The Fall Campaign
The Fair is in the past tense, the Fall
Campaign is in the future tense. Buffalo has welcomed the world,
our streets have been crowded, our hotels and homes filled, our
street cars overloaded; the tide of human life has ebbed away. “What
is written is written.” We have been very busy in serving men and
women. Our furniture is worn, and many of us are tired. We now turn
as a Church to distinctively Christian work. “And when he had come
to himself he said, I will arise and go to my Father.” Let us come
to ourselves, and to our Father. Let us not be content to enter
our homes, settle in our old way and spend the winter doing nothing
for the City of Buffalo. Let us come to our Father, find what he
has for us to enjoy and to do. Buffalo never needed pure and undefiled
religion more than she needs it now. From her streets one man has
gone to be with God, to wear a martyr’s crown; another has gone
to his own place, scorched in body by the electric current, in soul
by the awful flames of sin and hate. Both are beyond our sympathy
and help, but the raw material for others like both these is all
about us.
The product of the Christian home, church,
Sunday-school, has gone; the product of the saloon and anarchy has
gone; the church and the saloon remain. We know the one will be
busy night and day, all days debauching and degrading men and women;
let the other be just as busy saving and building up. Rally to your
church home and work. Remember the prayer-meetings, Sunday-school,
Sabbath services. Come, bring friends, welcome strangers, try to
lead men and women to Christ.
“Thy will be done” was the last prayer
of our dying President. We have sung the hymn, “Nearer, My God,
to Thee,” as a nation. Nearness to God and doing God’s will means
service of man in the name of Christ. Let us incarnate our prayer
and song in deeds of service.
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