two or several "Isaiahs,"
and yet to have the highest reverence for the ancient documents, which have
brought down to us, through a thousand generations, some of the earliest traditions
of mankind.
It would be out of place in these pages to discuss
either the theological or the critical questions which beset the study
of the Pentateuch. The average British Bible-reader knows little, and cares
less, about the dissection of the "Book of Origins" from the "Book of the
Covenant," nor has he so much as heard of the literary labours of the "Elohist"
and the "Jehovist." He takes for granted the Mosaic authorship of the "Five
books," just as he often assumes the accuracy of Bishop Ussher's marginal
dates. The modern literary criticism of the Pentateuch, pursued with unflagging
zeal by a multitude of scholars during more than half a century past, has
sought, by the application to words and phrases of much the same method
of patient observation and generalisation as Darwin applied to the facts
of Biology, to make these ancient writings give up the secret of their evolution
into their present form. It is now believed that the Pentateuch, as it has
been handed down to us in the Jewish canon, is a compilation, or rather the
result of a series of compilations; that it contains the work of many writers
who flourished under the divided monarchy, and during the Exile. These writers
collected, partly from earlier writings, now lost to us, and partly from
stones handed down by word of mouth, often in verse,6 the traditions,
folklore, laws and customs of their race. The laws were not only recorded,
but annotated, supplemented, and to some extent adapted to the varying
circumstances and changing ideas of two or three eventful centuries. After
the fashion of Eastern writers, these laws, in their collected form, were
attributed to the great Lawgiver, Moses, exactly as even the Psalms which
the exiles sang as they "wept by the waters of Babylon" were included in
one volume with the "Psalms of David"; exactly as proverbs of later date
were fathered upon Solomon. The documents thus compiled, though subjected
to frequent editing, still largely preserve, in their combined form, their
individual peculiarities of language, formula, nomenclature and standpoint.7
§ 6. No attempt is made in this little
book to distinguish between the various literary "sources" of the Hebrew
Land Laws.8 The material has been drawn freely from all of them.
My present purpose is simply to disentangle from the best known of the extant
Hebrew writings the main lines of Hebrew thought on the Land Question. The
results are, on the whole, practically independent of the conclusions of
the Higher Criticism; for while there may be differences of detail between
(say) the Deuteronomic and the "Priestly" legislation, there is absolutely
no difference in principle. The Torah or "Law" is, therefore, here taken
in the form which it assumed when completely developed and fully committed
to writing. "For," as is well said by two writers who may be thought to have
pushed fearlessness of criticism almost to the point of rashness,
"even if the religious contents of parts of
the Old Testament in their original form should turn out to be somewhat
less rich and varied than is agreeable to traditional ideas, yet the text
in its present form, even if not in the original, has an independent right
of existence, and the interpretation put upon this text by Jewish and Christian
students deserves the most respectful attention. The Old Testament was
surely not a dead book to the Jews of the great post-exilic age, but was
full of light, and susceptible of the most varied and edifying adaptations."9
For "the Jewish law, if it is to be judged properly,
must be judged as a whole, and not with exclusive reference to one of its
parts. ... In all its stages, the Mosaic law held before the eyes of Israel
an ideal of duty to be observed, of laws to be obeyed, of principles to
be maintained; it taught them that human nature needed to be restrained;
it impressed upon them the necessity of discipline."10
§ 7. But, whatever may have been the process
by which these writings assumed their present form, they are rightly called
the Books of Moses, for the great historical figure of the Lawgiver dominates
them throughout, and alone makes them intelligible. Moses nowhere claims
the authorship of the Pentateuch, and he would have been the last to complain
that some part of the legislation it contains should be attributed to other
hands. "Enviest thou for my sake?" He said, when Joshua, jealous for his
chief's honour, asked him to rebuke some unauthorised persons who "prophesied"
in the camp; "would God that all the Lord's people were prophets, and that
the Lord would put His spirit upon them!"11 If it was through
Moses that "the Lord gave the word," it is no less true that "great was the
company of those that published it."12
A descendant of Levi, nursed by his own Hebrew
mother, though adopted by an Egyptian princess and brought up as an Egyptian,13
Moses was familiar from his earliest days both with the traditions of the
people who looked back to Abraham as their ancestor, and with the culture
of the proud Egyptian empire,14 under which they were being oppressed.
