27
November 1933 A.D. Prof.
J.G. Machen: Mountains and Why We Love
Them
Archivist. “November 27:
Mountains and Why We Love Them.” This Day in Presbyterian History. 27 Nov 2014.
http://www.thisday.pcahistory.org/2014/11/november-27-mountains-and-why-we-love-them/. Accessed 27 Nov 2014.
November 27: Mountains and Why We Love Them.
[The following paper by Dr. J. Gresham Machen
was read before a group of ministers in Philadelphia on November 27, 1933. It was subsequently
published in Christianity Today
(original series, August 1934) and later reprinted in a collection of Machen’s
essays edited by Ned B. Stonehouse, published under the title What Is Christianity? (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1951). The address was again separately reprinted in 2002 by the
Committee for the Historian of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church and can also be
found online at the OPC website : http://www.opc.org/machen/mountains.html. For
an interesting exploration of the background of this work, as found among the
Papers of Dr. Allan A. MacRae, click here.]
Mountains and Why We Love Them
by J.
Gresham Machen
What
right have I to speak about mountain-climbing? The answer is very simple. I
have none whatever. I have, indeed, been in the Alps four times. The first time
I got up Monte Rosa, the second highest of the Alps, and one or two others of
the easier Zermatt peaks. On my second visit I had some glorious days in the
Grossglockner group and on a few summits in the Zillerthal Alps and also made
my first visit to that beautiful liberty-loving land of South Tirol, where, as
a result of a war fought to “make the world safe for democracy,” Mussolini is
now engaged in the systematic destruction of a language and civilization that
has set its mark upon the very face of the landscape for many centuries. On my
third visit, in 1913, I did my most ambitious climbing, all in the Eastern
Alps, getting up the Kleine Zinne by the north face, certain of the sporty
Cortina courses, and also the Campanile di Val Montanaia, which is not
considered altogether easy. In 1932 I was on three of the first-class Zermatt
peaks.
Why,
then, have I no right to talk about mountain-climbing? For the simple reason
that I did all of these climbs with good guides, safeguarded by perfectly good
Alpine ropes. An Alpine guide is said to be able to get a sack of meal up the
Matterhorn about as well as he can get some tourists up, and then those
tourists go home and boast what great mountaineers they are. Well, I differed
from the proverbial sack of meal in two particulars: (1) I am a little superior
to the sack of meal in climbing ability; (2) the sack of meal is unaware of the
fact that it is not a mountaineer, and I am fully aware of the fact that I am
not. The man who leads on the rope is the man who has to be a real mountaineer,
and I never did that. I am less than the least of the thousands of real
climbers who go to the Alps every summer and climb without guides.
But
although I am not a mountaineer, I do love the mountains and I have loved them
ever since I can remember anything at all. It is about the love of the
mountains, rather than about the mountains, that I am venturing to read this
little paper today.
Can
the love of the mountains be conveyed to those who have it not? I am not sure.
Perhaps if a man is not born with that love it is almost as hopeless to try to
bring it to him as it would be to explain what color is to a blind man or to
try to make President Roosevelt understand the Constitution of the United
States. But on the whole I do believe that the love of the mountains can at
least be cultivated, and if I can do anything whatever toward getting you to
cultivate it, the purpose of this little paper will be amply attained.
One
thing is clear—if you are to learn to love the mountains you must go up them by
your own power. There is more thrill in the smallest hill in Fairmount Park if
you walk up it than there is in the grandest mountain on earth if you go up it
in an automobile. There is one curious thing about means of locomotion—the
slower and simpler and the closer to nature they are, the more real thrill they
give. I have got far more enjoyment out of my two feet than I did out of my
bicycle; and I got more enjoyment out of my bicycle than I ever have got out of
my motor car; and as for airplanes—well, all I can say is that I wouldn’t lower
myself by going up in one of the stupid, noisy things! The only way to have the
slightest inkling of what a mountain is is to walk or climb up it.
Now I
want you to feel something of what I feel when I am with the mountains that I
love. To that end I am not going to ask you to go with me to any out-of-the-way
place, but I am just going to take you to one of the most familiar tourist’s
objectives, one of the places to which one goes on every ordinary European
tour—namely, to Zermatt—and in Zermatt I am not going to take you on any really
difficult climbs but merely up one or two of the peaks by the ordinary routes
which modern mountaineers despise. I want you to look at Zermatt for a few
minutes not with the eyes of a tourist, and not with the eyes of a devotee of
mountaineering in its ultra-modern aspects, but with the eyes of a man who,
whatever his limitations, does truly love the mountains.
