| Life at Herrnhut
from J. E. Hutton's History
of the Moravian Church
As we study the social and religious system which
now developed at Herrnhut,
it is well to bear in mind the fact that when the Count, as lord of the
nianor, first issued his - Injunctions and Prohibitions," he was not
aware
that, in so doing, lie was calling back to life once more the
discipline
of the old Bohemian Brethren. He had not yet read the history of the
Brethren,
and he had not yet studied Comenius's "Account of Discipline." He knew
but little of the Brethren's past, and the little that be knew was
wrong
; and, having no other plan to guide him, he took as his model the
constitution
lying ready to hand in the average German village of the day, and
adapted
that simple constitution to the special needs of the exiles.*( Here
again
Ritschl is wrong. He assumes (Geschichte des Pietismus Ill.
243)
that when Zinzendorf drew up his " Injunctions and Prohibitions " and "
Statutes " he was already acquainted with the Ralio Disciplinae. But
the
" Injunctions " and " Statutes " were read out on May 12th, and the
"Ratio"
was not discovered till July.) He had no desire to make Herrnhut
independent.
It was still to be a part of his estate, and conform to the laws of the
land; and still to be the home of a " Church within the Church," as
planned
by Luther long ago in his famous German Mass.
First, then the Count laid down
the rule that all male adults in Herrnhut, no matter to what sect they
might belong, should have a voice in the election of twelve Elders ;
and
henceforward these twelve Elders, like those in the neighbouring
estates
of Silesia, had control over every department of life, and enforced the
Injunctions and Prohibitions with an iron hand. They levied the usual
rates
and taxes to keep the streets and wells in order. They undertook the
care
of widows and orphans. They watched the relations of single young men
and
women. They kept a sharp eye on the doings at the inn. They called to
order
the tellers of evil tales ; and they banished from Herrnhut all who
disobeyed
the laws, or conducted themselves in an unbecoming, frivolous or
offensive
manner.
The power of the Elders was enormous.
If a new refugee desired to settle in Herrnhut, he must first obtain
permission
from the Elders. If a settler desired to go on a journey, he must first
obtain permission from the Elders. If a man desired to build a house ;
if a trader desired to change his calling ; if an apprentice desired to
leave his master ; if a visitor desired to stay the night, he must
first
obtain permission from the Elders. If a man fell in love and desired to
marry, he must first obtain the approval of the Elders ; and until that
approval had been obtained, he was not allowed to propose to the choice
of his heart. Let us see the reason for this remarkable
strictness.
As the Brethren settled down in
Herrnhut, they endeavoured, under the Count's direction, to realize the
dignity of labour For rich and poor, for Catholic and Protestant, for
all
able-bodied men and women, the same stern rule, held good. If a man
desired
to settle at Herrnhut, the one supreme condition was that he earned his
bread by honest toil, and lived a godly righteous and sober life. For
industrious
Catholics there was a hearty welcome ; for vagabonds, tramps and
whining
beggars there was not a bed to spare. If a man would work he might
stay,
and worship God according to his conscience ; but if he was lazy, he
was
ordered off the premises. As the Brethren met on Sunday morning for
early
worship in the Public hall, they joined with one accord in the prayer,
Bless the sweat of the brow and faithfulness in business ; and the only
business they allowed was business which they could ask the Lord to
bless.
To them work was a sacred duty, a delight and a means for the common
good.
If a man is blessed who has found his work, then blessed were the folk
at Herrnhut. "We do not work to live," said the Count ; "we live to
work."
The whole aim was the good of each and the good of all. As the grocer
stood
behind his counter, or the weaver plied his flying shuttle, he was
toiling,
not for himself alone, but for all his Brethren and Sisters. If a man
desired
to set up in business, he had first to obtain the permission of the
Elders
; and the Elders refused to grant the permission unless they thought
that
the business in question was needed by the rest of the people. "No
brother,"
ran the law at Herrnhut, "shall compete with his brother in trade." No
man was allowed to lend money on interest without the consent of the
Elders.
If two men had any dispute in business, they must come to terms within
a week ; and if they did not, or went to law, they were expelled. If a
man could buy an article in Herrnhut, he was not allowed to buy it
anywhere
else.
