■ /, v-'f A • The Gospel Her “LOOK ON THE FIELDS—THE HARVEST IS COME—THE LOVE OF CHRIST CONSTRAINETH US. VoL 1. RALEIGH, N. C., APRIL, 1888. No. 1. The Gospel Herald. RAl’ES PER ANNUM. I. For papers separately addressed, either to same or to different post offices : One copy - -5° Three copies at $I, or 33j cts. apiece. II. For packages sent to* one person, who shall be responsible for their distribution : Four copies for $i, or more at — 25 cts, apiece. Twenty-five copies for $5, or more at. 20 cts. apiece. One hundred copies for $15, or more at 15 cts. apiece. |[p^ Please remit by Draft, Postal Order, or in Registered Letter, and notify us promptly of any change in address. Address C. DURHAM, Rai,i;igh, N. C. THE BOARD OF MISSIONS AT WORK IN OUR TOWNS. “ Mission fields” will perhaps exist until the end of time. At present they are to be found not only in country places, but also in cities and towns abounding in churches and chapels—very often right under their shad ows, and near to the “rector’s” dwelling and the Methodist or Baptist parsonage. In many towns of even our own State there are families who never attend worship, and who know of religion and God only by hearsay; while in our larger towns these may be num bered by the hundreds. Let a celebrated evangelist visit Wilmington, Raleigh, Char lotte, and how many persons will be found attending church for the first time in five, ten, or twenty years! heathens in Christen dom. Now, these people are by no means to be left out when we come to estimate the extent of the mission field in North Carolina. Much as the destitution in the rural districts may stir our hearts, and properly, there is occasion for as deep sympathy in the condi tion of the non-church goers in our towns and cities, and more occasion for alarm in view of what that condition threatens to our country and the integrity of republican and Christian institutions. When our towns grow to the dimensions of cities, these, if left un noticed by our boards of missions and by town churches, will lapse into barbarism and savagery as decided as is now found in Africa. The “British savage,” and the “New York rough,” are not a whit behind the old-time Fiji cannibal. He takes life as readily, and has reduced theft, burglary, arson and assassination to a science. The evil is one which needs no outside help in order to its growth and increase. If leaven is the true representative of grace, in the heart, it is equally symbolical of evil tliere. Indeed the latter may rather be compared to those germs or spores, which mature in a night and propagate their kind by scores and hundreds and nrillions, in a few days. Were it not for the presence of the Lord of Hosts with his people, they could not keep pace with the Evil One. Weeds flourish without work, where corn languishes with it. Evil is infectious; good is at best contagious. The former can be absorbed from the atmos phere ; the latter requires contact. Vice, like an odor, enters at the'chinks and crevi ces ; virtue needs to be invited and wooed with doors wide open. Down hill and up hill express the difference. Active effort must be put forth to reach the evil in our towns. It will not correct itself , rather in the end if left to itself it will subvert the good. Beginning with a theatre or opera- house in some deserted place of worship, thence going on to the restaurant and saloon and ending with the gambling hall or other “Hell,” its course in some of our larger cities is onward—right onward and always downward. It is this which imparts such significance to the work of Edward Judsonin New York. There he is putting forth Herculean efforts to stem the tide wdiich ought never to have been allowed to set in. Had those “up town” churches, when they were “down town,” gone out into the highways and hedges and compelled t^iem to come in— and find a home when they came, the same up-town churches would have been reared, but not at the expense and to the utter ex tinguishment of the down-town centres of gospel influence. It is barely possible to recover ground when once lost by neglect like this. And if God does “not leave a small remnant” as a nucleus, the attempt will be attended with greater difficulties than are to be met on virgin soil. And now for our towns—what are we to do ? The evil is not so imminent and threatening it may be as in many Northern and Western towns. But it is nevertheless coming. It needs only to be let come. With railroads, manufactur ing, commerce, comes population, and much of it foreign and infidel. Are our town churches alive to the situation? Do they take it in? Are their pastors men of work and wise to understand the times? Can we bi'ing ourselves to the point of erecting two plain churches instead of one fashionable, stylish and costly, which may rather repel than attract the middle and the lower or poorer classes? With the confessional and mass, the Catholic wields a power which compels all of every class to attend upon the services of the sanctuary. These, Pro testants reject; but yet they are not power less. Nay, if they wield surely and faith fully the simple gospel—with its invitations, warnings, labors of love, its unending search after lost sheep, and travels among the lanes and slums, and then provide a home for the wanderers, they too may crowd their temples with worshippers, but worshippers of a higher order, willing, loving, adoring. And