In
Zermatt, after I arrived on July 15, 1932, I secured Alois Graven as my guide;
and on a number of the more ambitious expeditions I had also Gottfried Perren,
who also is a guide of the first class. What Ty Cobb was on a baseball diamond
and Bill Tilden is on the courts, that such men are on a steep snow or ice
slope, or negotiating a difficult rock, Ueberhang. It is a joy as I have
done in Switzerland and in the Eastern Alps, to see really good climbers at
work.
At
this point I just want to say a word for Swiss and Austrian guides. Justice is
not done to them, in my judgment, in many of the books on climbing. You see, it
is not they who write the books. They rank as professionals, and the tourists
who hire them as “gentleman”; but in many cases I am inclined to think that the
truer gentleman is the guide. I am quite sure that that was the case when I
went with Alois Graven.
In
addition to climbing practice on the wrong side of the cocky little Riffelhorn
and on the ridge of the Untergabelhorn—which climbing practice prevented me
from buttoning my back collar button without agony for a week—and in addition
to an interesting glacier expedition around the back side of the Breithorn and
up Pollux (13,430 feet) and Caster (13,850) and down by the Fellikjoch through
the ice fall of the Zwillingsgletscher, on which expedition I made my first
acquaintance with really bad weather in the high Alps and the curious optical
illusions which it causes—it was perfectly amazing to see the way in which near
the summit of Caster the leading guide would feel with his ice-axe for the edge
of the ridge in what I could have sworn to be a perfectly innocent expanse of
easy snowfield right there in plain view before our feet, and it was also
perfectly amazing to see the way in which little pieces of ice on the glacier
were rolled by way of experimentation down what looked like perfectly innocent
slopes, to see whether they would simply disappear in crevasses which I could
have sworn not to be there (if they disappeared we didn’t because we took the hint
and chose some other way through the labyrinth)—after these various preliminary
expeditions and despite the agony of a deep sore on my right foot in view of
which the Swiss doctor whom I consulted told me that as a physician he would
tell me to quit but that as a man he knew I would not do so and that therefore
he would patch me up as well as possible, and despite the even greater agony of
a strained stomach muscle which I got when I extricated myself and was
extricated one day from a miniature crevasse and which made me, the following
night in the Theodul hut, feel as helpless as a turtle laid on its back, so
that getting out of my bunk became a difficult mountaineering feat—after these
preliminary expeditions and despite these and other agonies due to a man’s
giving a fifty-year-old body twenty-year-old treatment, I got up three
first-class Zermatt peaks; the Zinalrothorn, the Matterhorn, and the Dent
Blanche. Of these three, I have not time—or rather you have not time (for I for
my part should just love to go on talking about the mountains for hours and
Niagara would have nothing on me for running on)—I say, of these you have not
time for me to tell about more than one. It is very hard for me to choose among
the three. The Zinalrothorn, I think, is the most varied and interesting as a
climb; the Dent Blanche has always had the reputation of being the most
difficult of all the Zermatt peaks, and it is a glorious mountain indeed, a
mountain that does not intrude its splendors upon the mob but keeps them for those
who will penetrate into the vastnesses or will mount to the heights whence true
nobility appears in its real proportions. I should love to tell you of that
crowning day of my month at Zermatt, when after leaving the Schönbühl Hut at
about 2.30 A.M. (after a disappointment the previous night when my guides had
assisted in a rescue expedition that took one injured climber and the body of
one who was killed in an accident on the Zmutt Ridge of the Matterhorn,
opposite the hut where we were staying, down to Zermatt so that we all arrived
there about 2 A.M., about the time when it had been planned that we should
leave the hut for our climb) we made our way by lantern light up into the
strange upper recesses of the Schönbühl Glacier, then by the dawning light of
the day across the glacier, across the bottom of a couloir safe in the morning
but not a place where one lingers when the warmth of afternoon has affected the
hanging glacier two thousand feet above, then to the top of the Wandfluh, the
great south ridge, at first broad and easy but contracting above to its
serrated knife-edge form, then around the “great gendarme” and around or over
the others of the rock towers on the ridge, until at last that glorious and
unbelievable moment came when the last few feet of the sharp snow ridge could
be seen with nothing above but a vacancy of blue, and when I became conscious
of the fact that I was actually standing on the summit of the Dent Blanche.
But
the Matterhorn is a symbol as well as a mountain, and so I am going to spend
the few minutes that remain in telling you about that.
