Notable Events of the Nineteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 238 pages of information about Notable Events of the Nineteenth Century.

Notable Events of the Nineteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 238 pages of information about Notable Events of the Nineteenth Century.

Of all the products of this prolific nineteenth century, the one most extensive and most profitable to the church still remains to be mentioned.  Though this century did not see the birth of the Sunday School, it has witnessed its wonderful development.  In June, 1784, Robert Raikes published his famous letter outlining his plan for the religious instruction of children on the Lord’s Day, and before the close of the year, John Wesley wrote that he found Sunday Schools springing up wherever he went, and added with prophetic insight:  “Perhaps God may have a deeper end therein than men are aware of.  Who knows but some of these schools may become nurseries for Christians?” Within five years, a quarter of a million children were gathered into the Sunday Schools.  So much had already been done before the beginning of the century.  But even then men did not realize whereunto the movement was destined to grow.  Probably no enterprise has really exerted a deeper and stronger influence on the religious life of the time.  Children have entered the schools, passed through their grades, have become teachers in their turn, and their descendants have followed in their footsteps, until now we can scarcely bring ourselves to believe that a little more than a hundred years ago the Sunday School was unknown.  The organization of Sunday School Unions, the introduction of the International Lesson System, and the City, State and National Conventions are all the developments of this century.  The thought that a million and a half of Sunday School teachers are now engaged in every clime, Sunday by Sunday, in teaching the children and young people the truths of Christianity is enough to fill the mind of the Christian with thankfulness and hope.

PULPIT AND PRESS.

It would be beyond the scope of an article of this character to attempt to recall the names of the eminent preachers of the century.  It has been singularly rich in men of eloquence, depth of thought and high culture.  A few, however, are distinguished among the noble army by the phenomenal character of their work.  Of these probably no name is so widely known as that of Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage, D.D.  One of the most remarkable phenomena of the religious world in this century, is the fact that every week one preacher should address an audience numbered by millions.  The fact is unprecedented.  Of all classes of readers, the number of those who read sermons is considered the smallest, yet this century has produced a preacher whose sermons command a public larger than that of a fascinating novelist.  For thirty years the newspapers have been publishing Dr. Talmage’s sermons in every city of his own land, in every English-speaking land and in many foreign lands where they are translated for publication.  It is a significant fact, which should gratify every Christian, that the man whose words reach regularly and surely the largest audience in the world should be a preacher of the Gospel.

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Notable Events of the Nineteenth Century from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.