Evelyn Underhill

The School of Charity


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THE SCHOOL OF CHARITY

       Morehouse titles by Evelyn Underhill

      An Anthology of the Love of God

      The Spiritual Life

      The Mystery of Sacrifice

      Mystics of the Church

      ____________________

      Lent with Evelyn Underhill, edited by G.P. Mellick-Belshaw

      ____________________

       Treasurers from the Spiritual Classics series

      Abba

      The Light of Christ

      The Fruits of the Spirit

      THE SCHOOL

      OF CHARITY

       Meditations on the Christian Creed

      EVELYN UNDERHILL

      ©Longman Group UK Limited. This edition of The School of Charity first published by Morehouse Publishing in 1991 by arrangement with Longman Group UK Limited.

      First published in 1934 by Longmans, Green and Co., LTD

      First American edition published by Morehouse Publishing

       Editorial Office

      78 Danbury Road

      Wilton, CT 06897

       Corporate Office

      P.O. Box 1321

      Harrisburg, PA 17105

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the written permission of the publisher.

       Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Underhill, Evelyn, 1875-1941,

      The school of charity: meditations on the Christian creed / Evelyn Underhill.—1st American ed.

      p. cm.

      Reprint. Originally published: London: Longmans, Green, 1934

      ISBN 0-8192-1548-1

      1. Nicene Creed—Meditations. 2. Spiritual Life—Anglican authors. I. Title.

      BT999.U5 1991

      238’. 142—dc20

      90-19825

      CIP

       Printed in the United States of America by

      BSC LITHO

      Harrisburg, PA 17105

      To PLESHEY

      with my love

      CONTENTS

       FOREWORD

       PREFACE

       Part I

       I. I BELIEVE

       II. ONE GOD, CREATOR

       III. ONE LORD

       Part II

       IV. INCARNATE

       V. CRUCIFIED

       VI. GLORIFIED

       Part III

       VII. SPIRIT

       VIII. CHURCH

       IX. THE WORLD TO COME

      FOREWORD

      It was a great thing for London that we were able to induce one of the best-known writers on the Spiritual Life, to undertake our Lenten book for this year. I have read it carefully through twice, and I shall be surprised if it is not considered one of the deepest and most helpful books of the kind she has written.

      The first advice which I should give to the reader of it is that it shall be read through very carefully, first once and then twice, otherwise the deep thought and spiritual experience which underlies it might be missed.

      The truths that have gone home most to me (others may find messages in it which more appeal to them) are:

      (1) How few and great are the solid facts which underlie all religion. We discuss and dispute over so many things which lie on the surface, but “I believe in God” carries us right down into the heart of Eternal Mystery. “The Christian creed,” says the author, “is a hand-list of the soul’s essential requirements: the iron ration of truths, the knowledge of mighty realities”

      (2) The second fact which comes out in this book is how practical mystics are. I suppose that Miss Evelyn Underhill is best known as a writer on Mysticism, and yet you could not find a more practical book than this is.

       “What theology means by the Incarnation is the eternal Charity of God finding utterance within His creation.”

      “A Light we can bear to look at, and looking at must adore, comes to us from a Light we cannot bear to look at even whilst we worship it.”

      “Christ was trained in a carpenter’s shop; and we persist in preferring a confectioner’s shop. But the energy of rescue, the outpouring of sacrificial love, which the supernatural life demands, is not to be got from a diet of devotional meringues and éclairs.”

      “The spiritual life does not begin in an arrogant attempt at some peculiar kind of other-worldliness, a rejection of ordinary experience. It begins in the humble recognition that human things can be very holy, full of God.”

      All these are great sayings and are eminently practical.

      (3) That last quotation leads up to another fact very encouraging to us ordinary people, and that is the capability of all of us to live the spiritual life.

      “After all, the shepherds got there long before the Magi; and even so, the animals were already in position when the shepherds arrived.”

      “The essence of the story of the Magi is that it is no use to be too clever about life. Only in so far as we find God in it, do we find any meaning in it.”

      And more than that.

      “The child who began by receiving those unexpected pilgrims had a woman of the streets for His most faithful friend, and two thieves for His comrades at the last.”

      “The third-rate little town in the hills, with its limited social contacts and monotonous manual work, reproves us when we begin to fuss about our opportunities and our scope.”

      (4) But passing over for lack of space the fine chapters on the Cross and the Church—what will stay by