There
is a curious thing when you first see the Matterhorn on a fresh arrival at
Zermatt. You think your memory has preserved for you an adequate picture of
what it is like. But you see that you were wrong. The reality is far more
unbelievable than any memory of it can be. A man who sees the Matterhorn
standing at that amazing angle above the Zermatt street can believe that such a
thing exists only when he keeps his eyes actually fastened upon it.
When I
arrived on July 15, 1932, the great mountain had not yet been ascended that
summer. The masses of fresh snow were too great; the weather had not been
right. That is one way in which this mountain retains its dignity even in the
evil days upon which it has fallen when duffers such as I can stand upon its
summit. In storm, it can be almost as perilous as ever even to those who follow
the despised easiest route.
It was
that despised easiest route, of course, which I followed—though my guide led me
to have hopes of doing the Zmutt Ridge before I got through. On Monday, August
1st, we went up to the “Belvedere,” the tiny little hotel (if you can call it
such) that stands right next to the old Matterhorn Hut at 10,700 feet. We went
up there intending to ascend the Matterhorn the next day. But alas for human
hopes. Nobody ascended the Matterhorn the next day, nor the day after that, nor
that whole week. On Wednesday we with several other parties went a little way,
but high wind and cold and snow soon drove us back. The Matterhorn may be sadly
tamed, but you cannot play with it when the weather is not right. That applies
to experts as well as to novices like me. I waited at the Belvedere all that
week until Friday. It is not the most comfortable of summer resorts, and I
really think that the stay that I made in it was one of the longest that any
guest had ever made. Its little cubby-holes of rooms are admirable as
Frigidaires, but as living quarters they are “not so hot.” People came and
people went; very polyglot was the conversation: but I remained. I told them
that I was the hermit or the Einsiedler of the Belvedere. At last,
however, even I gave it up. On Friday I returned to Zermatt, in plenty of time
for the Saturday night bath!
The
next Monday we toiled again up that five thousand feet to the Belvedere, and
this time all went well. On Tuesday, August 9th, I stood on what I suppose is,
next to Mt. Everest, the most famous mountain in the world.
From
the Belvedere to the summit is about four thousand feet. The Matterhorn differs
from every other great Alpine peak that I know anything about in that when you
ascend it by the usual route you do not once set foot on a glacier. You climb
near the northeast ridge—for the most part not on the actual ridge itself but
on the east face near the ridge. In some places in the lower part there is some
danger from falling stones, especially if other parties are climbing above.
There is scarcely anything that the blasé modern mountaineer calls rock
climbing of even respectable difficulty; but it is practically all rock
climbing or clambering of a sort, and it seems quite interesting enough to the
novice. The most precipitous part is above what is called “the shoulder,” and
it was from near this part that the four members of Whymper’s party fell 4,000
feet to their death when they were descending after the first ascent in 1865.
There are now fixed ropes at places in this part. You grasp the hanging rope
with one hand and find the holds in the rock with the other. It took me five
hours and forty minutes to make the ascent from the Belvedere. It would
certainly have been no great achievement for an athlete; but I am not an
athlete and never was one, and I was then fifty-one years of age and have an
elevator in the building where I live. The rarefied air affected me more than
it used to do in my earlier years, and the mountain is about 14,700 feet high.
I shall never forget those last few breathless steps when I realized that only
a few feet of easy snow separated me from the summit of the Matterhorn. When I
stood there at last—the place where more than any other place on earth I had
hoped all my life that I might stand—I was afraid I was going to break down and
weep for joy.
The
summit looks the part. It is not indeed a peak, as you would think it was from
looking at the pictures which are taken from Zermatt, but a ridge—a ridge with
the so-called Italian summit at one end and the so-called Swiss summit three
feet higher at the other. Yes, it is a ridge. But what a ridge! On the south
you look directly over the stupendous precipice of the south face to the green
fields of Valtournanche. On the north you look down an immensely steep snow
slope—with a vacancy beyond that is even more impressive than an actual view
over the great north precipice would be. As for the distant prospect, I shall
not try to describe it, for the simple reason that it is indescribable.
Southward you look out over the mysterious infinity of the Italian plain with
the snows of Monte Viso one hundred miles away. To the west, the great snow
dome of Mont Blanc stands over a jumble of snow peaks; and it looks the monarch
that it is. To the north the near peaks of the Weisshorn and the Dent Blanche,
and on the horizon beyond the Rhone Valley a marvelous glittering galaxy of the
Jungfrau and the Finsteraarhorn and the other mountains of the Benese Oberland.