it is a question worthy to be considered by Boards of Missions, whether they cannot help here, if in no other way, by giving wise direction to the efforts of churches and pas tors in meeting the destitution in our towns. W. R. HOW TO BUILD CHURCHES ON OUR MISSION FIELDS. Secure a good lot in the very best place possible. It is much better to pay a large price for a church lot well located than to have one given too far out, or in an inac cessible part of the town,-or if in the coun try, too far from the public road or roads. After the lot has been secured, adopt a plan for the building, unless the house is to be one costing very little money; it is always better to have a good architect furnish draw ings of the building, the plan of which has been adopted. The money paid for the draw ing is well spent, for you know just what your house will be before the w'ork has been begun. THE MEANS. Raise all the means possible with which to build in the town or community. Give everybody in the community an opportunity to help in the good work. After the mem bership, if any, and all the peop)le in the community, have done all they possibly can, then call on the brethren and sisters and friends elsewhere for the needed help. But if the work can be done by the people of the neighborhood, do not call on the people of other neighborhoods for help. In all the appeals for help from those who do not live in the community, tell definitely what the X)lan of the liouse is, its dimensions, its seat ing capacity, its cost, and what you liave done or can do yourselves, and just the amount of help you will need from others, or as nearly as you can approximate it. And as you are under appointment of the State Mission Board, all will take it for granted tljat there ought to be a church, for the Board sends no one as missionary to a place to fill regular appointments unless there is hope of building up a church there. And as we have no church extension committee, and perhaps do not need one, it would be well for the missionary to ask the State Mis sion Board to second and emphasize his ap peals for help to build his mission church. \¥. R. Gwaltnby. bership larger by several thousand, but our crops have been better, and we are better able to spare a liberal offering to the Master's cause. 4. We have better organization for reach ing the churches than ever before. In most of the Associations a representative was ap pointed for us in eac.h church whose duty it is to see that a collection is secured before May 1st, 1888, and the money forwarded to Bro. F. H. Briggs, Treasurer, Raleigh, N. C. The names of these representatives appear in their respective minutes. In Associations where no appiointments appear in the min utes, the appointees of last year will be expected to hold over. Under this plan we ought to secure contributions from eight hundred churclies during the year ending April 30th, 1888. An average collection of $4.00 per church would bring in over $8,000— much more than w e have ever given the Board in any other one year. No w, let us give the next sixty days to earn est work for Home Missions. In churches that have preaching only once a month there will be two chances for a public collection. If the weather or anything else interferes in March, see to it that the chance is not lost in April. If our representative in any church is sick or disabled, let some other member volunteer to attend to the work in that church. Let us have for the next sixty days a long pull, a strong pull, and a pull all together, and we shall give ihe Home Board such a lift as we have never given it before. A*. G. McManaway, Vice-President. SOME THOUGHTS ABOUT FOREIGN MISSIONS FOR NORTH CAROLINA BAPTISTS. felt by our fathers ; and in the very organh zation of the Convention, this was set forth as one of its primary objects: “To educate young men called of God to the ministry, and approved by the churches to which they belong.” The work was great, but, wuth prayer and faith in God, tmdertaken, and God’s bless ing has been upon it. Hundreds have been aided by this Board, and w’hile some have failed, the most of them have done well, some, very well. Not a few- of our most useful and conse crated ministers, at home and abroad, are among the number. That great and good man, so recently called from serving Christ below', to I'eign w'ith Him above, Matthew T. Yates, the foremost of all the missionaries sent out by the Southern Baptist Conven tion to preach the glorious Gospel of the blessed God in heathen lands, w'as among the first of the beneficiaries aided by this Board. Brethren, the work has not been a -failure, but a great success. Who can estimate the wmrth of one such man as the peerless Yates? What better use could have been made of the contributions given for his support while at Wake Forest, under the patronage of this Board. The Lord was preparing him for His great work? And what a privilege to be permitted by the blessed Master to take some little part in such a w'ork ? We have now thirty-nine young ministers on the Board, and still others are asking for help. To sustain these, allowing $10 each, it will take $890 per month. The work is great, but the Lord’s people are many, and we are well able to sustain them, and more. By the help of the Lord, and for his glory, let us do it. John Mitchell. THE CONTRIBUTIONS LAST YEAR from the North Carolina Baptist State Con vention amounted to $6,656.44, and from the Western Convention $548.75, making in all from North Carolina $7,024.19. OUR AIM FOR THIS CONVENTIONAL YEAR is to raise $2,975.81 more, and make the amount even $10,000.00. This is not a large contribution for the Baptists of North Caro lina. We ought to raise it. Yea, we ought to raise much more than tliat. WE HAVE NO PAID AGENCY IN THE STATE for Foreign Missions. Hence we must de pend upon correspondence mainly, and upon the help of the pastors and the brethren and sisters ivho ivill help us. We beg that pas tors will preach more on missions, distribute more literature, and liave some system for COLPORTAGE—OUR PLANS. brethren, a brother, or a sister, to become responsible to the Board for .