It is easy to see the purpose of
these regulations. They were an attempt to solve the social problem, to
banish competition, and to put co-operation in its place. For some
years
the scheme was crowned with glorious success. The settlement grew ; the
trade flourished the great firm of Durninger obtained a world-wide
reputation
; the women were skilled in weaving and spinning ; and the whole system
worked so well that in 1747 the Saxon Government besought the Count to
establish a similar settlement at Barby. At Herrnhut, in a word, if
nowhere
else, the social problem was solved. There, at least, the aged and ill
could live in peace and comfort ; there grim poverty was unknown ;
there
the widow and orphan were free from carking care; and there men and
women
of humble rank bad learned the truth that when men toil for the common
good there is a perennial nobleness in work.*(There was , however, no
community
of goods.) For pleasure the Brethren had neither time nor taste. They
worked,
on the average, sixteen hours a day, allowed only five hours for sleep,
and spent the remaining three at meals and meetings. The Count was as
Puritanic
as Oliver Cromwell himself. For some reason he had come to the
conclusion
that the less the settlers knew of pleasure the better, and therefore
he
laid down the law that 0 strolling popular entertainers should be
forbidden
to enter the holy city. No public buffoon ever cracked his jokes at
Herrnhut.
No tight-rope dancer poised on giddy height. No barrel-dancer rolled
his
empty barrel. No tout for lotteries swindled the simple. No juggler
mystified
the children. No cheap-jack cheated the innocent maidens. No
quack-doctor
sold his nasty pills. No melancholy bear made his feeble attempt to
dance.
For the social joys of private life the laws were stricter still. At
Herrnhut,
ran one comprehensive clause, there were to be no dances whatever, no
wedding
breakfasts, no christening bumpers, no drinking parties, no funeral
feasts,
and no games like those played in the surrounding villages. No bride at
Herrnhut ever carried a bouquet. No sponsor ever gave the new arrival a
mug or a silver spoon.
For sins of the coarse and vulgar
kind there was no mercy. If a man got drunk, or cursed, or stole, or
used
his fists, or committed adultery or fornication, -he was expelled, and
not permitted to return till he had given infallible proofs of true
repentance.
No guilty couple were allowed to "cheat the parson." No man was allowed
to strike his wife, and no wife was allowed to henpeck her husband; and
any woman found guilty of the latter crime was summoned before the
board
of Elders and reprimanded in public.
Again, the Count insisted on civil
order. He appointed a number of other officials. Some, called servants,
had to clean the wells, to sweep the streets, to repair the houses, and
to trim the gardens. For the sick there was a board of sick waiters ;
for
the poor a board of almoners ; for the wicked a board of monitors ; for
the ignorant a board of schoolmasters ; and each board held a
conference
every week. Once a week, on Saturday nights, the Elders met in Council
; once a week, on Monday mornings, they announced any new decrees; and
all inhabitants vowed obedience to them as Elders, to the Count as
Warden,
and finally to the law of the land. Thus had the Count, as lord of the
manor, drawn up a code of civil laws to be binding on all. We have
finished
the Manorial Injunctions and Prohibitions. We come to the free
religious
life of the community.
Let us first clear a difficulty
out of the way. As the Count was a loyal son of the Lutheran Church,
and
regarded the Augsburg Confession as inspired,*( I am not exaggerating.
In one of his discourses he says I regard the Augsburg Confession as
inspired,
and assert that it will be the creed of the Philadelphian Church till
Christ
comes again." See Muller Zinzendorf als Erneuerer, p. go, and
Becker,
P. 335.) it seems, at first sight, a marvellous fact that here at
Herrnhut
he allowed the Brethren to take steps which led ere long to the renewal
of their Church. He allowed them to sing Brethren's Hymns ; he allowed
them to revive old Brethren's customs; he allowed them to hold
independent
meetings ; and he even resolved to do his best to revive the old Church
himself. His conduct certainly looked very inconsistent. If a man in
England
were to call himself a loyal member of the Anglican Church, and yet at
the same time do his very best to found an independent denomination, be
would soon be denounced as a traitor to the Church and a breeder of
schism
and dissent, But the Count's conduct can be easily explained. It was
all
due to his ignorance of history. He had no idea that the Bohemian
Brethren
had ever been an independent Church. He regarded them as a branch of
the
Reformed persuasion. He regarded them as a " Church within the Church,"
of the kind for which Luther had longed, and which Spener had already
established.
