Making Men [excerpt]
There were two boys who grew up together. They did
everything together that boys would do. They ate together, they
slept together, they went to school together, they played together,
they did everything together except one thing. One of these boys
was influenced by another boy to go to a little mission Sunday School
established by the Congregational Church in Cleveland, in the back
of a saloon. This boy grew up in the atmosphere of that Sunday School.
He was influenced to keep on through high school, and to go to college,
and during his college course he dedicated his life to the ministry
of the Master, and today in the City of Cleveland, in the Pilgrim
Congregational Church, the Bohemian pastor is John Pruke, second
to none in his influence for good among the Bohemians of this land
of ours. That is the boy that grew up in the little mission school
in the atmosphere of Christ. I said he had a chum, and they did
everything in common except the one thing. The chum didn’t go with
John Pruke to Sunday School, to this Sunday School that I speak
about. He did go to what he called a Sunday School, but not in our
understanding of that word. It was only because it was held on Sunday
that it was called a Sunday School. He learned a lot of things there,
and he learned, in what is very similar to our Catechism, a lot
of things boys should not learn. One of the questions he answered
was this, and it sounds very similar to one we have had in our boyhood.
What is my duty to God? And here is the difference. This boy, with
the others in that class, answered, I have no duty to God, because
there is no God. This boy grew up in that atmosphere, and one day
when the eyes of this whole nation were turned towards the city
of Buffalo, New York, yes, when the ears of the whole world were
opened in that direction because that day at the Pan American Exposition
the President of our country was to voice sentiments of worldwide
interest, because it was expected that day [68][69]
that William McKinley would utter principles that would never die,
the whole world was looking towards Music Hall and the delighted
folk began coming up to the platform to shake hands with William
McKinley. As that line filed past the President there was a young
fellow coming along, and as he extended his hand, his bandaged hand,
from beneath this bandage came the two shots that sent William McKinley
to his martyr’s grave and Leon Czolgocz, murderer of William McKinley,
was the chum of John Purke, who did everything that Purke did excepting
honor Almighty God.
|