$300, recom mend their colporter, the Board appoints and furnishes the books (never more than .$300 worth in the hands of the colporter, or under his order, at one time) and the col porter sells them at the catalogue prices, but by the discount secured through the Board after paying all bills, makes a living salary. The church, the brethren, the brother, or the sister, who become responsible to the Board wull, if the w'ork is honestly and faith fully done, be out notliing, and the work will have been done. If it has not been thus done, the colporter whom they recommended has proved unfaithful, inefficient, or, in the proyidenoe of God, has been unfortunate. 4th Plan.—If a man wishes to engage in colportage and can secure the Board against loss to the amount of stock he may wish to have in hand at any one time, the Board will furnish the books at the best possible dis count, give all reasonable time for payments, secure every possible encouragement through the pastors and churches of his section, to his work, and aid him with sucli gifts of Bibles, Testaments, etc., for donation to the destitute and needy as may be in its power. The same discount cannot, many times, be secured when books are bought on time, as they would be under plan three and four, and hence the colporter could not, with the same work and prudence, as in plan two, hope, by the discount alone, to make the samesalary; but he can live, and do a blessed work. Who will undertake it? raising funds for this work. HOME MISSIONS. This paper will reach its readers at the time when Flome Missions should be upper most in their thoughts. In this State March and April are the months in which most of our churches make their annual collections for this object. For several reasons our col lections ought to be larger this year than ever before : 1. The Board needs more help than it has needed in the past. Its field of operations is larger. It has more missionaries, and they are accomplishing a greater work than here tofore, and of course expenses have been proportionately increased. 2. The success attending the work of the Board furnishes an additional reason for larger contributions. We should use the Lord’s money as we do our own—where it will yield the largest returns. Judged by this test, the Home Board is entitled to much more than we have been sending to it from North Carolina. In Cuba alone 1,000 mem bers have been added to our churches in two years. In Texas 5,879 members were added to the churches under the care of the Board during the fifteen months ending September 30th, 1887. In all the other fields the suc cess has been alike encouraging. The Lord is thus saying to us by His blessings, ‘ ‘ Go forward and possess the land. 3. We have more ability than we have had for several years past. Not only is our mem- literature. Of this we have an ample supply and will send it free to any one who will distribute it carefully and prudently. THE MONTHLY' CONCERT OF PRAYER POE SIISSIONS has done a wonderful work in the past. Let all our churches revive it. To discuss some mission field or some phase of mission work with pra3'ers, select scripture readings and appropriate songs would do far more good than the regular sermon. THE FOREIGN MISSION JOURNAL is, by far, better than it has ever been. One article in the number for this month is worth the subscription price for five years. The paper is exceedingly cheap. Let all our pas tors see that it is in the hands of their people. THE BRYAN HOUSE. More than $300.00 of the pledges made to this liouse are still due. Let them be paid as soon as possible. OUR CHINA MISSION has recently lost a large part of its working force—some by death and others by broken health; and some who have been there for many years are growing infirm and are bending under the weight of years. But God be thanked there are several North Carolina boys who are going to say to us soon, “Here am I—send me.” May God help us to be ready to send them at once. Sincerely, W. L. Wright. EDUCATION BOARD. The work of this Board is distinctly set forth by the Constitution of the North Caro lina Baptist State Convention Art. II, viz.; The Education Board shall, as far as it may be able, assist promising and indigent young ministers seeking to prepare them selves for the more efficient preaching of the gospel. The necessity for this work was keenly Many letters of inquiry about this work have been received, and many applications to do the work have been made. I judge, therefore, that colportage is largely in the mind of our people, and at this time in this department (a new one for our Board) there is an open door. Shall we enter ? We ought to enter and do the work. Indeed, we have begun. Colporters are now at work. They are doing well. There are more to follow. This opportunity is before us, and, if we would laj' the foundation of our worli, broad and deep, colportage must be made to plaj' an important part. Intelligence, zeal, and contributions are needed, and in the order of this statement. WHAT ARE THE PLANS? HUW CAN WE GO ABOUT IT ? These questions liave come up from all parts of the State, and I will try to answer them. 1st Plan.