He held his delusion down to the end of his days ; and, therefore, as
Lutheran
and Pietist alike, he felt at liberty to help the Brethren in all their
religious endeavours.
For this purpose, therefore, be
asked the settlers at Herrnhut to sign their names to a voluntary
Brotherly
Union " ; and the chief condition of the " Union was that all the
members
agreed to live in friendship with Christians
of other' denominations, and also
to regard themselves as members of the Lutheran Church. They
attended the
regular service at the Parish Church. There they took the Holy
Communion
; there they had their children baptized ; and there the young people
were
confirmed.'
Meanwhile the movement at Herrnhut
was growing fast. The great point was to guard against religious
poison.
As the Count had a healthy horror of works of darkness, he insisted
that
no meetings should be held without a light ; and the Brethren set their
faces against superstition. They forbade ghost-stories ; they condemned
the popular old-wives' tales about tokens, omens and death-birds ; they
insisted that, in case of illness, no meddling busybody should
interfere
with the doctor ; and thus, as homely, practical folk, they aimed at
health
of body and of mind.
But the chief object of their ambition
was health of soul. As the revival deepened, the number of meetings
increased.
Not a day passed without three meetings for the whole congregation. At
five in the morning they met in the hall, and joined in a chorus of
praise.
At the dinner hour they met again, and then, about nine o'clock, after
supper, they sang themselves to rest. At an early period the whole
congregation
was divided into ninety unions for prayer, and each band met two or
three
times a week. The night was as sacred as the day. As the night-watchman
went his rounds, he sang a verse at the hour, as follows:
The clock is eight! to
Herrnhut all is told,
How
Noah and his seven were saved
of old,
Hear,
Brethren, hear! the hour
of nine is come!
Keep
pure each heart, and chasten
every home
Hear,
Brethren, hear! now ten the
hour-hand shows
They
only rest who long for night's
repose.
The
clock's eleven, and ye have
heard it all,
How
in that hour the mighty God
did call.
It's
midnight now, and at that
hour you know,
With
lamp to meet the bridegroom
we must go.
The
hour is one; through darkness
steals the day;
Shines
in your hearts the morning
star's first ray?
The
clock is two ! who comes to
meet the day,
And
to the Lord of days his homage
pay?
The
clock is three! the Three in
One above
Let
body, soul and spirit truly
love.
The
clock is four! where'er on
earth are three,
The
Lord has promised He the fourth
will be.
The
clock is five! while five away
were sent,
Five
other virgins to the marriage
went!
The
clock is six, and from the
watch I'm free,
And
every one may his own watchman
be!
At
this task all male inhabitants,
over sixteen and under sixty, took their turn. The watchman, in the
intervals
between the hours, sang other snatches of sacred song ; and thus anyone
who happened to be lying awake was continually reminded of the presence
of God.
On Sunday nearly every hour of the
day was occupied by set-vices. At five there was a short meeting, known
as the "morning blessing." From six to nine there were meetings for the
several "choirs." At ten there was a special service for children. At
eleven
there was morning worship in the Parish Church. At one the Chief Elder
gave a general exhortation. At three, or thereabouts, there was a
meeting,
called the "strangers' service," for those who had not been able to go
to Church ; and then the Count or some other layman repeated the
morning
sermon. At four there was another service at Berthelsdorf ; at eight
another
service at Herrnhut ; at nine the young men marched round the
settlement
singing hymns ; and on Monday morning these wonderful folk returned to
their labour like giants refreshed with new wine. Their powers of
endurance
were miraculous. The more meetings they had the more they seemed able
to
stand. Sometimes the good Pastor Schwedler, of Gorlitz would give them
a sermon three hours long ; and sometimes, commencing at six in the
morning,
he held his congregation enthralled till three in the
afternoon.
Again, the Brethren listened day
by day to a special message from God. We come now to the origin of the
Moravian Text-book. As the Count was a great believer in variety, he
very
soon started the practice, at the regular evening singing meeting, of
giving
the people a short address on some Scriptural text or some verse from a
hymn. As soon as the singing meeting was over he read out to the
company
the chosen passage, recommended it as a suitable subject for meditation
the following day, and next morning had the text passed round by the
Elders
to every house in Herrnhut. Next year (1728) the practice was better
organized.
