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<h2> CHAPTER IX. </h2>
<p>Mr. Bodiham was sitting in his study at the Rectory. The
nineteenth-century Gothic windows, narrow and pointed, admitted the light
grudgingly; in spite of the brilliant July weather, the room was sombre.
Brown varnished bookshelves lined the walls, filled with row upon row of
those thick, heavy theological works which the second-hand booksellers
generally sell by weight. The mantelpiece, the over-mantel, a towering
structure of spindly pillars and little shelves, were brown and varnished.
The writing-desk was brown and varnished. So were the chairs, so was the
door. A dark red-brown carpet with patterns covered the floor. Everything
was brown in the room, and there was a curious brownish smell.</p>
<p>In the midst of this brown gloom Mr. Bodiham sat at his desk. He was the
man in the Iron Mask. A grey metallic face with iron cheek-bones and a
narrow iron brow; iron folds, hard and unchanging, ran perpendicularly
down his cheeks; his nose was the iron beak of some thin, delicate bird of
rapine. He had brown eyes, set in sockets rimmed with iron; round them the
skin was dark, as though it had been charred. Dense wiry hair covered his
skull; it had been black, it was turning grey. His ears were very small
and fine. His jaws, his chin, his upper lip were dark, iron-dark, where he
had shaved. His voice, when he spoke and especially when he raised it in
preaching, was harsh, like the grating of iron hinges when a seldom-used
door is opened.</p>
<p>It was nearly half-past twelve. He had just come back from church, hoarse
and weary with preaching. He preached with fury, with passion, an iron man
beating with a flail upon the souls of his congregation. But the souls of
the faithful at Crome were made of india-rubber, solid rubber; the flail
rebounded. They were used to Mr. Bodiham at Crome. The flail thumped on
india-rubber, and as often as not the rubber slept.</p>
<p>That morning he had preached, as he had often preached before, on the
nature of God. He had tried to make them understand about God, what a
fearful thing it was to fall into His hands. God—they thought of
something soft and merciful. They blinded themselves to facts; still more,
they blinded themselves to the Bible. The passengers on the "Titanic" sang
"Nearer my God to Thee" as the ship was going down. Did they realise what
they were asking to be brought nearer to? A white fire of righteousness,
an angry fire...</p>
<p>When Savonarola preached, men sobbed and groaned aloud. Nothing broke the
polite silence with which Crome listened to Mr. Bodiham—only an
occasional cough and sometimes the sound of heavy breathing. In the front
pew sat Henry Wimbush, calm, well-bred, beautifully dressed. There were
times when Mr. Bodiham wanted to jump down from the pulpit and shake him
into life,—times when he would have liked to beat and kill his whole
congregation.</p>
<p>He sat at his desk dejectedly. Outside the Gothic windows the earth was
warm and marvellously calm. Everything was as it had always been. And yet,
and yet...It was nearly four years now since he had preached that sermon
on Matthew xxiv. 7: "For nation shall rise up against nation, and kingdom
against kingdom: and there shall be famines, and pestilences, and
earthquakes, in divers places." It was nearly four years. He had had the
sermon printed; it was so terribly, so vitally important that all the
world should know what he had to say. A copy of the little pamphlet lay on
his desk—eight small grey pages, printed by a fount of type that had
grown blunt, like an old dog's teeth, by the endless champing and champing
of the press. He opened it and began to read it yet once again.</p>
<p>"'For nation shall rise up against nation, and kingdom against kingdom:
and there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers
places.'</p>
<p>"Nineteen centuries have elapsed since Our Lord gave utterance to those
words, and not a single one of them has been without wars, plagues,
famines, and earthquakes. Mighty empires have crashed in ruin to the
ground, diseases have unpeopled half the globe, there have been vast
natural cataclysms in which thousands have been overwhelmed by flood and
fire and whirlwind. Time and again, in the course of these nineteen
centuries, such things have happened, but they have not brought Christ
back to earth. They were 'signs of the times' inasmuch as they were signs
of God's wrath against the chronic wickedness of mankind, but they were
not signs of the times in connection with the Second Coming.</p>
<p>"If earnest Christians have regarded the present war as a true sign of the
Lord's approaching return, it is not merely because it happens to be a
great war involving the lives of millions of people, not merely because
famine is tightening its grip on every country in Europe, not merely
because disease of every kind, from syphilis to spotted fever, is rife
among the warring nations; no, it is not for these reasons that we regard
this war as a true Sign of the Times, but because in its origin and its
progress it is marked by certain characteristics which seem to connect it
almost beyond a doubt with the predictions in Christian Prophecy relating
to the Second Coming of the Lord.</p>
<p>"Let me enumerate the features of the present war which most clearly
suggest that it is a Sign foretelling the near approach of the Second
Advent. Our Lord said that 'this Gospel of the Kingdom shall be preached
in all the world for a witness unto all nations; and then shall the end
come.' Although it would be presumptuous for us to say what degree of
evangelisation will be regarded by God as sufficient, we may at least
confidently hope that a century of unflagging missionary work has brought
the fulfilment of this condition at any rate near. True, the larger number
of the world's inhabitants have remained deaf to the preaching of the true
religion; but that does not vitiate the fact that the Gospel HAS been
preached 'for a witness' to all unbelievers from the Papist to the Zulu.
