| William McKinley      The assassination of 
              any man is a public calamity. The assassination of a President is 
              more so, because, not only has an honored individual lost his life, 
              but because also any man who may be elevated to the same high office 
              may be treated in a similar manner; enmity exists toward the government, 
              and the heart of the government is sought in the President. The 
              assassination of William McKinley was more than the assassination 
              of a President. We have had other Presidents, grand men too, who 
              filled their office to the full, but they came much short of McKinley.To McKinley was given the extraordinary 
              grand work of projecting American thought and life into the policies 
              of the world. America is understood better to-day than ever before, 
              and McKinley is more honored. With some the President was more than 
              the man, but with him the man was more than the President. With 
              every new duty and responsibility a new trait of glory was seen 
              in his character. As a boy at home, a student at college, a soldier 
              in the battlefield, a representative in Congress, as Governor of 
              his State, and as President of the United States, he was so true 
              to sterling manhood that his popularity like the rising of the sun 
              rose higher and higher. When he had been shot, the people mad with 
              sorrow and rage, handling roughly the villain, he made what seems 
              a miracle, a step which brought him into touch with the cross of 
              Christ, and uttered words which have echoed and re-echoed throughout 
              the world. “Do not let them injure him.” The spirit of the martyrs, 
              the spirit of conquerers [sic], the spirit of Christ, breathes 
              in those startling words. Few men rise to that elevation, none beyond.
 He is the third martyred American 
              President. To gain a place along-side of Lincoln and Garfield is 
              of itself a great honor. Here are three men, Lincoln, Garfield, 
              McKinley, without superiors in the annals of time. They shine in 
              the firmament of human history with an [433][434] 
              intensity of lustre that is not surpassed. Men of lofty thought 
              and pure emotions bow at such a shrine and worship the invisible. 
              But as they differ in glory so also do they differ in the incidents 
              leading to their death and coronation.
 Mr. Lincoln was murdered because of 
              the emancipation of the slaves and the crushing of the rebellion; 
              his life was given as a ransom for the black race. Mr. Garfield 
              was slain because a man crazed with a blind ambition failed in securing 
              the political recognition he thought for reasons satisfactorily 
              to himself he merited. May be that the bitter opposition of unsafe 
              and insincere leaders of his own party had an indirect influence 
              on that crazed mind. Mr. Lincoln was murdered for what he had done: 
              Mr. Garfield was murdered for what he was, for standing up so bravely 
              against men in his own party who sought to rule and to reign over 
              him. With Mr. McKinley these things were absent. He had freed the 
              millions in the isles of the south seas and in the isles of the 
              orient, and had the unbounded support, not only of his own party 
              but of the patriotic and the true throughout the land, yea, throughout 
              the world. He was murdered because he represented law and order 
              and love. The blow he received struck the heart of the nation. For 
              that reason his death is mourned throughout the world.
 The assassin is guilty as Judas. He 
              voluntarily chose himself for the cruel and terrible deed, and will 
              suffer for it. Above him and above all events is God. Mr. Garfield 
              at the death of Lincoln said, “The Lord reigneth and the government 
              at Washington still lives,” and as true as that God reigneth he 
              uses this calamity to the elevation and the building up of his kingdom. 
              As Cowper said:
  
               
                “Judge not the Lord by feeble sense,But trust him for his grace;
 Behind a frowning Providence,
 He hides a smiling face.”
      Moses was called to 
              die while for his age he was still a young man, at least, he was 
              full of vigor mental and physical. To all human reasoning he was 
              the very man to complete the work he had began and so successfully 
              conducted so far but God said, no, “Moses come up with me to the 
              mountain and die, Joshua is now the man to do this work.” Is there 
              not a beautiful parallel here? William McKinley did a great work—greater 
              perhaps than any other since Lincoln—and to the eye of man no other 
              could carry on and develop that work, but God said, “William come 
              up, the man to carry on the work is at your right hand, come up 
              and make room for him.” Envy long ago marked Roosevelt for political 
              slaughter. It said that he should not become President, and to make 
              that doubly sure, he was made Vice President, and now to break over 
              his environments he had all the machinations of the politicians, 
              and that almost unsurmountable thing called American tradition to 
              overcome. While in those circumstances his political [434][435] 
              opponents smiled with serene satisfaction and supposed security, 
              but God said, “Gentlemen, this man is to become President,” and 
              he has. The plans of men are shattered, the plans of God are in 
              force. Mr. McKinley is dead, Mr. Roosevelt is at the head of the 
              nation. And we have abundant reason for placing in him profoundest 
              confidence. He is the worthy successor of the noblest of men.He will, as he has said, follow the 
              path marked out for him by his illustrious predecessor, but other 
              providential incidents, doubtless, will turn up, and in a large 
              sense the path is not yet marked out for him, and the difference 
              between McKinley and Roosevelt may be as great as the difference 
              between Moses and Joshua, and Joshua followed the path as marked 
              out for him only in principles of actions; not in detail of operations. 
              Principles are eternal, policies of methods of statesmanship are 
              changeable. The policies of one man may not meet the demands of 
              another; what may be just the thing to do in a given case may be 
              illogical or unreasonable in another. We should not insist that 
              this man of God shall lose his individuality in the greatness and 
              the success of another. There are specific tasks for him to accomplish, 
              and he will accomplish them only as he is led and strengthened of 
              the God of Joshua. America by the logic of its environments is called 
              of God to enlighten, to lead, to Christianize vast millions, to 
              shed a new glory, to preach the old gospel in the garb of a new 
              rhetoric, and God knows the man to do this vast work. We mourn the 
              death and loss to us of McKinley, but thank God for the providence 
              which gave us Roosevelt.
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