The American Missionary. Volume 43, No. 05, May, 1889
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Various. The American Missionary. Volume 43, No. 05, May, 1889
FINANCIAL
CENTENNIAL
CONGREGATIONALISM IN GEORGIA
NOTES FROM THE SOUTH
ILLUMINATED SPOTS
THE GOVERNMENT AND THE INDIANS
NOTES FROM NEW ENGLAND
WHAT THE WORLD SAYS
PARAGRAPHS
SOUTHERN ECHOES
BOOK NOTICE
THE SOUTH
THE GEORGIA CONGREGATIONAL ASSOCIATION
EVANGELISTIC LABORS
THOMASVILLE, GEORGIA
MRS. LYDIA HERRICK BENNETT
STUDENT'S LETTER
THE INDIANS
PERILS OF MISSIONARY LIFE
FIRST FRUITS
THE CHINESE
LOS ANGELES CONGREGATIONAL CHINESE MISSION
BUREAU OF WOMAN'S WORK
WOMAN'S STATE ORGANIZATIONS
THREE NEW ORGANIZATIONS IN THE SOUTH
OUR YOUNG FOLKS
HOW THE PENNIES GREW
RECEIPTS FOR MARCH, 1889
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These pages will come before our readers amid the enthusiastic rejoicings of a great nation celebrating the one hundredth anniversary of its Constitution—a Constitution that has been tried and found worthy.
The greatest strain to which this great charter has been subjected in the past hundred years has been occasioned by slavery. The crisis cost untold blood and treasure. The great strain of the next hundred years will be what slavery has left behind it—a vast and growing black population, and an imbittered race prejudice.
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One of the impressive thoughts which a visit to an institution like Fisk University is sure to excite, is the relation of all this work to the future. Apropos of this, the Rev. J.O.A. Clark, D.D., LL.D., of Macon, Ga., has just written a little tract of fifty pages on "The Future of the Races." He does not vote in New England, nor is he a Yankee; but he is a good and true witness. He says, that the Races are running races along the paths of knowledge and up the hills of science. These are his words (pages 19 and 20): "Have they" [the colored people] "availed themselves of the educational facilities? Have they profited by them? We answer that they have been incalculably benefited. They have shown not only that they can receive education, but education of a high order. Their improvement has been so astonishing as to silence doubt and caviling. Our Southern eyes have been opened to see it. Southern candor is free to admit it. There are none who do not admit it but the hopelessly prejudiced. I am persuaded that the average examinations in the colored schools are better than the average in the white schools, for teachableness is the basis of all education, and this universally distinguishes the negro." Dr. Clark is not saying that the white boy may not learn more easily and master more rapidly, but rather is telling how the hare came out second in the race with his competitor not so fleet of foot, but which had the gift of patient continuance in well-doing. Still he accentuates the fact that "their improvement is astonishing." I am sure that no one can visit Fisk University without having all his doubts dispersed as to the future of the negro race. It is to have a future.
This leads me to quote the closing words of Dr. Clark's significant pamphlet (page 52): "All Africa stretches out her hands to God; to the work of delivering her fatherland from heathenism. God is calling the blacks of these Southern States. They are to be the chief instruments in giving the Gospel of Christ to the benighted land of their fathers. Wherefore, let the work of Christian, and so sanctified, education go on."
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