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4 THE FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 190'1. - FROM MANY PULPI ISTINGUISHED FISSIONS . % : et SUBJECT OF : e ' il e SERVICE Eminent Bishops Tell How Souls Are Won to God. % : . MISSIONARY LABOR FOR CHRISTIANS Duty of 'len to Spread Truths of Gospel { | L J Large Crowd Throngs the Church of St. John. —_— Other Houses of Wor- ship Are Largely Bishop Kinsolving of Brazil Talks in Auditorium. —_— Big Audience Hears the Address of Prelate. = i 1 A% | 7 BISHOP I Hilig 3 ) < 0 & e S ¢ | | NEW SRS g i RIS S b e . ¢ (! / { | ‘ | | | ' | | | | | | | | ) oo— — —— - E Ebiscobal its i ritns Y 0 selves aftor him, This is not only the WELL-ATTENDED mass meet HE Episcopalian pulpits of this city, Oakland and Berkeley revelation of Christ but reason lto. And ing was held under the aus ra th the eloquence of the wis 4 relates rday | | | now, my friends, many of us are {llustrat- | ices of the Yo Men's Chris rang oquence of the wisiting ‘/v:/.xl..\ yesterday | """l‘ ihis pacan Greek life. We are ascrt- | 5:..::" “\r,"h‘-‘..‘{m:’.:"fly’:;\:‘.“‘:“u morning and cvening {s on the preceding Sabbath every a?,,“g,?,‘_;r’\\‘v’,“‘)’. ;:“:‘:},;‘1""3: “Q‘;.‘h.“,‘rxg’c,?, :T?P::lml‘ fl,\kvnlen’l.l);'h .fr‘r:‘m.‘:n huyel hal lenomina ] » chotee f 1 | stand befora people who are immoral, peo- o speaker o o s J church of Episcopaliam denomination had some choice bit of special | Dle Who Bive Way €0, the: Gnaty DoD and the Right Rev. Lucian Les religious service to offer. Sermons and adresses by the famed worldly dissipations? Why should we be | Kinsolving, Bishop of Hrazil. Bishop afraid to stand up and condemn that | Kinsolving had no specified subject for Jihich, In not right; that which 18 against e o g g B e o g |a o teachings of Christ? And there is = s X . - | | much need to-day of the preacher speak- | the utterance of genaral remarks upon | ing of these things because we seem to be | the need of more missionary work b | in an age of revival of these pagan Greek | Christian men and women in all walka of | ideas which brought her realms and sub- | life, The Bishop Is a native Virginian, anc Jjects to desolation and ruin. An enthu- | g marked Southern accent, coupled with slasm for material wealth has seized and | prilljancy of thought and fine power of bound some of our people. We are not | expression, rendered his address more asked to sacrifice our very lives or be | than ordinarily interesting. hermits and live in a desert, but we are | After scriptural reading by Archdeacon asked to distrust and discourage this pom- | ¢ B, Crawford of Kansas and the usual pous display of worldliness, becausé we | announcements by Secretary H. J. Me | | are men and children of Christ. | Coy Bishop Kinsolving was introduced by | Not because you want to be conspicu- | Rolla V. Watt. The Bishop expressed his ous but for Christ's sake. My friends, we | appreciation of the high and lofty priv | shall never meet again as we are to-night. | ilege afforded him of speakmg to an aud Coming as 1 did here to-night on my way | ence of young Christian men and womer to my far distant home, it seems that I s, ha ust mooak. OF 1o It was not his intention to speak of tha | i 3 v ife t6 the world was withoyt | C2rdinal principles of the church to wh men and laymen in attendance at the conference were eagerly e audiences subjects of discourse showed a broad wvariety in treatment. e clergymen spoke on the wital questions of the day. 1 lessons from the book of books, applyving them to mod- ons. As this zoas the last opportunity for pulpit speaking on the part of the ors the curiesity and desire of the public to hear the distinguished prelates r ) dted