The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 11, November, 1889 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 61 pages of information about The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 11, November, 1889.

The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 11, November, 1889 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 61 pages of information about The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 11, November, 1889.

Our church work has necessarily been of slow growth.  Churches might have been multiplied, had we thought it best to lower the standard near the level of the old churches, and acknowledge wild ravings as belonging in the worship of God.  We have believed that our churches should mean new ideas and intelligent worship.  We have knowingly lent our aid to nothing else.

These churches are gathered into Associations, and the fine bodies of pastors and delegates which come together in these, present a most emphatic testimony to the value of the work done in the past, and are an earnest of what the future will show.

Revivals—­some of them of great power—­have been reported to us from the Plymouth Church, Washington, D.C., Fisk University, Memphis, Jonesboro, Sherwood, Glen Mary, Oakdale, Athens and Pine Mountain, Tenn.; Montgomery and Florence, Ala.; Tougaloo and Jackson, Miss.; Straight University, New Orleans, and Corpus Christi, Texas.  Many others of our churches have had a quiet work of grace, by which additions have been made to them.

We report new churches at Glen Mary and Athens, Tenn.; Roseland, La; Fort Payne and Alco, Ala.  This makes the whole number of our churches in the South 136.

Besides these churches, there are our churches among the Indians and the work of gathering the Chinese into churches in California.

We are praying and laboring for the eternal salvation of millions, the establishment through the grace of God, the atoning blood of Christ, and the work of the Holy Spirit, of character which shall meet the tests of the Judgment Day and the needs of eternal association with purity.  In aiming at this ultimate result, our missionaries are doing a work of inestimable importance for the nation and the world.  They are successfully working upon some of the great problems of this country, which armies and millions of money have failed, and of necessity must fail, to solve.  Nothing but the “glorious gospel of the blessed God,” taught from the pulpit and the teacher’s desk, and illustrated in the eloquent lives of consecrated missionaries, can change the idol worshiper from heathen China, the wild-man of the West, the half-heathen Negro so recently in the cruel degradation of slavery, those of our own race in the bonds of ignorance and immorality—­so that they shall have and manifest an intelligent and worthy manhood and womanhood.  Nothing else can meet cruel prejudice, which would forever deny full manhood or womanhood to those called to it by God himself, and pour oil upon its angry waves until they shall be still.

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The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 11, November, 1889 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.