The responsibility for the continued prevalence of unbelief lies, not with
the preachers, but with those preached to.</p>
<p>"Again, it has been generally recognised that 'the drying up of the waters
of the great river Euphrates,' mentioned in the sixteenth chapter of
Revelation, refers to the decay and extinction of Turkish power, and is a
sign of the near approaching end of the world as we know it. The capture
of Jerusalem and the successes in Mesopotamia are great strides forward in
the destruction of the Ottoman Empire; though it must be admitted that the
Gallipoli episode proved that the Turk still possesses a 'notable horn' of
strength. Historically speaking, this drying up of Ottoman power has been
going on for the past century; the last two years have witnessed a great
acceleration of the process, and there can be no doubt that complete
desiccation is within sight.</p>
<p>"Closely following on the words concerning the drying up of Euphrates
comes the prophecy of Armageddon, that world war with which the Second
Coming is to be so closely associated. Once begun, the world war can end
only with the return of Christ, and His coming will be sudden and
unexpected, like that of a thief in the night.</p>
<p>"Let us examine the facts. In history, exactly as in St. John's Gospel,
the world war is immediately preceded by the drying up of Euphrates, or
the decay of Turkish power. This fact alone would be enough to connect the
present conflict with the Armageddon of Revelation and therefore to point
to the near approach of the Second Advent. But further evidence of an even
more solid and convincing nature can be adduced.</p>
<p>"Armageddon is brought about by the activities of three unclean spirits,
as it were toads, which come out of the mouths of the Dragon, the Beast,
and the False Prophet. If we can identify these three powers of evil much
light will clearly be thrown on the whole question.</p>
<p>"The Dragon, the Beast, and the False Prophet can all be identified in
history. Satan, who can only work through human agency, has used these
three powers in the long war against Christ which has filled the last
nineteen centuries with religious strife. The Dragon, it has been
sufficiently established, is pagan Rome, and the spirit issuing from its
mouth is the spirit of Infidelity. The Beast, alternatively symbolised as
a Woman, is undoubtedly the Papal power, and Popery is the spirit which it
spews forth. There is only one power which answers to the description of
the False Prophet, the wolf in sheep's clothing, the agent of the devil
working in the guise of the Lamb, and that power is the so-called 'Society
of Jesus.' The spirit that issues from the mouth of the False Prophet is
the spirit of False Morality.</p>
<p>"We may assume, then, that the three evil spirits are Infidelity, Popery,
and False Morality. Have these three influences been the real cause of the
present conflict? The answer is clear.</p>
<p>"The spirit of Infidelity is the very spirit of German criticism. The
Higher Criticism, as it is mockingly called, denies the possibility of
miracles, prediction, and real inspiration, and attempts to account for
the Bible as a natural development. Slowly but surely, during the last
eighty years, the spirit of Infidelity has been robbing the Germans of
their Bible and their faith, so that Germany is to-day a nation of
unbelievers. Higher Criticism has thus made the war possible; for it would
be absolutely impossible for any Christian nation to wage war as Germany
is waging it.</p>
<p>"We come next to the spirit of Popery, whose influence in causing the war
was quite as great as that of Infidelity, though not, perhaps, so
immediately obvious. Since the Franco-Prussian War the Papal power has
steadily declined in France, while in Germany it has steadily increased.
To-day France is an anti-papal state, while Germany possesses a powerful
Roman Catholic minority. Two papally controlled states, Germany and
Austria, are at war with six anti-papal states—England, France,
Italy, Russia, Serbia, and Portugal. Belgium is, of course, a thoroughly
papal state, and there can be little doubt that the presence on the
Allies' side of an element so essentially hostile has done much to hamper
the righteous cause and is responsible for our comparative ill-success.
That the spirit of Popery is behind the war is thus seen clearly enough in
the grouping of the opposed powers, while the rebellion in the Roman
Catholic parts of Ireland has merely confirmed a conclusion already
obvious to any unbiased mind.</p>
<p>"The spirit of False Morality has played as great a part in this war as
the two other evil spirits. The Scrap of Paper incident is the nearest and
most obvious example of Germany's adherence to this essentially
unchristian or Jesuitical morality. The end is German world-power, and in
the attainment of this end, any means are justifiable. It is the true
principle of Jesuitry applied to international politics.</p>
<p>"The identification is now complete. As was predicted in Revelation, the
three evil spirits have gone forth just as the decay of the Ottoman power
was nearing completion, and have joined together to make the world war.
The warning, 'Behold, I come as a thief,' is therefore meant for the
present period—for you and me and all the world. This war will lead
on inevitably to the war of Armageddon, and will only be brought to an end
by the Lord's personal return.</p>
<p>"And when He returns, what will happen? Those who are in Christ, St. John
tells us, will be called to the Supper of the Lamb. Those who are found
fighting against Him will be called to the Supper of the Great God—that
grim banquet where they shall not feast, but be feasted on. 'For,' as St.