in a crowding of every church and hall in which sermons were delivered by them. ISSIONARY services were | ing the Chjnese out of their foul, ill-smell- out of their ignorance and out ) he owed allegiance, but to speak in a ger held last night at the superstition and degradation | Benetiction to mien. Th worid was mettc | SIt1, 2y of missionary work in and out < supers degradatio 3 T vt e RE ekl e st et o O oD, ea e Yrorld was better | of the church. Resuming, he said in pa BEvangeliet. The church was peaking of the strange | T hope I may join that choir of immortal, | DETAILED BY THE MASTER. invisible dead who speak the words of “I am a missionary in the cause of Christ. Jesus Christ. All of us who are Chris- tians were detailed by the Lord and Mas- —— BISHOP HALL | ter in trumpet tones eighteen hundred | Jears ugo to do his work. With all ou | sins we are called to bear the truths of % x ol AT ST. pBTBR’S the gospel to the ends of the world, Mark c TRIN | you the Injunction, ‘Go, ye, and preach CH DURING THE SERVICES HELD THERE YESTERDAY AND SOME OF THE e races of people who formerly lived among crowded to its { of New Mex- capacity and four said in part: renowned for the voted labors in the he hi is section of the coun- m onary f d interesting ad- J \'fl;'_\' ;v\!ixbnulp is et o Jrav @ once the habitation resses, T r!;f‘h ‘n“‘:n” of a people who have withered from the |+ 3 >d the mann leaving nothing but the ruins of e waging war ' These strangs Daopie Rave AT GRACE EPISCOPAL CHU Right | v and their land is occupied FAMOUS AND ELOQUEN the gospel to all the world.' Tt is a h PRE 2 < g . TIV oN ‘ e ; ission, t ofl flue T (2 GO G | | FAMOUS AND BLOGUSNT PRELATES WO SEOXE THE WORD G GOD T ATTENTIVE LISTENERS 1% | | Divine Exhorts Hearers to | Sai i, B ttar s St i in the | primitive manner as when the Spaniards e UGHOUT THE CITY. ; Cultivate God’ the church of God. What Barnabas and ican porder | Arst came uvon - them. The Spaniards | | od’s Saul did we may do. They preached the E : | came for gold, but they were accompanied | % C 1 ipd - i “hris R ot 1S | by the Franci ithers, who cafme for * Epirit. L gy e B B e R LR od. world, and it is our duty to follow in their | footsteps.” The Right Rev. Arthur C. A. Hal, | The speaker went on to say that com ion of the Tited states s o | BiSHOp Gailor, at the Church of the Advent, Discourses on the Les- Arizona alrea fame. People came T Bishop of Vermont, last nighi hed mercml\e“!grp”s;\v;\; gasedflfm rnn( o z ple e ! ; - . she nont, t preached | principles by which the affairs t et s wtking the sons Taught by the Desolation and Ruin of Greece. the cermon’'at S Peter's Episcopal | church are forwarded fo suescsstil co - o chra i e oo e S p iy Church. A large congregation listened | clusions. The church seeks to win missionari who have come te Arizona | duting the last two years have been men HE Right Rev. Thomas F. nal worth. | Gailor, D.D., Bishop of Ten- sent we are not_ prosecuting xicans. We withdrew ntr vears ago as a nec: Mexicans be- | Roman Catholic church, and | neople that church is doing work fairly well. It will do it better | crowded to its utmost capacity. Father | Greece is still the marvel of men, but nd bettcr when influenced by the attentively to an eloquent . discourse on | Yerts In every land under the sun, Wh ed into a sluggish, sensual, immoral exist- ; sclves possessed. To them the human life :;hea subject, “Sealing With the Spirit of | ceased to Bn3 Virgtnie dous o sale ence, which eventually wound up her ca- | was the highest pinnacle of their glory | G9d- ; the towns through which he passed. W nessec, delivered an eloquent | reer as a powerful nation. While Rome | and belief. Self-induigence, sensuality, | The