A Curious Change
The Pan-American Fair was designed for
instruction and amusement. Its avowed purpose was to exhibit the
marvellous progress in agricultural and manufactured products that
mark the century just closed. The hope was that such exhibition
would open South American markets to the United States. While the
Monroe doctrine shuts the governments of the Old World from the
Southern continent, we must also cultivate fraternal relations with
our brothers of the Southland. The Fair was to be an exhibit of
thoughts in the form of things. It was to be irreligious, not anti-religious,
but secular. Because South America is largely Roman Catholic, and
North America is largely Protestant, the soul of civilization—Christianity,
was not to be noticed. The Tent of the Evangelist was pitched outside
the grounds, given the outer court. An anarchist fires two bullets,
the tragedy brings the nation to its knees. “God breathed into the
Fair the breath of life, and it became a living soul.” The clamour
of the Midway dies down, the exhibits are forgotten, the world waits
by the dying bed of a Christian Statesman. A Christian character
becomes a memorial window, through it the light of the uplifted
countenance shines; we forget the walls we have builded and think
only of the character Christ has completed. Amusement and instruction
are forgotten, Christ is remembered. “The stone that the builders
rejected has become the head of the corner.” Murder has made another
martyr, and the martyr witnesses anew to Christ. In a few months
the buildings will be destroyed, the Fair forgotten, but through
the centuries the memory of McKinley will shine with added lustre
and in the brightness of that light Christ will be enthroned.
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