Instead of waiting for the Count to choose, the Elders selected in
advance
a number of texts and verses, and put them all together into a box ;
and
then, each evening, one of the Elders put his hand into the box and
drew
the text for the following day. The idea was that of a special
Providence.
If Christ, said the Count, took a special interest in every one of His
children, He would also take the same kindly interest in every company
of believers ; and, therefore, He might be safely trusted to guide the
hand of the Elder aright and provide the "watchword" needed for the
day.
Again and again he exhorted the Brethren to regard the text for the day
as God's special message to them ; and finally, in 1731, he had the
texts
for the whole year printed, and thus began that Brethren's Textbook
which
now appears regularly every year, is issued in several tongues, and
circulates,
in every quarter of the globe, among Christians of all denominations.*
( As I write these words a copy of the first TextBook lies before. It
has
only one text for each day, and all the texts are taken from the New
Testament.)
Feb. 10th 1728.
In order, next, to keep in touch
with their fellow-Christians the Brethren instituted a monthly Saturday
meeting, and that Saturday came to be known as "Congregation Day." At
this
meeting the Brethren listened to reports of evangelical work in other
districts.
Sometimes there would be a letter from a travelling Brother; sometimes
a visitor from some far-distant strand. The meeting was a genuine sign
of moral health. It fostered broadness off mind, and put an end to
spiritual
pride. Instead of regarding themselves as Pietists, superior to the
average
professing Christians, the Brethren now rejoiced to hear of the good
done
by others. They prayed not for their own narrow circle alone, but for
all
rulers, all churches, and all people that on earth do dwell ; and
delighted
to sing old Brethren's hymns, treating of the Church Universal, such
-is
John Augusta's " Praise God for ever " and " How amiable Thy
tabernacles
are." At this monthly meeting the Count was in his element. He would
keep
his audience enthralled for hours together. He would read them first a
piece of news in vivid, dramatic style ; then he would suddenly strike
up a missionary hvmn ; then he would give them a little more
information
and thus he taught them to take an interest in lands beyond the
sea.
Another sign of moral health was
the " Love-feast. " As the Brethren met in each other's houses, they
attempted,
in quite an unofficial way, to revive the Agape of Apostolic times ;
and
to this end they provided a simple meal of rye-bread and water, wished
each other the wish, " Long live the Lord Jesus in our hearts," and
talked
in a freeand-easv fashion about the Kingdom of God. And here the
Brethren
were on their guard. In the days of the Apostles there had been
scandals.
The rich had brought their costly food, and the poor had been left to
pine.
At Herrnhut this scandal was avoided. For rich and poor the diet was
the
same, and came from a common fund; in later years it was white bread
and
tea ; and in due time the Love-feast took the form of a meeting for the
whole congregation.
Again, the Brethren were wonderfully
simple-minded. As we read about their various meetings, it is clear
that
in their childlike way they were trying to revive the institutions of
Apostolic
times. For this purpose they even practised the ceremony of
foot-washing
as described in the Gospel of St. John. To the Count the clear command
of Christ was decisive. "If I then, your Lord and Master," said Jesus,
"have washed your feet, ye also ought to wash one another's feet." What
words said the
Count, could be more binding than
these? "No man," he declared, " can read John xiii. without being
convinced
that this should be done." He revived the custom, and made it both
popular
and useful. The ceremony was generally performed by the young, before
some
special festival. It spread in time to England and Ireland, and was not
abandoned till the early years of the nineteenth century*( It is often
referred to in the English Congregation Diaries. It was abandoned
simply
because it was no longer valued; and no one was willing to take part.
1818).
We come now to the origin of the
" choirs." As Zinzen dorf studied the Gospel story, he came to the
conclusion
that in the life of Jesus Christ there was something specially suitable
to each estate in life. For the married people there was Christ, the
Bridegroom
of His Bride, the Church ; for the single Brethren, the "man about
thirty
years of age for the single Sisters, the Virgin Mary ; for the
children,
the boy in the temple asking questions.The idea took root. The more
rapidly
the settlement grew, the more need there was for division and
organization.
