The American Missionary — Volume 42, No. 03, March 1888 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 67 pages of information about The American Missionary — Volume 42, No. 03, March 1888.

The American Missionary — Volume 42, No. 03, March 1888 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 67 pages of information about The American Missionary — Volume 42, No. 03, March 1888.

There will be no respectable people in heaven. (God is no respecter of persons.)

I was much disencouraged.

It was said at the startment of this meeting.

I take care of three head of children.

We have passed through many dark scenes and unseens.

May we have the eye of an eagle to see sin afar off and shun it.

I have made inquiration at several places.

A letter written jointly to represent the opinions of several persons, thus expresses itself to us:  “We are happy to write this letter to you in a conglomerate manner.”

* * * * *

THE EDUCATIONAL WORK OF THE A.M.A.

BY REV.  FORREST F. EMERSON.

The report of the Executive Committee on educational work in the South, confirms the conviction which must have impressed itself on many minds, that the Association is a divinely-appointed agency for carrying forward a work delegated to us as a nation.  God calls nations as he calls men, and consecrates them to a special work.  Rome had a call, and fulfilled it, under the Divine Providence, and that call was to work out the idea, and demonstrate the necessity, of government, and to cultivate in the minds of men everywhere regard for the authority of law; Greece had her mission, and it was to teach the value of individual culture, both physical and intellectual; the people of Israel had their call to teach the doctrine of God, of his moral government, and of the eternal nature of moral law; and this Christian nation has its divine call, and that call arises from the peculiar relation which it sustains to the other races and nations of the earth.

For a long time it seemed as if this land was to be given exclusively to the English race.  The Dutch who settled here were assimilated and absorbed; the Spaniards and Portuguese found a congenial clime in South America; the French, by the progress of events, were prevented from gaining a foothold in New England, and with the sale of so-called “Louisiana”—­an immense area extending from the Gulf to British America,—­France relinquished her last claim to ownership of any part of our domain.  The period of history, from the landing at Jamestown and Plymouth to the war of 1812, and later, was the unfolding of events which pointed to the supremacy of the English in North America.  Our religion was Protestant and English; our literature took root in English forms of thought; our free institutions were the outcome of principles which had been, and now are, influential in English politics; our common law was English, our traditions of liberty were English, and that union of liberty and law which makes us strong, we inherited from our English fathers.  So that in 1820, two hundred years after the arrival of the Mayflower, we were essentially an English nation; old England broken away from old forms and precedents, the natural expansion of England under new forms of government and society.

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The American Missionary — Volume 42, No. 03, March 1888 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.