You are here

قراءة كتاب The Call of the World; or, Every Man's Supreme Opportunity

تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"

‏اللغة: English
The Call of the World; or, Every Man's Supreme Opportunity

The Call of the World; or, Every Man's Supreme Opportunity

تقييمك:
0
No votes yet
دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 2

href="@public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@33237@[email protected]#Page_68" class="pginternal" tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">68—Has many world harbors, 68—Navigable rivers, 69—Is isolated from other commanding powers, 69.

  • AMERICA HAS QUALITIES OF CHARACTER NEEDED FOR A WORLD TASK
    • The pioneers, 70—Mechanical genius, 71—Public school, 72—The home missionary, 72—Home of world movements, 73.
  • AMERICA HAS RESOURCES FOR A WORLD TASK
    • Size, 75—Mineral resources, 77—Railroads, 77—Wealth, 78—Agricultural products, 79.
  • AMERICA MUST HAVE VISION AND CONSECRATION ADEQUATE TO HER TASK
    • A spiritual enterprise, 82—America's share of the world task, 83—Men and money needed, 84.

  • CHAPTER IV
    A MAN'S RESPONSE TO THE WORLD APPEAL
    • Efficiency experts, 87—A fourfold program, 89Widening horizon, 90—Studying the Church, 92—The missionary committee, 93Unwithholding consecration, 95—Principles of stewardship, 98—Methods, 101Unending prayer, 103—Calls forth and energizes movements, 106—Finds a way out in hours of crisis, 107—Fills gaps in thin line of battle, 107—Togo's telegram, 109.

  • FOREWORD

    The four questions which the author has most frequently heard in discussing world problems with men are the following:

    What progress is the missionary enterprise making?

    How much remains to be done?

    What is America's share of world responsibility?

    How can men relate themselves in a practical way to the spread of Christianity throughout the world?

    It is to give a brief answer to these four fundamental questions that the following pages have been prepared for use in Missionary Discussion Groups, Men's Bible Classes, Brotherhoods, Missionary Committees, and groups of Sunday School Officers and Teachers. It is also confidently expected that many men who cannot meet to discuss these problems in any of the groups mentioned will read and study the book in private. In preparing the manuscript the author has had in mind a large number of men who are now or should become public advocates of missions. The book presents information which they may use in addresses.

    Many of the facts given have been taken from the Report of the Edinburgh World Missionary Conference, The World Atlas of Christian Missions, The Statesman's Year Book, 1912, The Decisive Hour of Christian Missions, by John R. Mott, and The Unoccupied Mission Fields of Africa and Asia, by S. M. Zwemer.

    The author is indebted to his friend, the Rev. W. R. Dobyns, D.D., of St. Joseph, Missouri, for the design on the cover.

    It is the hope of the writer that the reading and discussion of the topics outlined in these pages will inspire many men to undertake to master the world plans of Christ and lead them to enthrone at the center of life the missionary purpose—the one purpose around which a man may build all the facts of his life and to which he may cling and let everything else go when he is hard pressed.

    New York, September, 1912.


    THE CALL OF THE WORLD


    CHAPTER I
    THE WIDENING SOVEREIGNTY OF CHRIST IN
    THE WORLD

    In a discussion concerning the elements of an effective speech, Dr. C. H. Patton, of the

    Pages