Great Britain and Her Queen eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 188 pages of information about Great Britain and Her Queen.

Great Britain and Her Queen eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 188 pages of information about Great Britain and Her Queen.

We have already spoken of the growth and development of social philanthropic work in connexion with the great Methodist missions in towns; there remains one most important movement in this direction to notice—­the establishment of the “Children’s Home,” which, begun in 1869 by Dr. Stephenson, received Conference recognition in 1871.  It has now branches in London, Lancashire, Gravesend, Birmingham, and the Isle of Man, and an emigration depot in Canada.  Over 900 girls and boys are in residence, while more than 2,900 have been sent forth well equipped for the battle of life; some of them becoming ministers, local preachers, Sunday-school workers, and in many ways most useful citizens.  The committee of management has the sanction of Conference.  This “powerful arm of Christian work” not only rescues helpless little ones from degradation and misery; it undertakes the special training of the workers amongst the children in industrial homes and orphanages; and hence has arisen the institution in 1895 of the order of Methodist deaconesses, which is recommended by Conference to Connexional sympathy and confidence, the deaconesses rendering to our Church such services as the Sisters of Mercy give to the Church of Rome.  One example may suffice.  A London superintendent minister describes the work of one of the Sisters during the past twelvemonth as “simply invaluable.  She has visited the poor, nursed the sick, held services in lodging-houses, met Society classes and Bible-classes, gathered round her a godly band of mission-workers, and in a hundred ways has promoted the interests of God’s work.”

Two events made 1891 memorable for Methodists, the centenary of Wesley’s death and its commemoration being the first.

The Conference decided that suitable memorial services should be held, and an appeal made to Methodists everywhere for funds to improve Wesley’s Chapel and the graveyard containing his tomb.  Universal interest was aroused; all branches of Methodism were represented; the leading ministers of Nonconformist Churches also shared in the services.  Crowded and enthusiastic congregations assembled in City Road when on Sunday, March 1, the Rev. Charles H. Kelly, Ex-President, preached on “The Man, his Teaching, and his Work,” and when the Rev. Dr. Moulton delivered the centenary sermon.  On March 2, a statue of Wesley was unveiled—­exactly one hundred years after his death—­Dean Farrar and Sir Henry H. Fowler addressing the meeting.

[Illustration:  Westminster Training College.]

The Allan Library, the gift of the late Thomas R. Allan, containing more than 30,000 books and dissertations, was opened by the President; it has since been enriched by gifts of modern books from the Fernley Trustees and others, and a circulating library is now connected with it.  Accessible on easy terms to ministers and local preachers, and within the reach of many others, this library should be a useful stimulus to the taste for study among ministers and people.

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Great Britain and Her Queen from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.