Publication information |
Source: Zion’s Herald Source type: magazine Document type: editorial Document title: “‘The Work of the Master’” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: 2 October 1901 Volume number: 79 Issue number: 39 Pagination: 1253 |
Citation |
“‘The Work of the Master.’” Zion’s Herald 2 Oct. 1901 v79n39: p. 1253. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
William McKinley (religious character). |
Named persons |
Henry Clark Corbin; William McKinley. |
Document |
“The Work of the Master”
WHEN a great and noble man passes away, even the apparently commonplace incidents
connected with his career and illustrating his character are treasured up and
made the texts of numberless sermons or addresses. It has been so with every
notable name in history so far, and it will be so in the instance of that exemplary
Christian man, William McKinley, in one sense a product of the Methodist Episcopal
Church, but in a broader sense the creation of American Christianity. Among
the McKinley stories which deserve to be told again and again is the incident
narrated at the memorial service held in Vienna by the U. S. Minister to Austria,
who knew the late President intimately.
At the beginning of the Spanish War, Mr. McKinley
had on one occasion been working at his official duties late into the night.
He then pushed his chair back and wearily closed his eyes. General Corbin, who
was present, remarked:
“Tired to death, Mr. President?”
“Yes; and I could not keep it up, Corbin, if I
did not feel that I was doing the work of the Master!”
That is it. All good work is the work of the Master.
Whether it be the performance of civic duties in the cause of law and liberty,
whether it be warring against worse than Spaniards—against the slaveries of
the commercial task-masters, the corruption of depraved officials, or the tyrannies
of the brewery and the saloon—whether it be temperance agitation, “slum” ministry,
missionary sacrifice, or any other form of noble effort, the need is for this
sense of divine proprietorship and participation in Christian enterprises. We
cannot “keep it up” unless we feel that the Master is doing it along with us
and through us. It is God’s work, and we must do it with God’s strength, in
God’s way.