To the east, between the Strahlhorn and Monte Rosa, the snows of the Weissthorn
are like a great sheet let down from heaven, exceeding white and glistering, so
as no fuller on earth can white them; and beyond, fold on fold, soft in the dim
distance, the ranges of the Eastern Alps.
Then
there is something else about that view from the Matterhorn. I felt it partly
at least as I stood there, and I wonder whether you can feel it with me. It is
this. You are standing there not in any ordinary country, but in the very midst
of Europe, looking out from its very centre. Germany just beyond where you can
see to the northeast, Italy to the south, France beyond those snows of Mont
Blanc. There, in that glorious round spread out before you, that land of
Europe, humanity has put forth its best. There it has struggled; there it has
fallen; there it has looked upward to God. The history of the race seems to
pass before you in an instant of time, concentrated in that fairest of all the
lands of the earth. You think of the great men whose memories you love, the men
who have struggled there in those countries below you, who have struggled for
light and freedom, struggled for beauty, struggled above all for God’s Word.
And then you think of the present and its decadence and its slavery, and you
desire to weep. It is a pathetic thing to contemplate the history of mankind.
What
will be the end of that European civilization, of which I had a survey from my
mountain vantage ground—of that European civilization and its daughter in
America? What does the future hold in store? Will Luther prove to have lived in
vain? Will all the dreams of liberty issue into some vast industrial machine? Will
even nature be reduced to standard, as in our country the sweetness of the
woods and hills is being destroyed, as I have seen them destroyed in Maine, by
the uniformities and artificialities and officialdom of our national parks?
Will the so-called “Child Labor Amendment” and other similar measures be
adopted, to the destruction of all the decencies and privacies of the home?
Will some dreadful second law of thermodynamics apply in the spiritual as in
the material realm? Will all things in church and state be reduced to one dead
level, coming at last to an equilibrium in which all liberty and all high
aspirations will be gone? Will that be the end of all humanity’s hopes? I can
see no escape from that conclusion in the signs of the times; too inexorable seems
to me to be the march of events. No, I can see only one alternative. The
alternative is that there is a God—a God who in His own good time will bring
forward great men again to do His will, great men to resist the tyranny of
experts and lead humanity out again into the realms of light and freedom, great
men, above all, who will be messengers of His grace. There is, far above any
earthly mountain peak of vision, a God high and lifted up who, though He is
infinitely exalted, yet cares for His children among men.I know that there are
people who tell us contemptuously that always there are croakers who look
always to the past, croakers who think that the good old times are the best.
But I for my part refuse to acquiesce in this relativism which refuses to take
stock of the times in which we are living. It does seem to me that there can
never be any true advance, and above all there can never be any true prayer,
unless a man does pause occasionally, as on some mountain vantage ground, to try,
at least, to evaluate the age in which he is living. And when I do that, I
cannot for the life of me see how any man with even the slightest knowledge of
history can help recognizing the fact that we are living in a time of sad
decadence—a decadence only thinly disguised by the material achievements of our
age, which already are beginning to pall on us like a new toy. When Mussolini
makes war deliberately and openly upon democracy and freedom, and is much
admired for doing so even in countries like ours; when an ignorant ruffian is
dictator of Germany, until recently the most highly educated country in the
world—when we contemplate these things I do not see how we can possibly help
seeing that something is radically wrong. Just read the latest utterances of
our own General Johnson, his cheap and vulgar abuse of a recent appointee of
our President, the cheap tirades in which he develops his view that economics
are bunk—and then compare that kind of thing with the state papers of a
Jefferson or a Washington—and you will inevitably come to the conclusion that
we are living in a time when decadence has set in on a gigantic scale.
What
have I from my visits to the mountains, not only from those in the Alps, but
also, for example, from that delightful twenty-four-mile walk which I took one
day last summer in the White Mountains over the whole Twin Mountain range? The
answer is that I have memories. Memory, in some respects, is a very terrible
thing. Who has not experienced how, after we have forgotten some recent hurt in
the hours of sleep, the memory of it comes back to us on our awaking as though
it were some dreadful physical blow. Happy is the man who can in such moments
repeat the words of the Psalmist and who in doing so regards them not merely as
the words of the Psalmist but as the Word of God. But memory is also given us
for our comfort; and so in hours of darkness and discouragement I love to think
of that sharp summit ridge of the Matterhorn piercing the blue or the majesty
and the beauty of that world spread out at my feet when I stood on the summit
of the Dent Blanche.
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