Tuesday, December 12, 2023

Words & Deeds Alone Do Not Make a Man

Harry Emerson Fosdick

Judgment based on deeds alone can never truly estimate a man, because in every important decision of our lives an "unpublished self" finds no expression in our outward act.  Duty is not always clear; at times it seems a labyrinth without a clue. Perplexed, we balance in long deliberation the opposing reasons for this act or that, until, forced to choose, we obtain only a majority vote for the decision.

Yet that uncertain majority alone is published in our deed; man's eyes never see the unexpressed protestant minority behind. And when the choice proves wrong, and friends are grieved and enemies condemn and what we did is hateful to ourselves, only one who knows how much we wanted to do right, and who accounts not only the published but the unpublished self can truly estimate our worth.

Peter, who denied his Lord, it may be because he wanted the privilege of being near him at the trial, is not the only one who has appealed from the outward aspect of his deed to the inner intention of his heart: "Lord, thou knowest all things; thou knowest that I love thee" (John 21:17).

Moreover, even when we choose aright, no deed can ever gather into utterance all that is best and deepest in us. A mother's love is as much greater than any word she speaks or act she does, as the sunshine is greater than the focused point where in a burning glass we gather a ray of it. We are infinitely more than words can utter or deeds express. No adequate judgment, therefore, can rest on deeds alone. A machine may be estimated by its output, but a man is too subtle and profound, his motives and purposes too inexpressible, his temptations and inward struggles too intimate and unrevealed, his possibilities too great to be roughly estimated by his acts alone.


    "Not on the vulgar mass

    Called 'work' must sentence pass,

Things done, that took the eye and had the price;

    O'er which, from level stand,

    The low world laid its hand,

Found straightway to its mind, could value in a trice:


    But all, the world's coarse thumb

    And finger failed to plumb,

So passed in making up the main account;

    All instincts immature,

    All purposes unsure,

That weighted not as his work, yet swelled the man's amount:


    Thoughts hardly to be packed

    Into a narrow act,

Fancies that broke through language and escaped;

    All I could never be,

    All, men ignored in me,

This, I was worth to God, whose wheel the pitcher shaped."


- from the poem "Rabbi Ben Ezra" by Robert Browning

- an interpretation on Browning's message in the poem




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