Aug. 29th, 1728.
For each class the Master had a
special message, and, therefore, each class must have its special
meetings
and study its special duties. For this purpose a
band of single
men-led by the ascetic Martin Linner, who slept on bare boards-agreed
to
live in one house, spent the evenings in united study, and thus laid
the
basis of the Single Brethren's Choir.
May 4th, 1730.
For the same purpose the single
young women, led by Anna Nitschmann, agreed to live in a "Single
Sisters
House," and made a covenant with one another that henceforward they
would
not make matrimony the highest aim in life, but would rather, like Mary
of Bethany, sit at the feet of Christand learn of Him.
Sept. 7th, 1733.
For the same purpose the married
people met at a love-feast, formed the "married choir," and 'promised
to
lead a pure and holy life, "so that their children might be plants of
righteousness."
For the same purpose the children, in due time, were formed into a
"children's
choir." The whole aim was efficiency and order. At first the unions
were
voluntary ; in time they became official. As the years rolled on the
whole
congregation was systematically divided into ten "choirs," as follows:
The married choir, the widowers, the widows, the Single Brethren, the
Single
Sisters, the youths, the great girls, the little boys, the little
girls,
the infants in arms. Each choir had its own president, its own special
services, its own festival day, its own love-feasts. Of these choirs
the
most important were those of the Single Brethren and Single Sisters. As
the Brethren at Herrnhut were soon to be busy in evangelistic labours,
they found it convenient to have in their ranks a number of men and
women
who were not bound down by family ties; and though the young people
took
no celibate vows, they often kept single through life for the sake of
the
growing cause.
The system invaded the sanctity
of family life. As the Count was a family man himself, he very properly
took the deepest interest in the training of little children ; and, in
season and out of season, he insisted that the children of Christian
parents
should be screened from the seductions of the world, the flesh and the
devil. "It is nothing less than a scandal," he said, "that people think
so little of the fact that their children are dedicated to the Lord.
Children
are little kings ; their baptism is their anointing ; and as kings they
ought to be treated from the first." For this purpose he laid down the
rule that all infants should be baptized in the hall, in the presence
of
the whole congregation ; and as soon as the children were old enough to
learn, he had them taken from their homes, and put the little boys in
one
school and the little girls in another. And thus the burden of their
education
fell not on the parents, but on the congregation.
Again, the Count carried out his
ideas in the " vasty halls of death." Of all the sacred spots in
Herrnhut
there were none more sacred and more awe-inspiring than the "God's
Acre"
which the Brethren laid out on the Hutbert. There, in the bosom of
Mother
Earth, the same division into choirs was preserved. To the Count the
tomb
was a holy place. If a visitor ever came to Herrnhut he was sure to
take
him to the God's Acre, and tell him the story of those whose bones
awaited
the resurrection of the just.
1733
The God's Acre became the scene
of an impressive service. At an early hour on Easter Sunday the
Brethren
assembled in the sacred presence of the dead, and waited for the sun to
rise. As the golden rim appeared on the horizon, the minister spoke the
first words of the service.,. " The Lord is risen," said the minister.
" He is risen indeed!" responded the waiting throng. And then, in the
beautiful
language of Scripture, the Brethren joined in a solemn confession of
faith.
The trombones that woke the morning echoes led the anthem of praise,
and
one and all, in simple faith, looked onward to the glorious time when
those
who lay in the silent tomb should hear the voice of the Son of God, and
be caught up in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air. To the Brethren
the tomb was no abode of dread. In a tomb the Lord Himself had lain ;
in
a tomb His humble disciples lay "asleep " ; and therefore, when a
brother
departed this life, the mourners never spoke of him as dead. "He is
gone
home," they said and so death lost his sting.
Again, the Brethren had a strong
belief in direct answers to prayer. It was this that led them to make
such
use of the " Lot. " As soon as the first twelve Elders were elected,
the
Brethren chose from among the twelve a committee of four by Lot; and in
course of time the Lot was used for a great variety of purposes. By the
Lot, as we shall see later on, the most serious ecclesiastical problems
were settled. By, the Lot a sister determined her answer to an offer of
marriage. By the Lot a call toservice was given, and by the Lot it was
accepted or rejected. If once the Lot had been consulted, the decision
was absoluteand binding. The prayer had been answered, the Lord had
spoken,
and the servant must now obey.