services were conducted by the | was this flour sent abroad, when, in fa ermon last night at the Serv-| has left the modern world the impress of | Pomp and glory the Greek drank to the | Rev. W. M. Bours, pastor of the church. | the very brand was unknown to most Vi ces held at the Church of the | her law, her wisdom. her art and her|Very full. He thought little 10T aihe De- | The regular vested choir was augmented | §inians? Why did not the manutactur nt on Eleventh street. ) literature is still with us.. The magnifi-| J04 the grave was el Ang that wae tng | DY several singers who participated in pgi;fgaé‘:r;;’:‘:gg&%k:'twc“;"![ajm!izfl; rosa near Market. The chureh was | cent spiendor of the art and literature of | tharacteristic of Greek life. There was | L rendition of beautiful hymns. Bishop | Pie sca’ Simply because it is the nature something grand and inspiring in this lif-, | Hall in his sermon said: : 1 i of business to expand—to broaden un Parrish, pastor of the church, officiated at | when their pictures and statues we read | but it had to pass. She went to ruin un- We are unable to do things ourselves . B th @ the parishioners and th would more than compe tra labors expended i: | and a full choir was in attend- | Of Were decapitated and -the heads of Ro- | der the infinence of her sins. This world | foT_Our own salvation and the only way | resched anh coaqory O rne Tord 2 op Graves spoke in substance as | 1 1 Sna hop Gailor took for his text the | Man Emperors and conquerors were sub- | in ail its solid structure is supported by | ‘n which we may accomplish that end is | reason the church sends out its mission construct a sc | twelfth chapter of St. John, twenty-fitth | Stituted thereon by the hand of Roman | sacrifices to Christ. The body by its own | 10 seal ourselves with the. spirit of God. | aries. The Bishop resumed: . tell us that missionary work | Dr. Holly. Bishop of Haiti, e chap 2 b | people, that was the end of Greece. The | death gains its own resurrection. This is | This should not be merely a w as o culmination to his forty years of | verse. In part he said: | Greeks began and ended with them- |the contrary of the old Greek bellef, | stamped on our forehead or an extermai| FOR THE GLORY OF JESUS. 's | missionary labors he desired to coustruct | “The words in this chapter which is | selves. Washir.gton and Napoleon lost their lives | sign, but it should be indelibly impressed “What delight to be able to preach the among heathen ¢ foak “Such peopie draw pictures of un.|an industrial school for the hitherto | given to us are called forth by one of the| —.To the Greek's mind man began and|and found them where they lost them. |On our souls in God's own likeness. It | truth to the benighted races of the earin Conguerzble - superstition, ignorance and | Beglected mountaineers of the West In-| | roceding verses. Ancient Greece was a | €ided With himself. They had no concep- | The true seholar dies in his studles. And | Should be even as St. Peter salg, ‘Yo are | If at times the battle is hard. remember . Buppose you £0 with me. to | dles. He declared !ha‘ld(hx' COMSLIUCtion | | ywer in her time, but, lke all countries | ton of God nor of a hereafter. Their gods | %o it Is with our spiritual life. We must | partakers of divine nature.’ Not of his | that there is a comradeship which com- xam to the een )sv.z;lmn. ar::;,‘:, | ::llns‘u“l& Iac;(n.w(r‘x_llt “u‘;g ofm;ge, t.phl”;; 21| Where there was no higher ideal than | gercg othing more than heroic men, en- | be ready to surrender ourseives to the | mniscence, omnipotence or other infine | pensates for every discomfort. It is the will have to pass ugh the n: v . | : dowed with the same life, the same pas- | Will and teachings of Christ. ite pawers, but of God's m ¢ f Christl to support those who reeking with odor. You will be | Darrow and that thus they would be en- | man and worldly things, she finally drift- | s.ons and the same instincts as they them- “We must Jove God and fashion our- |-and attributes. AN Sharaghe g:t}; (:levgmgdu‘;gisr njv:sptno lVthe :-;:::-” »v the Chinese and perh abled to take advantage of the rich fer- ' 2 8 'God gives to_us the gift of his spirit | Christianity. You must evef be vigilant e B O e 4 | and we are made partakers of his truth, | in your work, for it is_at moments w | not been reacned by the Catholic church Loy . - {\;;tllce and pu:tny. T}l}]esg he offers so | you are off guarld that Satan attacks your i ing but de : xh we may stamp them on our h soul. Onward in praver, onward in the g et e e el B et | IMPORTANT QUESTION SCHEDULED 0 on our will, - | panoply of God, and, you have his word 2 School with a dormuory at | He aftributed the success which has at- | g et Y: o ing and_ controlling It . vili practi s againn End When you enict the. scnoal. | (cnded the eftoxts of the Epizcopal mis | FOR DISCUSSION ‘IN CONVENTION || mia oty smeation le (on 1 San Tl 6100 Yie dni P sz B, ] spirit through whom he makes ki Victory from his competitors in the Olym- Put the fi&‘xl”bé‘ :’m xa:“r?.~c-“ ith Lx‘e- o ‘m",“"“‘ corps of native ministers i 4 % g g y us the things of Christ, Wf:;ou':o:"tfig | plan games for the glory of Greece, )y.m Spect; if you examine their books you | O aSsist them. - = - HE third and last week of the General Convention of the Episcopal Church twill begin this sacraments are useless for it is necessary | Should wrest victory from your efforts in will find that besides studying the Chi-| o o T Bl rfll’l b menmgm 2 : to“gg:nee o:r r&or:l‘ ?(al.uru renewed. 'l’he fleglh olf'(__hrlsuanhy for the glory of gfg‘;g‘_’,‘“i“j‘f‘f AR TS perunE goom. | Rev. Dr. Hare, Bishop of South Dakota. morning. Following ure the events scheduled for to-day: people think that if they recelve | Jesus Christ. the sacraments they are providing them- In glosing the Bishop paid a tribute to etry H 4 % i selves with a passport to Heaven. Byt | the admirable work being accomplished by L & o ~hrictis 4 “‘God divided man into men of ail con- k —_ 1##1; I : 1, ut 0 » . ~“ne aifterence between Christianity | arioos oiocs B ihio, e, of all con. 10:00 a.m.—House of Bishops resumes its sittings in the Sunday School room of Trinity Church. more than that Is necessary. It is the | the Young Men's Christian Association, ift of grace whi and he urged his hearers never t. 558 PR N (o0 Tl e | e s 0 S e L Meets again a: 3 p. m. f":;;;‘w;"‘,v,,e"}}?f,'g g SGS | Bre 5332§.i‘}:£ ey it Chyietian doctors ministeing o The s | i Pl 57 ‘;',L‘Ffiié’fiffi;‘xé?fi?. by’ | 10:00 a.m—House of Deputies holds regular session in Trinity Church. rinertn;g;eg"vlrflol S e e T e e Jon "worsily bere Tou. Wil heaf. the S e e . 10:30 a.m.—House of Deputies to continue debate on “Marrisge and Divorce,” sitting as a com- ;32:;’%‘?;‘3%32%1?1‘3;'(::;::3“{; exetei | @ittt et @ fneted by men trained by ong experience | pulbit ras’ obcutfed by Dean'- Barty “of | 8:00 p. m.—Church Temperance Socicty to hold session at St. Luke's Church. . Erand" worke. Tt Gulokensthe” race (S | not know that not merely the extinction knowledge on the character and needs of | attendance at the General Episcopal Con- | the natives. These missionaries are lead- | vention in San Francisco, ‘ of our being so that we may lay h of sin but the cuitivation of a positive ] God’'s word. He must be wgrlh‘seglgere s G S s e B i F | In our own hearts and our souls made Continued on Page Five.