The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 12, December, 1889 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 161 pages of information about The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 12, December, 1889.

The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 12, December, 1889 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 161 pages of information about The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 12, December, 1889.

4.  The work of the Association is not a transient one.  A New England pastor at the beginning of our work for the freedmen, gave me a hearty welcome to present our cause in his pulpit, telling me frankly he did so the more cheerfully because he thought our work would soon be over—­say in twenty or twenty-five years.  Now that good man believed that home missions in the West, and in some of the older Eastern States, would be needed well nigh on to the millennium, yet he imagined that the blacks, just escaped from bondage, utterly poor, ignorant and degraded, would (perhaps he hardly stopped to think how) rise in twenty-five years above all need of help from any quarter in their upward struggle!  But the fallacy of such a supposition is realized more since these twenty-five years have passed than it was then.  It is now clearly seen that these ex-slaves will require for three or four generations the most abundant help to bring them up to the level of those Western settlers, including the Swedes, Germans and Norwegians crowding in thither, who are comparatively well-off and intelligent.  And then, after that preparation of the Negro has been made, the regular work of home missions will only be fairly begun among them.  The work for this people, therefore, is not transient, and the missionary society that has it in hand has before it not only a great but long-continued task.

And for that great work the Association has had a manifest call and preparation, and has gained an experience and an influence of peculiar value in its further prosecution.  The Association has wrought itself into the schools and churches, into the industries of the colored people, the improvement of their homes, the preparation of their sons and daughters for home and business life, and for teachers and preachers and physicians; it has wrought itself into their better aspirations for both this world and that which is to come.  It has won upon the confidence and respect of the white people by its unselfish and Christian work, its kind but firm adherence to principle, and by the blessing it has conferred upon both races in aiding the South in the only true solution of its great problem.

The Association has become anchored to this great work by the large amount of invested funds intrusted to its care.  It has received thousands of dollars from the Freedmen’s Bureau, from the Avery estate, from the gifts of Mrs. Stone and others, and added to all these is the large sum placed one year ago in its hands by the munificence of Mr. Hand.  These several sums aggregate more than two millions of dollars—­an amount of endowment, we believe, without a parallel among our Congregational societies for the home field.  While no inconsiderable share of these funds is in plant, and therefore increases instead of diminishes current expenses, yet the Association is the only legal custodian of these funds.  They constitute, therefore, a strong evidence of the confidence of large donors in its usefulness and stability and in the importance of its work, and at the same time they make a strong plea for current contributions to sustain that work.  God has moved the hearts of noble men and women to lay these firm foundations.  Will not others equally able and far-seeing in their benevolence add to these gifts and thus extend these foundations, and will not the churches build thereon with diligent and cheerful hands?

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The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 12, December, 1889 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.