1729
We have now to mention but one more
custom, dating from those great days. It is one peculiar to the
Brethren's
Church, and is known as the " Cup of Covenant." It was established by
the
Single Brethren, and was based on the act of Christ Himself, as
recorded
in the Gospel of St. Luke. As the Master sat with His twelve disciples
in the Upper Room at Jerusalem, we are told that just before the
institution
of the Lord's Supper, " He took the Cup and gave thanks, and said, '
Take
this and divide it among yourselves'" *( Luke xii.17) ; and now, in
obedience
to this command, this ardent band of young disciples made a covenant to
be true to Christ, and passed the Cup from hand to hand. Whenever a
young
brother was called out to the mission field, the whole choir would meet
and entrust him to Christ in this simple and scriptural way. It was the
pledge at once of united service and united trust. It spread, in course
of time, to the other choirs ; it is practised still at the annual
choir
festivals ; and its meaning is best expressed in the words of the
Brethren's
Covenant Hymn:
Assembling here, a humble
band,
Our
covenantal pledge to take,
We
pass the cup from hand to hand,
From
heart to heart, for His dear
sake.
It
remains to answer two important
questions. . As we study the life of the Herrnhut Brethren, we cannot
possibly
fail to notice how closely their institutions resembled the old
institutions
of the Bohemian Brethren. We have the same care for the poor, the same
ascetic ideal of life, the same adherence to the word of Scripture, the
same endeavour to revive Apostolic practice, the same semisocialistic
tendency,
the same aspiration after brotherly unity, the same title, "Elder," for
the leading officials, and the same, or almost the same, method of
electing
come of these officials by Lot. And, therefore, we naturally ask the
question,
how far were these Brethren guided by the example of their fathers? The
reply is, not at all. At this early stage in their history the Moravian
refugees at Herrnhut knew absolutely nothing of the institutions of the
Bohemian Brethren.* They had no historical records in their possession
; they had not preserved any copies of the ancient laws; they brought
no
books but hymn-books across the border; and they framed their rules and
organized their society before they had even heard of the existence of
Comenius's "Account of Discipline." The whole movement at Herrnhut was
free, spontaneous, original. It was not an imitation of the past. It
was
not an attempt to revive the Church of the Brethren. It was simply the
result of Zinzendorf's attempt to apply the ideals of the Pietist
Spener
to the needs of the settlers on his estate.
The second question is, what was
the ecclesiastical standing of the Brethren at this time ? They were
not
a new church or sect. They had no separate ministry of their own. They
were members of the Lutheran Church, regarded Rothe still as their
Pastor,
attended the Parish Church on Sundays, and took the Communion there
once
a month ; and what distinguished them from the average orthodox
Lutheran
of the day was, not any peculiarity of doctrine, but rather their vivid
perception of a doctrine common to all the Churches. As the Methodists
in England a few years later exalted the O.cctrine of "conversion," so
these Brethren at Herrnhut exalted the doctrine of the spiritual
presence
of Christ. To them the ascended Christ was all in all. He had preserved
the "Hidden Seed." He had led them out from Moravia. He had brought
them
to a watch-tower He had delivered them from the secret foe. He. had
banished
the devouring demon of discord, had poured out His Holy Spirit upon
them
at their memorable service in the Parish Church, and had taught them to
maintain the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace. He was the "
Bridegroom
of the Soul," the " Blood Relation of His People," the "King's Son
seeking
for His Bride, the whole question is throughly discussed by J. Muller
in
his Zinzendorf als Erneuerer der alten BruderKirche."
Church," the "Chief Elder pleading
for the Church before God." And this thought of the living and reigning
Christ was, therefore, the ruling thought among the Brethren. He had
done
three marvellous things for the sons of men. He had given His life as a
"ransom" for sin, and had thereby reconciled them to God ; He had set
the
perfect example for them to follow He was present with them now as Head
of the Church and thus, when the Brethren went out to preach, they made
His Sacrificial Death, His Holy Life, and His abiding presence the main
substance of their Gospel message.
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The full edition of J. E. Hutton's History of the
Moravian Church is
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