The American Missionary — Volume 44, No. 01, January, 1890 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 65 pages of information about The American Missionary — Volume 44, No. 01, January, 1890.

The American Missionary — Volume 44, No. 01, January, 1890 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 65 pages of information about The American Missionary — Volume 44, No. 01, January, 1890.

Surely God’s people should pray for Africa, moved by pity and by hope.  Christians in America can do more than pray—­they can help to answer their own prayers.  They can raise up the sons and daughters of Africa, trained in our schools, to go forth as missionaries and colonists to the land of their fathers.  The experiment has been tried with success.  Missionaries of African descent can endure the climate better, and can more readily reach the people than those of the white race.  There is a call in these facts for the means to give special instruction in Biblical truth to those who can thus be prepared for this great mission work.

* * * * *

CONVENTIONS OF COLORED PEOPLE.

The proposed National Conventions of colored people to be held in Chicago and Washington are significant facts.  They indicate that the colored people are suffering wrongs, and that they feel a call to seek redress.  Their right to hold such conventions is unquestioned; the wisdom of holding them will be vindicated, we hope, by their just and reasonable utterances and plans.  Intemperate language and rash and impracticable measures will not help, and we have so much confidence in the discretion of our colored friends that we believe none such will be said or proposed.

Our colored brethren must not forget that much is being done for them and that they are doing much for themselves.  It would be unwise to overlook this in any attempt to reach something less tangible.

Their appeal to the justice of the Nation, to the Constitution and the laws can be made invincible, but it will be well to keep in touch with the sympathy of the North and with the conscience of the South, for in spite of all the wrongs inflicted on the colored people in the South, we believe there is a large and growing number of Southern people who look upon this whole question conscientiously, and although perplexed desire that the right shall be done.

For the colored people themselves, while conventions are good, yet the accumulation of property, growth in intelligence, and character are better.

* * * * *

SCHOOL ECHOES.

A boy in one of the arithmetic classes was given an example which began with the statement, that a man deposited a certain sum of money in a bank.  He was asked if he knew what a bank was.  He replied; “Yes, it is a place where you dig coal.”

“What is the shape of the earth?”

“The earth is square.  Pap says so, and he says the Book says so too.  He says if there warn’t four corners, how could the four angels stand on ’em.”

“I hear you’uns have taken your children out of school.  What did you do that for?”

“I’ll tell ye.  I yaint goin’ to send my child to any such fool-teacher as that ar.  Why, he tole ’em that the world was roun’, an’ any fool knows better.”

A Methodist minister in North Carolina, preaching from the passage about standing at the corners of the streets to pray, told his people that if they wanted to see a “first class hypocrite,” see anybody who would stand up to pray.  The standing up was what he thought Jesus reproved.

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The American Missionary — Volume 44, No. 01, January, 1890 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.