VTti .1 ' -I- ,! ;r fy: j. r J J -t ' ( The Cdmmbner j a "V0L&P.-N0.9 .T . . 'U N It h r I v I children on ono side should bo educated .and tho' children On the other side condemned ", to tho night pf ignorance; I shall assumo no . such responsibility, I nni anXious that my chlldrdn " and grandchildren shall ho oduc'atod, and I do -not dtfslro (or a child or grandchild of niino anything that I do not deslrd for every child in tho world. Children come into tho world 'without thoir own volitlorf; they (ire -hero as a part of the Almighty's plan, and there is not a child oh God's footstool that has not as much right to all that Hfg 'can givfc as my child or you child. Education increases one's capacity . for service ' and thorof oro "enlarges' tho rowdrd that one can rightfully draw from society. There Is no reason why every human being should not have both a good heart and a trained mind; but; if I Wore compelled to choose between the two, I would rather that ono should havq' a good heart than a trained mind. A good hoarrcan make a dull brain use ful to society, but a bad heart cannot" make a good use 6f any brain, however trained or brilliant. When wo deal with tho heart we must deal with religion, for religion controls tho heart, and, when wo consdor this wo And that tho religious environment that surrounds our young people is as favorable as their intellectual en vironment. As in tho case of education, lack of appreciation may1 be due in part to lack ot opportunity to make comparison. If we visit a country in Asia where the philosophy of Con fucius controls, or whore they worship Buddha, or follow tho prophet, or observe tho forms ot tho Hindu religion, we find that, except where ' they have borrowed from Christian nations, , they have made no progress in fifteen hundred years. "Here, all have tho advantage of Christian Ideals, and yet, according to statistics, something more than half the adult males are "not connected with any religious organization. Some scoff at religion, and a few are outspoken enemies of the church. Can they be blind to tho benefits conformed by our churches? Se- durlty of life and property Is not' entirely due to criminal laws, to a sheriff in each county, andto an occasional' policeman. For every per pori" made honest1 by, conscience' an hundred are- made honest by law; for every one kept in the straight and narrow way by fear of prison walls, ' a multitude are restrained by the invisible walls' that-conscience rears about us walls 'that are trongor than the walls of stone. Law Is but- tho crystallization of conscience;, moral sentiment must bo created before it can express itself in- the form of a statute. Every preacher and priost, therefore, whether his congregation be large or small, who quickens the conscience ol those who hear him helps the community.' Every church of evory denomina tion, whether important or unimportant, that - helps to raise tho moral standards of ftfte land "benefits all who live under tho flag whether they acknowledge thoir obligations or not. But lack of appreciation on thd'part ot those- outside of the church would not concern-us so much it all the church members lived Up to thoir obligations. Let me ask those" not mem bers of the-church to pardon me for a moment While I speak to church members to everyone who is connected with any branch of the Christian ctfurch. How much is It worth to -one to be born again? Of what value is it to havo had the heart touched by the Saviour and so changedJEhat it loves the things it .used to hate and hates the things it formerly loved? Of What value is it to have one's life so trans formed, that, instead of resembling a stagnant pool, it becomes Hko a living spriug, pouring forth that which refreshes and invigorates? What is it worth to tho Christian, and what is it worth to those about him, to have his life -brought by Christ into such vital living contact with the Heavenly Father, that that life becomes .tho means through which tho goodness of God pours out to tho world? But I go a. step farther and ask whether th6 church as an organization not any one demonl- ' nation but the church universal-r appreciates Its groat opportunities, its tremendous responsl- bility, and the infinite power behind it. Take your Bibles when you go home and turn to the concluding' versos of the last chapter of Matthew. Note the use of tho little word. ALL four times in .a few lines. It is the last cdnterence that Christ has with his followers; 1 ' It is after His crucifixion and resurrection 'it . ' was His last-word to them. E"e told them that 'alljpower not some power but all power in heaven and. Jn earth, had been given into his hands; He sent them out to make disciples of air nations not of some but of all; He in structed , them to teach all tho tilings that -he had cotntnanded-; and Ho concluded witli that , wonderful promise: MLo I ani with you always, oven unto tho end of the world." Is there any other organization with such a commission back of it? Here is a gospel intended for every human being; hero is .a moral code that is to endure for all time; here is a philosophy of life that fits Into every human need; and back of these is all power in heaven and In earth! Does the church realize that God has given Into its keeping a solution for every problem that can, perplex a human heart 6r vex the world? Does it realize that it has not only Absolution but tho ONLY solution of all problems? J.t I mistake not there is more unrest in this country than was ever known before, and the world is nearer to tho verge ot chaos .than it has been In centuries. Let me call your atten tion to some of the problems that press upon the church for solution not all of these prob lems but three only. First, tho labor problem. Js there any , Christian who does not see increasing class conciouSness among the members of two great classes known as capitalists and laborers? Is there any Christian who does not-note a seem ing solidifying among the members of these two classes as if they looked forward with a 'vague dread to what they regard as an irrepressible conflict? Can any Christian regard the future as entirely bright unless capital and labor . can bo brought together in harmonious co-operation? All desire that the laborer shall give to society -the maximum of his producing power, but can he do so if he is not a willing worker? Alt . desire that the employer shall bo at his best in organizing and directing ability, but cap he be, unless -he is a satisfied employer?' .How Han we fill our land with willing workers and. satis fied employers except by the application of the " doctrines of the Man of. Galilee? The church believes in God, and it .believes that the God who created the employer created the employee; the church believes, in 'Christ,' and it belieyes that tho Christ wh.o djed f'or'ontf died for the other also; the church looks for' ward to the comifig