An Unparalleled Sunday
In the memory of many living there has never been a Sunday like
the last. Merciful indeed was the ordering of events whereby the
day of the Lord, with its memories and associations, intervened
between the death of President McKinley and the final commitment
of his body to the earth. For during the hallowed hours of last
Sunday the overburdened heart of this nation poured forth its sorrow
at multitudes of public and private altars. It was a time when the
prayer, “Send us help from the sanctuary,” was heard and answered.
Men came out of the Lord’s house quieter, more trustful and more
resigned. The note of revenge, struck too often in the pulpit on
the preceding Sunday, had died away. It was as if the wounded President’s
own attitude toward his assassin had been, in a measure, communicated
to the people. Never was the essential Christian character of our
country better evidenced than in the throng of worshippers last
Sunday and in the words of consolation, interpretation and incitement
to better living that fell from the lips of ministers of God. The
essential unity of Christendom, too, was made manifest. No Methodist
church thought of claiming Mr. McKinley as belonging specially to
its fellowship, while the tributes from every branch of the Protestant
communion and from the Roman Catholic churches, almost without exception,
showed that in the presence of the elemental realities of life and
death men of varying religious classifications are one.
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