According to Manetho, he was brought up as a priest, and was well acquainted
with Greek, Chaldæan and Assyrian literature. But the ties of blood,
and his faith in the God of his fathers were strong enough to make him renounce
the prospect of a great career, and to throw in his lot with his enslaved
kinsmen.15 In early manhood, moved by indignation at an act of
oppression, he killed an Egyptian who was ill-treating a Hebrew, and was
driven into exile.16 Into his peaceful and meditative life, as
Jethro's shepherd in Arabia, broke the Divine call to become the deliverer
of his race.17 "The God of thy father, the God of Abraham, the
God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob" is revealed to him by a Name with which
his Egyptian learning must have made him already familiar.18 His
Hebrew birth and his Egyptian education alike call him to, and equip him
for, the task of deliverance. "Come thou, therefore, and I will send thee
unto Pharaoh, that thou mayst bring forth My people the children of Israel
out of Egypt."
Whether Moses, during the educative and constructive
period of the desert wandering, laid down the "Law" in detail as we now
know it, or whether he merely sketched broad outlines, within which a long
succession of later legislators and teachers supplied the details, matters
little. The spirit and the groundwork of the Law is clearly Mosaic. In its
differences from other ancient codes, no less than in its resemblances to
them,19 it witnesses to an original which can only be accounted
for on the assumption that Moses lived, and delivered the Hebrews from slavery,
and laid the foundation of their national law; that he was "the ultimate founder
of both the national and the religious life of Israel."20
§ 8. It is natural enough that Moses and
the Prophets should have a good deal to say, and for us to hear, on the
Land Question. For, so long as man remains a land animal, the Lawgiver and
the Social Reformer cannot avoid the ever-pressing question of the relation
of man to land. Like some other ancient peoples (and some modern "savages"),
the Hebrews saw clearly truths about the Land Question which have become
obscured to most of us by the complexities of our modern industrial system.
It is, of course, obvious that the details of the land laws which Moses promulgated,
and to which the Prophets appealed, cannot apply to a nation so differently
circumstanced as our own. In considering the details, we must constantly
bear in mind the circumstances of the time and place, and the history and
condition of the people. "The precepts then uttered," said one of the early
Fathers of the Church, in discussing certain provisions of the Mosaic law,
"had reference to the weakness of them who were receiving the laws; since
also to be worshipped with the vapour of sacrifice is very unworthy of God,
just as to lisp is unworthy of a philosopher. Do not thou then require their
excellency now, when their use is past; but then when the time was calling
for them."21 But the principles which underlay those "precepts"
are fundamental and immutable, because the relation of man to the land on
which he lives and works is always and essentially the same. The earth is
still what one of the Apocryphal writers called it, "the mother of all things."22
Land is still, as it was in the time of Moses, the home and the workshop
of the human race, the reservoir from which human labour draws all the raw
materials23 wherewith to satisfy its needs. "Land is perpetual
man." "One generation passeth away, and another generation cometh: but the
earth abideth for ever."24 The Pentateuchal tradition recognises,
in what has been described as a "first attempt at organic chemistry," as
clearly as the modern scientist does, that even the materials of which the
human body is composed are drawn from the land and finally return to it.25
§ 9. It is, therefore, to the underlying
principles of the Hebrew social philosophy, other than to the details of
Mosaic legislation, that this little work is designed to call attention.
Modern writers on the Land Question—Gerrard Winstanley the Digger, Spence
of Newcastle, John Locke, William Ogilvie of Pittensea, Patrick Edward
Dove, Herbert Spencer (in his earlier phase), Alfred Russel Wallace, and,
above all, Henry George—have, after all, only restated, and attempted to
apply to modern social needs, principles which were enunciated by Moses
and enforced by many later Hebrew teachers. Some of them would have readily
admitted this: would, indeed, have gloried in it. It is not without significance
that one of Henry George's most telling and popular lectures had as its
subject, "Moses". The great Hebrew liberation could hardly have found in
our time a more fitting and sympathetic exposition.
But, ancient as these principles are, the most
characteristic of modern problems— problems of poverty amid increasing wealth,
of housing, of unemployment—are compelling the attention of social reformers,
more and more, to them. For, what we call the Land Question remains essentially
the same under everchanging forms of social organisation. When "the Lord
God formed man of the dust of the ground," He so formed him that he could
live only upon and from the land whence he came. It is true, now as always
(as Sir William Petty long ago put it in an arresting sentence26),
that "Land is the mother and Labour is the father of all wealth." Many
centuries earlier, the writer of one of the Hebrew "wisdom books" had,
as we have already seen, proclaimed the same truth.