of an universal Brother hood and it believes that this brotherhood will include both" those wh6 work for wages and those who pay wages. Is not this problem suf ficient to challenge the supremo attention of "the church? If not the church, what organization can spoak peace to the industrial1 world? . Another domestic problem, not so 4ld and not so hard to solve I trust, but irritating, while it lasts, is presented by the profiteer - I do not know whether you have any prof v iteers.in your community; it you have not you ought to advertise the fact.' .An hundred mil--lions . ot people are looking for just such a town to live in and, so far as I know; you will . have "no rival. We have some profiteers in Ne braska and, if they can: invade the precincts ot that great commonwealth, what gtate can hope to escape this plague. In one Nebraska city a clothing merchant, who sold on Installments, was charging ninety-seven dollars and a lmlf for suits of clothes that cost him thirteen and a half. In another city a shoe merchant was making an average prqfit of eighty-six per cent. That you may understand this let me explain. It means that, whenever he received a dollar and eighty-six cents for shoes, he would put one dollar of the dollar eighty-six cents aside and thus address.it: "Dollar, out of you I must pay the farmer who raised the animal that furnished the hide; out of you I 'must pay the, tanner who converted the hide into leather; out ofou I must pay the factory that converted the leather into shoes; and out of you I must pay all who helped to carry the hide from the farm to the tannery, from the tannery to the factory and . trom the factory to my store. Nova dollar if you pay all these others'-for the work thy have done I'll pay myself the other eighty-six cents for handling the shoes out over the counter to the customer," That is profiteering on a small . scale-rl say on a small jjcale because much of the profiteering is on a larger scale. Some of the corporations have piado returns to tho Treas ury department at Washington showing a prof it of one hundred per cent, some one thousand per cent and some have gone to three, four and even -live thousand per cent, .y$ftstfall we ha,& a coal strike at the begin- m. .9f J&nter. , . sThe. ne. workersomplain : that UYiug, expenses were riling Easier than wages and asked for more pay., The mine own ers refused thejr demands" and. tho nation was threatened with; a shortage' of- fuel. Wo now jlndthat some4 three hundred of those coal companies were making large profits, some five hundred per cent, some a thousand per cent, some fifteen hundred per cent and four of them reported that, after paying all wages and other . expeggesr they collected a profit of two thou sand per cent on their .capital and this profit was collected during tho war when young men were leaving college- and offering on their coun try's, altar their preparation for life; when mothers were giving up their sons on whom they hoped to rely in their declining years, when wives Were taking upon, themselves a double duty and when fathers Were leaving their children. It was when the people were paying taxes such aS ithey had never paid -before, and loaning money to the government oh a scale never" dreamed of before, When the nation was straining '.every nerve to do it's part in the big gest War the world ever knew; these corpora tions, engaged in handling a nOcessary of life, 'were shaming the highwayman by their prac tices. " T- I was so impressed by the gravity of the sit uation that I laid the matter before tho Pres byterian -General Assembly when it met in Philadelphia last spring, ' I suggested that tho churches ought to take the lead in arousing pub lic sentiment against the crime of the' profiteer 'and pointed out that these men will be sent to tho penitentiary some day and that it will be embarrassing to have a. sheriff enter a promi ' nent church and take a prominent member from a prominent pew and show that he has been stealing trora all the rest of the congregation. I argued that we should drive all the, profiteers out of the Presbyterian church o that, when they go to the penitentiary,' they will"-not go as Presbyterians- There t should be no Presby- tefrlan ward in the .profiteer prison. """ i also brought the matter fo the attention of the Metnodist General Conference and would have been glad 'to go before all the other churches, but about this time" the "parties, began tojfie-rd their national conventions and I thought that theySnight do sOntethlrfg; to protect the peo ple from 'the" greed of th$ Db1t6'er. ,'" I went to the Republican convention first not because I had more faith In that pa'rty but be cause it met first. I urged the adoption of a strong plank against the profiteer and expressed my willingness to take such a plank to the Democratic convention and 'ask for its adoption, I thought wo might be able to unite the two parties on this proposition and drive the prof iteer out of the country. You can imagine my disappointment when I read the Republican plat form and found that the plank against the prof iteer was the shortest plank: in the platform. It contained, but one" sentence and that sentence contained but eighteen ords, andV they did not mean anything. I was disappointed but could 'understand the embarrassment under which the party labored. tt is much easier for a party to punish wrong doing in the opposite party than among its own -member. I heard" a story thirty years ago that Illustrates this embarrassment. A man fwenfc Into a clothing Btore and, whenthe merchant was not looking, put on' a coat and ran out. The merchant caught sight of. him as he went out the door and Shouted, "stop thief," but the thief did not stop,. Then a policeman joined in the chase but utiU the thief did not stop. Finally, the policeman drew his revolver and shouted; "Stop, or I will shoot.' The merchant became excited and, grabbing the policeman, protested: "If you do shoot, shoot him in the pants, the coat beongs to me," That- vy8" the trouble at Chicago. Nearly all the profiteers were there, as delegates, or in the gallery or at the Blaclcstone. Of course, the convention was embarrassed any convention would, be under the same circum stances, : Then I hurried out to San Francisco, confi dent that our convention would give to the con suming public that protection which the Repub lican convention had refused to give. I prepared a plank against tho profiteers, proposing reme dies whiclr seemed to be adequate but the res olutions committee turned the planlc down. As committees dd not always reflect the sentiment of conventions X took the plank before the con vention and the convention turned it down even more 'emphatically It' seemed as if all the prof iteer who were not at Chicago had reached v Sari Francisco before I atdarndome of the ms ' ones VeVatboth pla6d3V. ;.r v - a " 2. - V '-v f i vr&mmMi.n t