John says, 'I saw an angel standing in the sun; and he cried in a loud
voice, saying to all the fowls that fly in the midst of heaven, Come and
gather yourselves together unto the supper of the Great God; that ye may
eat the flesh of kings, and the flesh of captains, and the flesh of mighty
men, and the flesh of horses, and of them that sit on them, and the flesh
of all men, both free and bond, both small and great.' All the enemies of
Christ will be slain with the sword of him that sits upon the horse, 'and
all the fowls will be filled with their flesh.' That is the Supper of the
Great God.</p>
<p>"It may be soon or it may, as men reckon time, be long; but sooner or
later, inevitably, the Lord will come and deliver the world from its
present troubles. And woe unto them who are called, not to the Supper of
the Lamb, but to the Supper of the Great God. They will realise then, but
too late, that God is a God of Wrath as well as a God of Forgiveness. The
God who sent bears to devour the mockers of Elisha, the God who smote the
Egyptians for their stubborn wickedness, will assuredly smite them too,
unless they make haste to repent. But perhaps it is already too late. Who
knows but that to-morrow, in a moment even, Christ may be upon us
unawares, like a thief? In a little while, who knows? The angel standing
in the sun may be summoning the ravens and vultures from their crannies in
the rocks to feed upon the putrefying flesh of the millions of unrighteous
whom God's wrath has destroyed. Be ready, then; the coming of the Lord is
at hand. May it be for all of you an object of hope, not a moment to look
forward to with terror and trembling."</p>
<p>Mr. Bodiham closed the little pamphlet and leaned back in his chair. The
argument was sound, absolutely compelling; and yet—it was four years
since he had preached that sermon; four years, and England was at peace,
the sun shone, the people of Crome were as wicked and indifferent as ever—more
so, indeed, if that were possible. If only he could understand, if the
heavens would but make a sign! But his questionings remained unanswered.
Seated there in his brown varnished chair under the Ruskinian window, he
could have screamed aloud. He gripped the arms of his chair—gripping,
gripping for control. The knuckles of his hands whitened; he bit his lip.
In a few seconds he was able to relax the tension; he began to rebuke
himself for his rebellious impatience.</p>
<p>Four years, he reflected; what were four years, after all? It must
inevitably take a long time for Armageddon to ripen to yeast itself up.
The episode of 1914 had been a preliminary skirmish. And as for the war
having come to an end—why, that, of course, was illusory. It was
still going on, smouldering away in Silesia, in Ireland, in Anatolia; the
discontent in Egypt and India was preparing the way, perhaps, for a great
extension of the slaughter among the heathen peoples. The Chinese boycott
of Japan, and the rivalries of that country and America in the Pacific,
might be breeding a great new war in the East. The prospect, Mr. Bodiham
tried to assure himself, was hopeful; the real, the genuine Armageddon
might soon begin, and then, like a thief in the night...But, in spite of
all his comfortable reasoning, he remained unhappy, dissatisfied. Four
years ago he had been so confident; God's intention seemed then so plain.
And now? Now, he did well to be angry. And now he suffered too.</p>
<p>Sudden and silent as a phantom Mrs. Bodiham appeared, gliding noiselessly
across the room. Above her black dress her face was pale with an opaque
whiteness, her eyes were pale as water in a glass, and her strawy hair was
almost colourless. She held a large envelope in her hand.</p>
<p>"This came for you by the post," she said softly.</p>
<p>The envelope was unsealed. Mechanically Mr. Bodiham tore it open. It
contained a pamphlet, larger than his own and more elegant in appearance.
"The House of Sheeny, Clerical Outfitters, Birmingham." He turned over the
pages. The catalogue was tastefully and ecclesiastically printed in
antique characters with illuminated Gothic initials. Red marginal lines,
crossed at the corners after the manner of an Oxford picture frame,
enclosed each page of type, little red crosses took the place of full
stops. Mr. Bodiham turned the pages.</p>
<p>"Soutane in best black merino. Ready to wear; in all sizes. Clerical frock
coats. From nine guineas. A dressy garment, tailored by our own
experienced ecclesiastical cutters."</p>
<p>Half-tone illustrations represented young curates, some dapper, some
Rugbeian and muscular, some with ascetic faces and large ecstatic eyes,
dressed in jackets, in frock-coats, in surplices, in clerical evening
dress, in black Norfolk suitings.</p>
<p>"A large assortment of chasubles.</p>
<p>"Rope girdles.</p>
<p>"Sheeny's Special Skirt Cassocks. Tied by a string about the waist...When
worn under a surplice presents an appearance indistinguishable from that
of a complete cassock...Recommended for summer wear and hot climates."</p>
<p>With a gesture of horror and disgust Mr. Bodiham threw the catalogue into
the waste-paper basket. Mrs. Bodiham looked at him; her pale, glaucous
eyes reflected his action without comment.</p>
<p>"The village," she said in her quiet voice, "the village grows worse and
worse every day."</p>
<p>"What has happened now?" asked Mr. Bodiham, feeling suddenly very weary.</p>
<p>"I'll tell you." She pulled up a brown varnished chair and sat down. In
the village of Crome, it seemed, Sodom and Gomorrah had come to a second
birth.</p>
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