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.
organization was effected, on the principles of federation, to secure united action on subjects on which all were agreed, and this organization has been maintained to the present time.  Branches have been formed in twenty-seven different lands, each dealing with matters peculiarly affecting the community in which it operates, and by correspondence, and periodical international conferences, keeping in touch with each other.  Its usefulness has been proved in the success of its efforts to secure tolerance in several lands, where men were being persecuted for conscience’ sake, though much still remains to be done on this line.  Perhaps the most conspicuous result of its work is the general observance throughout Christendom of the first complete week of every year as a week of prayer.  The proposal for such an observance was made in 1858.  Since that time the Alliance has issued every year a list of subjects which are common objects of desire to all Evangelical Christians.  On each day of the week, prayer is now offered in every land for the special blessing which is suggested as the topic for the day.

From the same spirit of Christian brotherhood which took shape in the Evangelical Alliance, came at later dates other movements which are yet in their infancy.  One of these is the Reunion Conference which meets annually at Grindelwald in Switzerland.  Its object is to find a basis for organic union of the Protestant Episcopal Church with Congregationalists, Presbyterians, Methodists and other evangelical denominations.  The meetings have been hitherto remarkably harmonious, and suggestions of mutual concessions have been made which have been favorably considered.  A less ambitious, and therefore more hopeful movement of like spirit, is that of the Municipal or Civic Church.  Its aim is the organization of a federative council of the churches of a city, or of sections of a city, for united effort in social reform, benevolent enterprise and Christian government.  It proposes to substitute local co-operation for the existing union on denominational lines, or to add the one to the other.  It would unite the Methodist, Baptist, Congregational and other churches in a city, or district, in a movement to restrict the increase of saloons, to insist on the enforcement of laws against immorality and to promote the moral and spiritual welfare of the community.  The united voice of the Christians of a city uttered by a council, in which all are represented, would unquestionably exercise an influence more potent than is now exerted by separate action.  To these movements must be added another which has been launched under the name of the Brotherhood of Christian Unity.  This is a fraternity of members of churches and members of no church, who yet accept Christ as their leader and obey the two cardinal precepts of Christianity—­love to God and love to man.  Its object is to promote brotherly feeling among Christians and a sense of comradeship among men of different creeds.  All

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