The Assassination of the President
The heart of the nation stood still
last Friday when the news was flashed over the wires that President
McKinley had been shot, in the Buffalo Exposition, by a man who
had approached him with thousands of others to grasp his hand. There
is no need here to recapitulate the story; the entire country, the
civilized world, indeed, has followed with intensest interest the
bulletins from that darkened chamber where the man who for years
has shown how public service could be raised to heroic power has
crowned that service by patient obedience, and the will to live
for the sake of all that hangs upon his life. Thank God, at this
writing we have good reason to hope that though not yet beyond danger,
our President will live. The prayers that since that dreadful hour
have been going up unceasingly from thousands of churches and hundreds
of thousands of Christian homes, and meeting hopeful response in
the improving condition of the stricken head of this great people.
And it is not the least important lesson of what might have been
an awful calamity, that the response is under God due to the President
himself, to the clean, upright, religious life which prepared him
not only physically but morally to endure the shock.
How terrible the shock must have been
to him, we have no word of his to tell us, but can we not divine?
That his first word should have been of care for the beloved wife
in whom his life is centered, the second of protection for the assassin
whose dastardly act had roused the instinct of vengeance in every
soul but his, and his third of sympathy with the great multitude
whose joy was checked by the attack upon himself—all this is deeply
impressive. But while it awakens in every heart a new reverence
for the man who at such a moment, by the spontaneous impulse of
character, demeaned himself so Christly, it also deepens our realization
of what must have been to him the shock of the fact that such a
deed could be done to such a man as he. After years of such service
as his, unique in its perplexities, responsibilities, difficulties,
unique too in the wisdom and self-repression with which he has dealt
with them all, that there could be a man to do this deed! How deeply
this thought must wound him as he lies in enforced silence, his
far embracing mind as clear as in his brightest hours.
The lessons of this great calamity—for
calamity it is though the President recover—are many, and in all
their bearings that have been pointed out by pulpit and press during
the days just past. They come home to the American people as law-makers,
as executors of law, as politicians, but most of all, as Christians.
For though without question our law-makers and politicians have
something to do in consequence of this crime, yet in the
last analysis, it is not because of our expansive national hospitality,
that this atrocity has been three times possible in the brief period
of a single generation, nor is it due primarily to any defect in
our laws or to any laxity in their execution. To us as a Christian
nation the lesson comes home. Are we so living, so conducting ourselves
as a people, that the embittered and hopeless of all lands turn
to us, not because of the license they may enjoy but because of
the confidence they repose in us, our principles, our ideal of national
life? If the liberty and equality and fraternity which we profess,
not because we are republicans or democrats, but because we are
disciples and brothers of the Christ, were a reality in our national
life, such crimes as this would not be committed.
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