—The Board appoints the col porter for a given Association and for a designated time; becomes responsible for a small monthly salarj'; supplies him with books; has from him a monthly itemized report; secures contributions from the churohe*s and friends of the ivork, and with these funds and the discount on the books, prosecutes the work. This is the plan vigorously and most suc cessfully worked in Virginia. It was made one of the objects for which their churches w-ere asked to contribute, just as to State, Foreign and Home Missions, and they gave last year about $5,000 to it, and the Board had twenty colporters in the field. To do this work, however, they had a Correspond ing Secretary, who gave his entire time to this one work. This is doubtless the best plan possible. On it our Board has acted thus far, but now feels that it would be un wise to further enlarge the work until more of the churches make contributions to it. This, it is hoped, will be done soon. If so, a colporter for each Association can be ap pointed. What say the churches? 2d Plan.—For an Association to secure a book fund of $250, recommend to the Board their colporter, have their committee on colportage purchase all books, for cash, through us, when they can do it to advant age, and the Associational Committee pays the colporter such salary as the discount on the books will justify. This plan was worked successfully in the Mt. Zion Associatifen for three years. It was last year adopted, and successfully worked in many Associations in South Carolina ; it is now the plan of their State system of colportage. With intelli gence, zeal and much hard work on the part of a judicious Associational Committee this plan can be made a success in any Associa tion in North Carolina. 3rd Plan.—For any church, number of REV. M. T. YATES, D. D. Not “ Yates coming,” but “Yates dead” is the cablegram. Gone from us, gone from his work, gone from China, gone from earth, gone to his rest, gone to his rew'ard. We are glad God raised him up from our midst, spared him to us so long, and worked through him so mightily. We now pray that a thousand like him may be given us, but where even God shall find them we know not. He lived and he died for China. His life and death will not be in vain. Facts are God’s fingers pointing to the final victory. The knowledge of these is a necessary con dition to intelligent interest in mission woi'k. The mission fire must be fed with facts. Judicious biographical mission historjf is not only most likely to be read, but most lasting in impressions for good. If we would iirop- erlj' appreciate the divine spirit of missions we must study the missionary' biography. This teaches by example the power of the gospel to illumine and transform human character. These lives set before us new chapters in tlie Acts of the Apostles. To fill up our mission ranks and our mission treas uries a larger number of our people must be brought face to face with the facts in the progress of the gospel—facts in the lives of the men whom God lias thrust out to the front. Let us, therefore, have, at once, a short, fresh, readable biograjihy of Dr. M. T. Yates—such a book as could be joublished and sold for fifty cents or one dollar. If this could be done, thousands of our people would be lienefited by' it. Could not Prof. W. L. Poteat gire us such a book ? THE QUARTERS. During the last quarter ’oefere the Baptist State Convention, the churches, \'er\' gener-, ally, are interested in taking collections for State Missions. This is done in order that the Board of Missions may close each year without debt. All agree that this is w'ise. From the State Convention in November to the Southern Baptist Convention in May our churches are specially' interested in collec tions for Flome and Foreign Missions. This, too, is wise, because it enables the Boards of that Convention to close their work each year without debt. Very little, therefore, has been given to State Missions, as the re port on another page will show, since De cember 1st, 1887. Soon after the Southern Baptist Convention closes its next session in Richmond, Va., will come the Chowan Asso ciation, and from then onto the Convention in Greensboro, State Missions and colport age will be before the churches. That pas tor is wisest who gives due attention to all of these objects. POLITICS. Those who w'ould be wise in church work must not wait this year till the latter part of summer or the fall to hold protracted meet ings and take collections for missions. This is the year of politics, politicians and elec tions. We can now look back over the work for the past twenty years, and every such year has made it specially hard on all of our church and mission work. Let us be wise and press the claims of these objects, before the mind of the people is too much absorbed in other things.