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<h2> SKY PILOTS. </h2>
<p>The authorship of the designation "sky pilot" is as unknown as that of the
four gospels. Yet its origin is recent. It has only been in use for a few
years, say ten, or at the outside twenty. Nobody knows, however, who was
the first man from whose lips it fell. Probably he was an American, but
his name and address are not ascertained. Surely this fact, which has
thousands if not millions of parallels, should abate the impudence of
religionists who ask "Who made the world?" when they do not know who made
nine-tenths of the well-known things it contains.</p>
<p>Whatever its origin, the designation is a happy one. It fits like a glove,
Repeat it to the first man you meet, and though he never heard it before,
he will knew that you mean a minister. For this very reason it makes the
men of God angry. They feel insulted, and let you see it. They accuse you
of calling them names, and if you smile too sarcastically they will
indulge in some well-selected Bible language themselves.</p>
<p>There are some trades that will not bear honest designations, and the
minister's is one of them. Call him what you please, except what he is,
and he is not disquieted. But call him "sky-pilot" and he starts up like
Macbeth at the ghost of Banquo, exclaiming "Come in any other form but
that!"</p>
<p>Go down to the seaside and look at one of those bluff, weather-beaten,
honest fellows, who know all the rocks and shoals, and tides and channels,
for miles around. Call one of them a "pilot," and he will not be offended.
The term is legitimate. It exactly denotes his business. He is rather
proud of it. His calling is honorable and useful. He pilots ships through
uncertain and dangerous waters to their destination. He does his work,
takes his pay, and feels satisfied; and if you cry "pilot!" he answers
merrily with a "what cheer?"</p>
<p>But "sky" in front of "pilot" makes all the difference. It makes the man
of God feel like having a cold shower bath; then the reaction sets in and
he grows hot—sometimes as hot as H—— well, Hades.</p>
<p>We are not going to swear if the parson does,<br/>
But after all, he <i>is</i> a "pilot" and a "sky" pilot.<br/>
He undertakes to pilot people to Heaven.<br/></p>
<p>Let him board your ship and take the helm, and he will guide you over the
Black Sea of Death to Port Felicity that, at least, is what he says in his
trade circular, though it turns out very differently in practice, as we
shall see presently.</p>
<p>Let us first notice a great difference between the sea pilot and the sky
pilot. The honest salt boards the ship, and takes her out to sea, or
brings her into port. When the work is over he presents his bill, or it is
done for him. He does not ask for payment in advance. He neither takes nor
gives credit. But the sky pilot does take credit and he gives none. He is
always paid beforehand. Every year he expects a good retaining fee in the
shape of a stipend or a benefice, or a good percentage of the pew rents
and collections. But when his services are really wanted he leaves you in
the lurch. You do not need a pilot to Heaven until you come to die. Then
your voyage begins in real earnest. But the sky-pilot does not go with
you. Oh dear no! That is no part of <i>his</i> bargain. "Ah my friend," he
says, "I must leave you now. You must do the rest for yourself. I have
coached you for years in celestial navigation; if you remember my lessons
you will have a prosperous voyage. Good day, dear friend. I'm going to see
another customer. But we shall meet again."</p>
<p>Now this is not a fair contract. It is really obtaining money under false
pretences. The sky pilot has never been to Heaven himself. He does not
know the way. Anyhow, there are hundreds of different routes, and they
cannot all lead to the same place. Certainly they all start from this
world, but that is all they have in common, and where they end is a
puzzle. To pay money in such circumstances is foolish and an encouragement
to fraud. The best way to pay for goods is on delivery; in the same way
the sky pilot should be paid at the finish.</p>
<p>But how is that to be done? Well, easily. All you have to do is to address
the sky pilot in this fashion—"Dearly beloved pilot to the land of
bliss! let our contract be fair and mutual. Give me credit as I give you
credit. Don't ask for cash on account. I'll pay at the finish. Your
directions may be sound; they ought to be, for you are very dogmatic.
Still, there is room for doubt, and I don't want to be diddled. You tell
me to follow your rules of celestial navigation. Well, I will. You say we
shall meet at Port Felicity. Well, I hope so; and when we do meet I'll
square up."</p>
<p>Of course, it may be objected that this would starve the sky pilots. But
why should it do anything of the kind? Have <i>they</i> no faith! Must all
the faith be on <i>our</i> side? Should they not practise a little of what
they preach? God tells them to <i>pray</i> for their daily bread, and no
doubt he would add some cheese and butter. All they have to do is to <i>ask</i>
for it. "Ask and ye shall receive," says the text, and it has many
confirmations. For forty years the Jews were among the unemployed, and
Jehovah sent them food daily. "He rained down bread from heaven." The
prophet Elijah, also, lived in the wilderness on the sandwiches God sent
him—bread and meat in the morning, and bread and meat in the
evening. There was likewise the widow's cruse of oil and barrel of flour,
which supported her and the man of God day by day without diminishing.
These things actually happened. They are as true as the Bible. And they
may happen again. At any rate they <i>should</i> happen. The sky-pilots
should subsist on the fruits of prayer. Let them live by faith—not
<i>our</i> faith, but <i>their</i> own. This will prove their sincerity,
and give us some trust in their teaching. And if they <i>should</i> starve
in the experiment—well, it is worth making, and they will fall
martyrs to truth and human happiness. <i>One</i> batch of martyrs will
suffice. There will be no need of what Gibbon calls "an annual
consumption."</p>
<p>The men of God pilot <i>us</i> to Heaven, but they are very loth to go
there themselves. Heaven is their "home," but they prefer exile, even in
this miserable vale of tears. When they fall ill, they do not welcome it
as a call from the Father. They do not sing "Nearer my God to thee." We do
not find them going about saying "I shall be home shortly." Oh no! They
indulge freely in self-pity. Like a limpet to a rock do they cling to this
wretched, sinful world. Congregations are asked if they cannot "do
something," a subscription is got up, and the man of God rushes off to the
seaside, where prayer, in co-operation with oxygen and ozone, restore him
to health, enable him to dodge "going home," and qualify him for another
term of penal servitude on earth.</p>
<p>It appears to us that sky pilots, like other men, should be judged by
their practice. If they show no belief in what they preach, we are foolish
to believe in it any more than they do. It also appears to us that their
profession is as fraudulent as fortune-telling. Many a poor old woman has
been imprisoned for taking sixpence from a servant girl, after promising
her a tall, dark husband and eight fine children; but men dressed in black
coats and white chokers are allowed to take money for promises of good
fortune in the "beautiful land above." It further appears to us that the
sky pilots should be compelled to come to a reasonable agreement before
their trade is licensed. They should settle <i>where Heaven</i> is before
they begin business. Better still, perhaps, every applicant for a license
should prove that <i>some</i> human soul <i>has been</i> piloted to
Heaven. Until that is done, the profession is only robbery and imposture.</p>
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